Imagining Jewish citizens as more loyal to a menacing supranational “Jewish” cause than to their own governments is a common trope of modern anti-Semitism. |
David Bernstein, writing for the Volokh Conspiracy at the Washington Post, points out that the brand of conspiratorial anti-Semitism underlying National Public Radio (NPR) host Diane Rehm’s questioning last week of presidential candidate Bernie Sanders’ nonexistent dual Israeli-American citizenship is exemplified by, among others, University of Michigan history professor Juan Cole:
Consider that in 2005, when he was perhaps the most influential progressive commenter on the Middle East, University of Michigan Professor Juan Cole wrote this of Bush Administration official Doug Feith: “Having a Likudnik as the number three man in the Pentagon is a nightmare for American national security, since Feith could never be trusted to put US interests over those of Ariel Sharon.” Feith, according to Cole, “played fast and loose with the truth . . . on behalf of a non-American political party, the Likud coalition of Israel.”
Professor Juan Cole |
In 2004, when Cole was elected president of the Middle East Studies Association (MESA), we wrote:
That the media turns to the strange mental world Juan Cole inhabits, a world filled with false facts, distortions, and sophism, with Jewish conspiracies and contempt for the American people, is a serious problem.
In reality, it’s the noxious influence of Cole and other conspiracy-mongers in the field of Middle East studies that have helped make anti-Semitism fashionable in academia and, by extension, the media.
Cinnamon Stillwell is the West Coast representative for Campus Watch.