by Caroline Glick
Next  month, convicted Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard will begin his 27th  year in prison, and the Obama administration is displaying stunning  insensitivity to what this means for the American Jewish community.
Pollard  was arrested in 1985 for transferring classified documents to Israel  during his service at US Naval Intelligence. In 1987, he was sentenced  to life imprisonment for his crime.
Pollard's  sentence contradicted his plea bargain agreement. It was based, among  other things, on an impact assessment report of his crimes that was  authored by CIA officer Aldrich Ames. At the time of Pollard's arrest,  Ames had been spying for the Soviet Union for two years.
Ames  was arrested for espionage in 1994. He was responsible for the deaths  of at least 10 agents working for US intelligence in the USSR.
Ames reportedly blamed Pollard for some of the agent deaths caused by his own espionage.
Pollard's  life sentence was grossly disproportionate to the sentences routinely  given to offenders who transfer classified information to US-allied  governments. The median sentence for such crimes is two years in prison.
Until  last year, there was a longstanding consensus in the US political and  intelligence communities opposed to granting clemency to Pollard.
This  consensus evaporated last year. In late 2010, US President Barack Obama  received letters recommending commutation of Pollard's sentence to time  served from former CIA director R. James Woolsey, and from retired  senator Dennis DeConcini, who served as the chairman of the Senate  Select Committee on Intelligence at the time of Pollard's arrest and  sentencing.
Obama received similar letters from  former secretaries of state George Schultz and Henry Kissinger. He  received requests for commutation from Sen. John McCain and former  attorney-general Michael Mukasey.
Lawrence  Korb, who served as assistant defense secretary under Caspar Weinberger,  has spearheaded the effort to release Pollard. Korb has stated  categorically that Pollard's harsh sentence was the result of  Weinberger's antipathy for Jews.
Other US  luminaries who have called for Obama to grant Pollard clemency include  former congressman and presidential adviser Lee Hamilton, former senator  and presidential adviser Alan Simpson, Harvard law professor and Obama  mentor Charles Ogletree, US Appellate Court Judge Stephen Williams and  former deputy attorney- general Phillip Heymann. Scores of congressmen,  several senators and more than 500 clergymen have called for Pollard's  release from prison.
Answering public  entreaties from Korb and Pollard's wife, Esther, in early January, Prime  Minister Binyamin Netanyahu became the first Israeli leader to issue a  formal, public appeal for clemency for Pollard. Netanyahu read the text  of his appeal to Obama from the Knesset podium and submitted it to the  White House on January 4.
One of the main  reasons for the urgency of the current appeal is Pollard's failing  health. Aside from that, the basic arguments given by his advocates are  the disproportionate length of Pollard's sentence; his deep, repeatedly  stated remorse for his actions; his exemplary behavior in prison; and  the fact that deterrence has been achieved.
OBAMA HAS failed to respond to Israel's formal request for clemency.
He  has been silent in the face of lesser requests as well. When Pollard's  father, Morris, was on his deathbed in June, Obama did not respond to  formal requests to permit Pollard to visit him in the hospital. He  similarly failed to respond to formal requests for Pollard to attend his  father's funeral.
Obama's cold silence was broken last week by his agent Vice President Joseph Biden. According to the New York Jewish Week,  in a meeting with 15 rabbis in South Florida on September 23, Biden  provided an unsolicited monologue about Pollard's case. Repeatedly  referring to Pollard as a "traitor," Biden said, "It would take the  Third Coming before I would support letting Pollard out."
According to The New York Times,  in making the statement, Biden, who is considered a friend of the US  Jewish community and of Israel, served as Obama's fall guy. Biden's job  was to deflect criticism of Obama's unstated decision not to release  Pollard away from the president.
In the event, Obama's decision to send Biden out to reject calls for Pollard's release backfired.
Rather  than killing the issue, Biden's unbridled assault on Pollard caused the  US Jewish leadership to unify around Pollard and call for his release.  As Anti-Defamation League National Director Abe Foxman told Channel 2 on  Wednesday, Jewish leaders had never discussed Pollard's case publicly,  but after Biden went public, they decided that they must follow suit.  The leaders of the Reform, Conservative and Orthodox movements were all  quoted by Jewish Week calling for Pollard's release.
Their  calls came just before Biden's previously scheduled Rosh Hashana  reception for Jewish leaders. So at the party on Wednesday, Biden was  beset by leaders asking him to reconsider his position and recommend  clemency for Pollard. In response, Biden agreed to meet with a small  group of Jewish leaders in the near future to discuss Pollard's case.
Biden's  assault on Pollard was strange for two main reasons. First, it was bad  politics. Obama reportedly tasked Biden with rebuilding Jewish support  for the administration. That support has frayed in the face of Obama's  harsh treatment of Israel.
It is odd that in  the context of Biden's outreach attempts, he chose to express a hostile  position on Pollard that couldn't help but raise the hackles of the very  community he was dispatched to woo. Rather than bringing the US Jewish  community closer to the administration, Biden accomplished the  astounding feat of unifying the fractured community in opposition to his  position.
The second reason that Biden's  anti-Pollard harangue made no sense is because it flew in the face of  the claim that Obama has turned over a new leaf on Israel. Obama's  supporters have argued that his speech at the General Assembly last  month where he opposed the PLO's efforts to gain UN membership as a  sovereign state was a watershed event for the president. In announcing  his intention to veto a Palestinian statehood resolution in the UN  Security Council, his supporters argue that Obama abandoned his previous  hostility towards Israel and embraced it as an ally.
BIDEN'S  ATTACK on Pollard is just the latest in a stunning line of rebukes of  Israel by Obama's senior surrogates over the past 10 days that cast a  pall on that supposed watershed event. First Secretary of State Hillary  Clinton said the US opposes even symbolic recognition of Israel's  capital city Jerusalem. Then she attacked Israel for approving new  housing construction in Jerusalem.
Following on  Clinton's heels, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta launched a public  assault on Israel both ahead of and during his visit early this week.
Panetta  seemingly made US support for Israel contingent on Israel's willingness  to make concessions to its increasingly radicalized neighbors, saying,  "As [the Israelis] take risks for peace, we will be able to provide the  security that they will need in order to ensure that they can have the  room hopefully to negotiate."
Panetta further  accused Israel of isolating itself diplomatically due to its  unwillingness to take what he considers sufficient risks. Just weeks  after US intervention was needed to force Egypt's military junta to  prevent the murder of six Israeli embassy guards besieged by a mob of  Egyptian rioters who took over the embassy in Cairo, Panetta added,  "Real security can only be achieved by both a strong diplomatic effort  as well as a strong effort to project your military strength."
Besides  blaming Israel for the absence of peace with the Palestinians and for  post-Mubarak Egypt's rapid radicalization, Panetta publicly rejected  Israel's right to take military action to prevent Iran from acquiring  nuclear weapons, claiming all action against Iran must be multilateral.  In stating this position, Panetta effectively gave a green light for  Iran to develop nuclear weapons.
This is the  case because the sanctions policy the Obama administration clings to has  already demonstrably failed to deter Iran from advancing its nuclear  weapons program.
Clinton's attack on Israeli  sovereignty in Jerusalem, Panetta's assault on Israel's right to defend  itself from the threat of genocide, and his unrestrained criticism of  Israel's refusal to genuflect before increasingly belligerent neighbors  all indicated that Obama's speech at the UN was not a new chapter in his  administration's treatment of Israel. Rather, it was a one-off response  to concern about the loss of American Jewish support for the president.  That concern was spiked by the Republican victory in New York's Ninth  Congressional District's special election last month.
Biden's  assault on Pollard - and through him, the American Jewish community -  was a similar sign that Obama has not let go of his antipathy for  Israel.
Obama's behavior on Israel following  the Democrats' congressional upset replicates his response to Republican  Sen. Scott Brown's upset victory in the special Senate election in  Massachusetts in January 2010. Brown was elected at the height of the  debate on Obama's nationalized healthcare plan.
For  the first couple of weeks after Brown's election, Obama and his  surrogates signaled their willingness to compromise with Republicans in  light of Massachusetts voters' rebuke of their partisan brinksmanship on  the healthcare issue. But within two months of Brown's victory, Obama  and his allies had doubled down and passed their highly controversial  healthcare program with no Republican support and against the opposition  of the majority of American voters.
In the  case of both Israel and healthcare, Obama has opted to ignore the  political consequences of his actions and press on with his ideological  agenda.
The lesson Pollard and his supporters  in the US and in Israel should take from Obama's behavior is that they  must continue to press on in their campaign for Pollard's release as  energetically and as relentlessly as possible. As the election date  nears, if Obama's polling numbers continue to drop, it is possible -  although unlikely - that he will decide that desperate times call for  desperate measures and grant Pollard clemency.
Even  if Obama fails to act in such a politically sensible fashion, a public  and outspoken campaign for Pollard's release still makes sense. At a  minimum, it can set the conditions for a new president to grant Pollard  clemency immediately upon taking office, by causing Obama's Republican  opponent to commit to such a course of action.
Speaking of Pollard's case with Jewish Week,  Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of  Reform Judaism, said, "In the midst of the Days of Awe, as we ponder the  wrongdoings we have committed and pray for God's mercy, we pray as well  that President Obama will act with mercy and grant Mr. Pollard  long-overdue clemency."
American Jewish leaders  deserve praise for their willingness to plead on Pollard's behalf. And  they should be urged to continue to highlight Pollard's plight and call  for his immediate release.
Pollard committed a  crime. But his punishment far outweighs his misdeeds. Whether Obama  releases him from his long suffering or not, it is heartwarming that due  to Biden's unbridled assault on Pollard, the American Jewish leadership  has found its voice and is calling for justice to be done.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
                             Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/10/justice-for-jonathan-pollard.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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