Intellectual terrorism
By Ghada Karmi
10/26/2007
The newest and least attractive import from America, following on
behind Coca-Cola, McDonald's and Friends, is the pro-Israel lobby. The
latest target of this US-style campaign is the august Oxford Union.

This week, two Israeli colleagues and I were due to appear at the
union to participate in an important debate on the one-state solution
in Israel-Palestine. Also invited was the American Jewish scholar and
outspoken critic of Israel, Norman Finkelstein. At the last minute,
however, the union withdrew its invitation to him, apparently
intimidated by threats from various pro-Israel groups.

The Harvard Jewish lawyer and indefatigable defender of Israel, Alan
Dershowitz, attacked the topic of the debate as well as the Oxford
Union itself. In an article headlined "Oxford Union is dead", he
accused it of having become "a propaganda platform for extremist
views", and castigated its choice of what he termed anti-Israel and
anti-Semitic speakers.

Yet Dershowitz could have restored the balance as he saw it; he was
the first person invited by the Oxford Union to oppose the motion but
he declined due, as he put it, to "the terms of the debate and my
proposed teammates".

Dershowitz's article attacking the Oxford Union appeared in the
Jerusalem Post in Israel and Frontpage magazine in the US. [Because of
British defamation laws Cif has been advised not to provide a link -
Ed.]

Dershowitz and Finkelstein were protagonists in a much-publicised
academic row in the US, though it is unclear whether this has any
relevance to the Oxford Union spat.

In solidarity with Finkelstein and to oppose this gross interference
in British democratic life, the three of us on the "one state" side -
myself, Avi Shlaim, of St Anthony's College, Oxford, and the Israeli
historian Ilan Pappe - decided to withdraw from the debate. This was
not an easy decision, since the topic was timely and necessary given
the current impasse in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, where
innovative solutions are in short supply.

Dershowitz and the other pro-Israel activists may rejoice at their
success in derailing an important discussion. But it is of little
comfort to those of us who care about freedom of speech in this
country. Last May, Dershowitz interfered in British academic life when
the University and College Union voted overwhelmingly to debate the
merits of boycotting Israeli institutions. He teamed up with a British
Jewish lawyer, Anthony Julius, and others, threatening to "devastate
and bankrupt" anyone acting against Israeli universities.

In another example of these bullying tactics, the Royal Society of
Medicine, one of Britain's most venerable medical institutions, came
under an attack this month, unprecedented in its 200 year history. It
had invited Dr Derek Summerfield, a psychiatrist (who has also
documented Israel's medical abuses against Palestinians in the
Occupied Territories), to its conference on Religion, Spirituality and
Mental Health. The RSM was immediately bombarded with threats from pro-
Israel doctors demanding Dr Summerfield's removal on the grounds that
he was and biased, and that the RSM's charitable status would be
challenged if he remained. Intimidated, the RSM asked Dr Summerfield
to withdraw, although they later reinstated him.

The power of the Israel lobby in America is legendary. It demonstrates
its influence at many levels. Campus Watch is a network that monitors
alleged anti-Israel activity in US academic institutions. The
difficulties of promotion in the US for scholars deemed anti-Israeli
are notorious. The notable Palestinian academic, Edward Said, was
subjected to an unrelenting campaign by pro-Israel groups at Columbia
University with threats on his life. His successor, Rashid Khalidi, is
the current object of the same campaign of vilification and attack.
Finkelstein himself has been denied tenure at his university and
everywhere else. The authors of a recent study of the Israel lobby's
influence on US foreign policy have been called anti-Semites and white
supremacists. Former president Jimmy Carter's book, Palestine: peace
not apartheid, has earned him the label of "Jew-hater" and Nazi
sympathiser. The British publisher, Pluto Press, is likely to be
dropped by its American distributors, the University of Michigan
Press, because pro-Israel groups accuse it of including "anti-
Semitic" (ie pro-Palestinian/critical of Israel) books on its list.

Such activities are familiar in the US. People there are hardened or
resigned to having their freedom of expression limited by the pro-
Israel lobby, and the threats of Dershowitz would cause no surprise to
anyone. But Britain is different, naively innocent in the face of US-
style assaults on its scholars and institutions. No wonder that those
who have been attacked give in so quickly, nervous of something they
do not understand. The UCU leadership, shocked and intimidated by the
ferocious reaction to the boycott motion from pro-Israel groups,
resorted to legal advice to extricate itself and announced in
September that a call to boycott Israeli institutions would be
"unlawful". The Oxford Union jettisoned one of its participants rather
than stand up to the threats of its critics. The RSM tried to distance
the offending speaker from its conference to protect itself from
abuse.

All this is understandable, but it is exactly the wrong response.
Appeasing bullies like Dershowitz will not stop them. It will rather
encourage them to go further. The question is, do we in this country
want a McCarthyite witch hunt? If not, then we must confront the
bullies and expose them for the intellectual terrorists they are, bent
on destroying the values of a free society. To do otherwise will
invite the fate of all repressed people, cowed and intimidated, hating
their tormentors, but too afraid to say so.

The Guardian
October 25, 2007


On Oct 26, 11:37 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/56cb5b92-10a7-11dc-96d3-000b5df10621.html?n...
>
> Harvard legal expert vows to sue lecturers boycotting Israel
>
> By Jon Boone
>
> Published: June 2 2007 03:00
>
> A top American lawyer has threatened to wage a legal war against
> British academics who seek to cut links with Israeli universities.
>
> Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard law professor renowned for his staunch
> defence of Israel and high-profile legal victories, including his role
> in the O.J. Simpson trial, vowed to "devastate and bankrupt" lecturers
> who supported such boycotts.
>
> This week's annual conference of Britain's biggest lecturers' union,
> the University and College Union, backed a motion damning the
> "complicity of Israeli academia in the occupation [of Palestinian
> land]".
>
> It also obliged the union's executive to encourage members to
> "consider the moral implications of existing and proposed links with
> Israeli academic institutions".
>
> Prof Dershowitz said he had started work on legal moves to fight any
> boycott.
>
> He told the Times Higher Educational Supplement that these would
> include using a US law - banning discrimination on the basis of
> nationality - against UK universities with research ties to US
> colleges. US academics might also be urged to accept honorary posts at
> Israeli colleges in order to become boycott targets.
>
> "I will obtain legislation dealing with this issue, imposing sanctions
> that will devastate and bankrupt those who seek to impose bankruptcy
> on Israeli academics," he told the journal.
>
> Sue Blackwell, a UCU activist and member of the British Committee for
> Universities of Palestine, said: "This is the typical response of the
> Israeli lobby which will do anything to avoid debating the real issue
> - the 40-year occupation of Palestine." Jewish groups have attacked
> the UCU vote, which was opposed by Sally Hunt, its general secretary.
>
> C The Financial Times Limited 2007


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