Sidney Blumenthal鈥檚 influence on Hillary Clinton is once again revealed in the latest batch of Clinton emails, released yesterday. As reports, the emails from Blumenthal include correspondence about Israel, in which he advises the secretary of State to consider the writings on the subject by Max Blumenthal.
By now it is well known that Max Blumenthal is no fan of Israel. His book is a one-sided screed in which the Jews of Israel are regarded essentially as the new Nazis. 鈥淣ever before,鈥� Nation columnist wrote, 鈥渉as anyone defended the analogizing of the behavior of Israeli Jews to that of the war criminals who led Nazi Germany.鈥� Alterman went on to write that 鈥渘othing this fellow writes can be taken at face value鈥� and referred to the book as 鈥淭he 鈥業-Hate Israel鈥� Handbook.鈥�
In these latest e-mails, we learn that in March of 2010, Sidney Blumenthal sent Secretary Clinton 鈥渁n article by Max, telling her that his son is spending his time on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and plans to move to Israel for about 6-8 months to write a book.鈥� He added that Max 鈥渢racks a lot of things that do not appear in the mainstream press.鈥� He also enclosed an article by the leftist Israeli Uri Avnery, who had written his own attack on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Evidently Sidney Blumenthal shares his son鈥檚 animus towards Bibi and Israel and, in passing on these materials, thought he was gaining some traction. Perhaps he was. Responding to this email, Secretary Clinton asked him how she should use the material in a speech she was scheduled to give to AIPAC.
In 2012, a released email reveals, Sidney Blumenthal sent Max鈥檚 January 2012 article in the Arab newspaper (鈥淭he Bibi Connection鈥�) to Clinton. In the article, Max chastises Netanyahu for his ties to U.S. Republicans, and in particular, Sheldon Adelson. 鈥淏ibi鈥檚 war against Obama,鈥� he wrote, 鈥渋s unprecedented.鈥� He had not one criticism, of course, of Obama鈥檚 policies towards Israel. Max also wrote that 鈥淣etanyahu鈥檚 campaign excites right-wing Jews and evangelical Christians, who overwhelmingly accept the biblical claims of the Jewish state鈥檚 historical right to Greater Israel, Judea and Samaria. Bibi鈥檚 deepest attack line against Obama merges theology with ideology.鈥� No longer, Max argued, was the U.S.-Israeli alliance depicted as 鈥渁 marriage of two vibrant democracies united by shared liberal values," but rather as a 鈥渦nited front of besieged bastions of Western civilization against an incipient Islamic onslaught.鈥� 鈥淩apture ready evangelicals,鈥� he wrote, 鈥渞ight-wing ultra-nationalists, and Republican Jews are far more likely to be attracted to this sort of alliance than cosmopolitan liberals.鈥� Clinton passed on these comments to others.
The emails do show that Clinton did not always accept Sidney Blumenthal鈥檚 analysis. In April 2010, she took him to task for suggesting that there should be 鈥渁 note of skepticism鈥� about intelligence reports that Syria had Scud missiles and could give them to Hezbollah. He asked:
Does Israel need reassurance on its own claims here? Unless this is part of a larger diplomatic movement that involves serious pressure to come soon on Israel. Otherwise, back to square one, making statements without evidence and disclosing that the Obama administration is spooked by the Israeli inspired propaganda campaign against it involving everything from ads signed by Eli Weisel [sic] to statements signed by Harry Reid, et al, encouraging more of same. Unless of course you actually have the intel nailed down.
To this, Clinton replied: 鈥淪kepticism not in order.鈥� Blumenthal immediately took back his previous email, since he most likely did not want Clinton to stop listening to him. Moreover, at the time, he was employed at a high salary by the Clinton Foundation. He indicated that the skepticism came from and was 鈥渆ndemic in sectors of Intel and military because of Bush hangover. I鈥檇 have Panetta or Blair inform Congress and have it reported. Let them stand on the intel. Understand public discussion of scuds from diplomatic standpoint. Provocative of Iran, foolish of Syria, yet changes nothing strategically.鈥�
He also could not help but add a sentence about Netanyahu, chastising him for missing the chance to make peace with Syria. 鈥淥f course,鈥� he wrote, 鈥渋f Bibi were to have engaged Syria in negotiations taking its previous gestures seriously鈥�.鈥� He did not finish the sentence.
Another email to Clinton came from Jeffrey Feltman, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, passing along an article from a left-wing Israeli publication called +972 Magazine. The magazine reported that a former Netanyahu adviser was on the outs with the prime minister, that Bibi was changing staff and firing people because of disagreement with him on fundamental issues, and that the new appointees 鈥渄on鈥檛 offer opinions that diverge from Bibi鈥檚 predispositions.鈥� In a further email, he alerted Clinton that 鈥測ou should be aware that the 972 blog 鈥s highly partisan, anti-BB, opposed to military action against Iran.鈥� Then he added: 鈥淔ar left wing in Israeli political terminology.鈥�
Why, we might ask, was such a clearly biased and extreme analysis by a far-left publication sent to the secretary?
The above is important particularly if Hillary Clinton becomes our next president. Recently, she gave a to the Saban Forum at the Brookings Institution which was called pro-Israel by many observers. In that speech, she tried to triangulate in order to not alienate different sides. Yet she played all the right notes, and portions of it were clearly intended to alert the Jewish community to her hope they would support her and not doubt her commitment to Israel.
But once in office, which Hillary would we get? We know that originally she wanted Blumenthal to work for her at State, but the Obama administration vetoed it. Rahm Emanuel in particular did not like tactics Blumenthal used during the 2008 campaign. He was most likely thinking of the old-style red-baiting Blumenthal used against Obama to bring to light the future president's communist ties, which led Obama鈥檚 campaign to send out their own red-baiting missives against Hillary for her post university work at a pro-communist law firm in California. (I wrote about it
As president, would Hillary continue the Obama administration鈥檚 hostile relationship with Israel, in which Israel is pressured while the Palestinian Authority is let off the hook? Or would the relationship be a more balanced one which held the Palestinian leadership to account? Would a President Hillary Clinton give a position in her administration to Sidney Blumenthal, a loyal friend from whom she solicits advice? Would he then continue to send her the anti-Israel screeds of his son, urging her to seriously consider his arguments?
Hillary Clinton should be asked these questions by the press during the campaign.