Deadliest Lies: The Israel Lobby and the Myth of Jewish Control

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Author: Abraham H. Foxman

ISBN-10: 1403984921

ISBN-13: 9781403984920

Category: Israel & the Jews

The representative of the Jewish community and staunch defender of human rights, Foxman delivers a powerful blow to such ideas as "The Israel Lobby." He shows how old stereotypes associated with the most virulent forms of bigotry have been resurfacing and taking subtle new forms. From Carter to Mearsheimer, he addresses the public figures who make these beliefs appear credible. He also reveals a disturbing parallel trend: the decline of global Jewish solidarity, which he argues is critical...

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An urgent message from the head of the Anti-Defamation League Publishers Weekly In opposing the view that there is an "Israel lobby" with disproportionate influence on U.S. foreign policy (a view that Foxman says plays into "the traditional anti-Semitic narrative about 'Jewish control' "), the national director of the Anti-Defamation League focuses on the controversial 2006 paper "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy" by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt (their book of the same title will be published in September). Foxman demolishes a number of shibboleths about the lobby's power. Much of the book's second half then takes on what Foxman sees as the biases and distortions in former president Carter's Palestine Peace or Apartheid, offering evidence, for example, that Yasser Arafat, not Ehud Barak, was the obstacle to an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement at the Taba negotiations. But Foxman never really defines what the "Israel lobby" is, paying more attention to the ADL than to that lobby's main instrument, the America Israel Public Affairs Committee. And many will find debatable his claim that Israel "has proven to be the single greatest source of stability in the region." This book succeeds far more as a rebuttal of a pernicious theory about a mythically powerful Jewish lobby than as a look at the real institutions that lobby in support of Israel or at Israel's complex role in the Middle East. (Sept.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Acknowledgments 9Foreword George P. Shultz 111 In a Time of Challenge 192 Old Poison in a New Bottle 393 Alluring Myths, Clear-Eyed Realities 934 The Power of Misinformation: The Judt Affair 1335 A President Loses His Way 1756 The Way Forward 215Notes 241Index 251

\ From Barnes & NobleIn this book, the longtime national director and chairman of the Anti-Defamation League delivers a vigorous response to John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's "The Israel Lobby" and Jimmy Carter's Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid. Abraham Foxman maintains that simplistic conceptions of Jewish influence feed on and reinforce old anti-Semitic stereotypes. The author of Never Again insists further that such conspiracy theories muddy true dialogue on both American foreign policy interests and Israel's security problems. Foxman takes the former president and the authors of the London Review article to task for errors and omissions, but he also presents his own proposed guidelines for Mideast peace. A forceful statement by a world-respected humanitarian.\ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklyIn opposing the view that there is an "Israel lobby" with disproportionate influence on U.S. foreign policy (a view that Foxman says plays into "the traditional anti-Semitic narrative about 'Jewish control' "), the national director of the Anti-Defamation League focuses on the controversial 2006 paper "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy" by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt (their book of the same title will be published in September). Foxman demolishes a number of shibboleths about the lobby's power. Much of the book's second half then takes on what Foxman sees as the biases and distortions in former president Carter's Palestine Peace or Apartheid, offering evidence, for example, that Yasser Arafat, not Ehud Barak, was the obstacle to an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement at the Taba negotiations. But Foxman never really defines what the "Israel lobby" is, paying more attention to the ADL than to that lobby's main instrument, the America Israel Public Affairs Committee. And many will find debatable his claim that Israel "has proven to be the single greatest source of stability in the region." This book succeeds far more as a rebuttal of a pernicious theory about a mythically powerful Jewish lobby than as a look at the real institutions that lobby in support of Israel or at Israel's complex role in the Middle East. (Sept.)\ Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information\ \