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Defending Dennis Ross
by Robert Satloff
Foreign Policy, April 8, 2010
Give Stephen M. Walt his due. After Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's tense visit to Washington last month, a
cowardly U.S. government official lobbed an "Israel vs. America"
dual loyalty canard at my former colleague, National Security Council
advisor Dennis Ross. But while he or she hid behind a cloak of journalistic
anonymity shamelessly provided by Politico's Laura Rozen, Walt at least
has the gumption to stand up and make his McCarthyite case in his own
name. And while Rozen's muse only attacked one person's bona fides, Walt
pilloried the professional credentials of several dozen of our nation's
leading Middle East experts.
For the record, Ross, who was a distinguished fellow at
the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) throughout George
W. Bush's administration, has been advancing U.S. interests in peace and
security for the past quarter-century. He is now working at a senior level
for his fourth president—two Democrats, two Republicans—and
has the battle scars that come with his membership in the increasingly
narrow circle of bipartisan foreign-policy practitioners. Our nation could
use fewer Walts and a lot more Rosses.
Of course, "McCarthyite" is a term one should
be reluctant to throw around, but I can think of no more accurate word
for fact-free accusations designed to smear reputations with an appeal
to patriotism. What else is one to make of Walt's rhetorical question:
"Isn't it obvious that U.S. policy towards the Middle East is likely
to be skewed when former employees of WINEP or AIPAC have important policy-making
roles, and when their own prior conduct has made it clear that they have
a strong attachment to one particular country in the region?"
I cannot speak for other organizations, but I can speak
for current and former employees of The Washington Institute. What "prior
conduct" is he talking about? To which country do we allegedly have
a "strong attachment"?
Our foreign-born scholars hail from virtually every country
in the Middle East—Turkey, Iran, Israel, and at least a dozen different
Arab countries. It is true that some have strong attachments to their
native lands. One went on to serve as senior aide to the Jordanian foreign
minister, another is now an advisor to the French Foreign Ministry, and
a third is currently a Lebanese diplomat. Our first Arab resident scholar
was Saad Eddin Ibrahim, an Egyptian patriot if there ever was one. But
I think Walt had something else in mind.
As for U.S. citizens on our staff, their
suspicious "prior conduct" includes 35 years in the Defense
Intelligence Agency (Jeffrey White), 30 years at the State Department
and the old U.S. Information Agency (David Pollock), and tours of duty
at the State Department, the FBI and the Treasury Department, the Pentagon,
and the National Defense University (Scott Carpenter, Matthew Levitt,
David Schenker, and Patrick Clawson, respectively). And then there are
the dozen U.S. Air Force officers who have each spent nearly a year as
national defense fellows, as well as the Foreign Service officers and
Defense Intelligence Agency analysts who have been on loan to us from
their home agencies. By Walt's arguments, all these public servants should
be precluded from high office. But still, I think Walt had something else
in mind.
And to which Middle Eastern country does Walt believe that
I, director of WINEP for the past 17 years, have a "strong attachment?"
Is it Jordan, where I studied at a university in Yarmouk and about which
I have written two books and my Oxford dissertation? Or perhaps Morocco,
where I lived with my family for more than two years and where I wrote
two other books? No, it seems Walt had something more nefarious in mind.
I do wonder why Walt limited himself to smearing current
and former employees of The Washington Institute. Given his argument about
"conflict of interest," one would think anyone with any connection
to the institute has been infected with whatever virus we carry. Indeed,
if Walt were truly concerned for the fate of our nation, he should really
place dozens of others in his diplomatic purdah. They would include the
three vice presidents who have addressed our celebratory events over the
years (Al Gore, Dick Cheney, and Dan Quayle) and the four former secretaries
of state who serve on our board of advisors.
There are also the groups of scholars, experts, and public
servants we bring together to recommend policy—people like U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice and Deputy National Security
Advisor Thomas Donilon. And how could I forget Walt's colleagues at Harvard
University's Kennedy School—Joseph Nye and Graham Allison—both
of whom have been signatories to major Institute study groups in recent
years? I am surprised Walt let a little water-cooler politics keep him
from flagging the eyebrow-raising activities of these dangerous characters.
There is also a different sort of "conflict
of interest" that doesn't seem to bother Walt. It's the old-fashioned
kind—the one about money. Absolutist that Walt is, one would think
he would pursue the mother of all conflicts of interest before asserting,
without argument or proof, that employment at the Washington Institute
is prima facie evidence for disqualification for high public service.
But that would get messy, especially because his employer proudly boasts
of financial support from the governments of Dubai, Kuwait, Italy, and
Germany, as well as numerous foreign-owned corporations.
The Washington Institute, on the other hand, does not accept
any funds from any foreign source—not a single dime from foreign
individuals, foundations, corporations or governments. Since our scholars'
job is to issue recommendations for U.S. foreign policy, our board of
directors put into place this U.S.-donors-only policy years ago. I don't
begrudge other people and institutions from looking for funds wherever
they can find it. Money is scarce these days, and you have to do what
you have to do—though we at The Washington Institute won't do it.
All this goes to prove that Walt couldn't care less about
real "conflicts of interest." He is a guerrilla fighter out
to win a policy war using any means at his disposal and a throwback to
the era when alleged realists believed that the U.S. government could
not advance strategic partnership both with Israel and with friendly Arab
and Muslim states. He pines for a zero-sum approach to Middle East policy
that would have made Loy Henderson leap for joy. His stock in trade are
smears and misleading innuendo, without a fact in sight. All in all, it's
a very impressive résumé for the Robert and Renée
Belfer Professor of International Relations at Harvard's Kennedy School
of Government.
Did I mention that the Belfers are donors to The Washington
Institute? Maybe Walt should disqualify himself, too.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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