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Abrams, one of the fathers of neo-conservatism, is infamous for lying to Congress.
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By Adam
Wild Aba,
IOL Correspondent
WASHINGTON,
February 5 (IslamOnline.net) – A staunch advocate of Israel has
jointed the neocon-studded Bush administration as Deputy National
Security Adviser for Global Democracy and Human Rights.
Embodying
neo-conservatism perhaps more than any other neoconservative, Elliot
Abrams will be assigned with promoting democracy and freedom abroad in
line with the Bush administration’s Greater Middle East and North
Africa Initiative, National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley said in a
press release seen by IslamOnline.net on Friday, February 4.
Abrams, 58,
has served as special assistant to President Bush and senior director
for Near East and North African affairs in the National Security
Council since December 2002.
He will
continue to work on Israeli-Palestinian affairs in concert with US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, according to the missive.
Jewish
Abrams is the author of the book: Faith or Fear: How Jews Can Survive in a
Christian America.
‘Original Neocon’
Abrams is
considered one of the fathers of neo-conservatism in the United
States.
He joined
the neocon exodus from the Democratic Party in the late 1970s led by
members of the Committee on the Present Danger and the Coalition for a
Democratic Majority.
“Abrams
has integrated the various influences that have shaped today's
neoconservative agenda. A creature of the neoconservative incubator,
Abrams is a political intellectual and operative who has advanced the
neoconservative agenda with chutzpah and considerable success,”
according to the US-based International Relations Center (IRC), which
provides an independent, well-researched analysis of US foreign
policy-makers.
Abrams was
also a charter member of the Project for the New American Century
(PNAC), which issued its statement of principles about the need for a
“neo-Reaganite” foreign policy in 1997.
He served as
a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, president of the Ethics and
Public Policy Center (EPPC) and advisory council member of the
American Jewish Committee.
When serving as EPCC president, Abrams was of the opinion that human
rights should be a “policy tool” to pursue the neoconservative
agenda.
He lobbied
for the creation of the controversial Commission on International
Religious Freedom with a focus on alleged religious discrimination in
Muslim countries.
Abrams also
served as the commission’s chairman until mid-2001, when he joined
the Bush administration.
Belligerent
In his chapter on the Middle East in PNAC, Abrams wrote: “Our military
strength and willingness to use it will remain a key factor in our
ability to promote peace.”
He has roundly rejected
peace talks with the Palestinian Authority and lambasted peace-loving
Jews for supporting peace talks and calling for halting Israeli
aggressions against the Palestinians.
“Strengthening Israel,
our major ally in the region, should be the central core of US Middle
East policy, and we should not permit the establishment of a
Palestinian state that does not explicitly uphold US policy in the
region,” Abrams asserted in PNAC’s chapter on the Middle East.
Following Ariel Sharon's
election as prime minister of Israel, Abrams wrote that hawkish Sharon
embodied a new approach “of firmness and resistance to violence or
the threat of violence.”
He further absolved
Sharon from committing the grisly Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982,
holding the Christian militias in Lebanon accountable for it.
Liar
Abrams
Abrams is
infamous for lying to Congress as Assistant Secretary of State for
Human Rights under President Ronald Reagan (1981-89).
During the
Regan era, he was accused of secretly supporting the so-called Contra
Movement in Nicaragua, which had been banned by Congress under the
then Bolen Amendment, to topple the Sandinistas regime there.
He was
further accused of being involved in smuggling weapons to Iran to
secure the safe release of hostages in Lebanon. The incidents were
known as the “Iran-Contra” scandal.
When
Congress asked Abrams about these allegations, he gave very deceptive
testimony.
He pleaded guilty to two lesser offenses, including withholding
information from Congress, in order to avoid a trial and a possible
jail term.
Abrams, one
of the six Iran-Contra defendants, was given a pardon by President
George H.W. Bush on Christmas Eve 1992.
“Inexperience”
Pundits and analysts have criticized Abrams’s nomination for
high-profile jobs within the US administrations given his blemished
record and “inexperience”.
“Despite his own record of lying to Congress and managing illegal
operations; Abrams rose to high positions in the National Security
Council to oversee US foreign policy in regions where he had no
professional experience,” the IRC said.
“Only ideological positions; proved himself as a political intellectual
in books and essays that explore the interface between orthodox
Judaism, American culture, and political philosophy; and demonstrated
his considerable talents in public diplomacy as a political art in the
use of misinformation and propaganda to ensure public and policy
support for foreign relations agendas that would otherwise be soundly
rejected.”
It said that
when Abrams was appointed to be the Reagan's administration point-man
on Latin America, he came to the State Department with no expertise in
the region and did not speak Spanish.
“Similarly,
Abrams became the NSC's Middle East specialist without any expertise
in the region-other than his family ties to Israel, his polemical
writings for neoconservative
publications, and his right-wing Zionism.”