by Boaz Bismuth
All assessments point 
to Chuck Hagel becoming the next U.S. defense secretary. His resume is 
impressive, the military section (a decorated Vietnam veteran) no less 
so than the political one. 
Hagel was the first 
Republican from Nebraska to enter the Senate in 24 years. In 2002 he 
maintained his seat with 83 percent of the vote. What is there to worry 
about? 
In 2008, Hagel 
published a book, “America: Our Next Chapter,” in which he recommended 
that the U.S. adopt an independent foreign policy. Nor has he gone out 
of his way to please the Israelis. "I’m not an Israeli senator. I’m a 
United States senator," he said when he was told that an attack on Iran 
would help Israel. In addition, he has refused to sign senatorial 
letters on subjects important to Israel and the AIPAC lobby group. 
"The Jewish lobby 
intimidates a lot of people [on Capitol Hill]," he was quoted as saying 
in Aaron David Miller's 2008 book, “The Much Too Promised Land.” Hagel 
is opposed to war with Iran and has even opposed imposing sanctions on 
the country. Meanwhile, he supports a dialogue with Tehran, as well as 
with the heads of Hamas in the Gaza Strip. No bombs and no sanctions. 
These are not the kind of ideas that sit well with Jerusalem. 
From Israel's point of 
view, this is a problematic appointment. Harvard Professor Stephen Walt 
writes in his blog: "The real meaning of the Hagel affair is what it 
says about the climate inside Washington. Simply put, the question is 
whether supine and reflexive support for all things Israeli remains a 
prerequisite for important policy positions here in the Land of the 
Free." 
With Obama in the White
 House, Kerry in the State Department and Hagel in the Pentagon, America
 seems intent on continuing to lose stature in the world. Hagel believes
 that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict destabilizes the Middle East. 
Let's hope there are people in the Pentagon who can point out Iran to 
him from time to time, if not in aerial photos, then at least on the 
map. 
Boaz Bismuth
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3177
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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