Congress Votes To Double Spending On Programs To Silence Critics of Jews And Israel

 By CFT Team — 19 Comments

The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill on Friday that rubber stamped the continuation of American assistance to Israel and the doubled of funding for the U.S. State Department’s office that allegedly combats global antisemitism:

The vote tally was 224-189.

The annual State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations bill for 2021 would allocate $3.3 billion in annual U.S. security aid to Israel in accordance with the 2016 Memorandum of Understanding, or MOU, between the United States and Israel worth $38 billion over a decade (the remaining $500 million, which goes towards missile-defense systems in Israel, such as the Iron Dome, David’s Sling and Arrow 3, is part of the U.S. Defense Department appropriations bill).

The State Department appropriations bill would include $5 million for refugees resettling in Israel, administered by the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration.

It would also allocate $50 million annually for the next five years in a newly established “People-to-People Partnership for Peace Fund.”

Additionally, it will provide funding for joint projects between the United States and Israel related to fighting COVID-19.

Finally, the appropriations measure includes $225 million for development and humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza, despite the Trump administration slashing funding in that category to virtually zero.

“Given the increasingly aggressive actions by extremist regimes and their terrorist clients, the close U.S.-Israel cooperation and coordination in security, defense intelligence and other areas are of even greater significance,” said the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations in a statement.

International Jewry is going to get twice as much money to silence their critics, which includes the U.S. taxpayers who are providing them with the money.

As Jewish shenanigans increase, so does antisemitism™ — that is, any opposition to these Jewish shenanigans.

And if you don’t go along with the Jewish plans to recreate the world into a Jewish “utopia” like we saw in Bolshevik Russia, then you are probably an antisemite who needs to sit down with a rabbi and learn about how the Jews have “suffered” for thousands of years.

Etan Carr, the so-called “Antisemitism Czar” at the State Department who will oversee this huge new infusion of cash, is on record that he doesn’t just want to eliminate antisemitism — he also wants people worldwide to learn to love Jews — the right way.

Talk about chasing windmills…

There isn’t enough money in the world to make that happen.

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Top Pentagon Officer Said Politicians Get ‘Very Rich’ by Supporting Israel

 ALISON WEIR  APRIL 18, 2023  ADLCUFIDOUGLAS MACGREGORJOHN BOLTONMIKE POMPEO

Top Pentagon Officer Said Politicians Get ‘Very Rich’ by Supporting Israel

Col. Douglas MacGregor on Tucker Carlson Tonight, January 8, 2020. (screenshot from video)

Senior U.S. Defense official Douglas Macgregor said that politicians who support Israel are only driven by money, and that the pro-Israeli lobby in the U.S. is trying to drag America into war…

He said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo “has his hands out for money from the Israeli lobby, the Saudis and others”

He also said of John Bolton: “Mr. Bolton has become very, very rich and is in the position he’s in because of his unconditional support for the Israeli lobby. He is their man on the ground, in the White House”

By Amir Tibon, Reposted from Ha’aretzNov. 16, 2020

Senior U.S. Defense official Douglas Macgregor, who was recently installed at the Pentagon by partisan loyalists of President Donald Trump, has come under fire for saying that American politicians become “very, very rich” by supporting Israel, with pro-Israeli organizations calling his remarks “antisemitic.”

In 2019, Washington was rattled after Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-MN) virtually made the exact same remark, tweeting that support for Israel in the United States was “all about the Benjamins,” referring to Benjamin Franklin, whose image appears on $100 bills.

Omar was denounced by members of Congress from both parties, and was accused of spreading antisemitism by Jewish American organizations, as well as by Trump.

[Editor’s note: See It’s even worse than llhan Omar said: The Israel lobby in full and NPR misleads public in report on AIPAC vs Ilhan Omar and NPR reporter defends one-sided report on Ilhan Omar

However, as of Saturday morning, leading Republican senators, who denounced Omar’s comments almost immediately in 2019, had all remained silent about Macgregor’s comments.

Macgregor, a retired Army Col., went even further than Omar, bluntly claiming that politicians who support Israel are only driven by money, and that the pro-Israeli lobby in the U.S. is trying to drag America into war.

Macgregor was appointed adviser to Trump’s new acting secretary of defense, Christopher Miller. His appointment is part of a purge of professional, non-partisan leaders in the Department of Defense, and their replacement by fervent Trump loyalists, which has been taking place since Trump was projected to have lost the presidential election to Joe Biden last week.

Macgregor’s remarks regarding the influence of the pro-Israeli lobby in the U.S. were first reported on Friday by CNN. The network quoted an interview Macgregor gave last year, in which he said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo “has his hands out for money from the Israeli lobby, the Saudis and others.”

Speaking about Trump’s former national security adviser, John Bolton, who like Pompeo is a strong supporter of the Israeli right-wing and the settlements enterprise, Macgregor said: “Mr. Bolton has become very, very rich and is in the position he’s in because of his unconditional support for the Israeli lobby. He is their man on the ground, in the White House.”

When asked whether politicians who are known for their support for Israel, such as Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), want to go to war with Iran, Macgregor replied: “You have to look at the people that donate to those individuals.”

He added that AIPAC has “enormous quantities of money that over many years have cultivated an enormous influence in power in Congress.”

Earlier this year, Trump had nominated Macgregor as U.S. ambassador to Germany, but his nomination was stalled after media outlets reported on statements that he made in which he criticized the German government.

It remains unclear why Trump has pushed in recent days for a complete leadership overhaul at the Pentagon. One possible explanation suggested by several leading U.S. media outlets is that the defeated Trump wants to complete the withdrawal of all American forces out of Afghanistan, and potentially also out of Syria, before leaving office. Macgregor has expressed support for such moves in the past.

ADL, AIPAC, etc. call Macgregor ‘antisemitic’

Ted Deutch said ‘antisemitic’ Macgregor must be fired (photo)

Slamming Macgregor’s remarks, Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL), one of the most prominent Jewish members of Congress, wrote on Twitter: “The only appropriate response from this White House to these antisemitic comments from someone with a distorted idea of the Holocaust must be a swift firing and complete condemnation.”

Echoing Deutch’s sentiments, Jonathan Greenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League warned that “There is no place in our government for these ugly, antisemitic conspiracy theories that wealthy Jews are controlling the government.”

AIPAC, considered the most powerful pro-Israel lobby in the U.S., called Macgregor’s comments “ill-informed and illegitimate” and said that his words will not deter the organization from continuing its work.

Christians United for Israel, the largest grassroots pro-Israeli organization in the U.S., also denounced Macgregor’s comments, writing in a tweet: ” Douglas Macgregor’s comments regarding Israel are repugnant. Antisemitism has no place in the US government.” The organization has been supportive of many of President Trump’s policies regarding Israel over the past four years.

Editor’s note:

Christians United for Israel (CUFI): CUFI is a right-wing Evangelical Christian organization that was long run by David Brog, a Jewish American attorney who previously practiced corporate law in Tel Aviv, Israel. He’s the author of Reclaiming Israel’s History and executive director of the Maccabee Task Force, funded by American billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who once said he regretted serving in the US Army instead of the Israeli military. In 2007, the Forward newspaper listed Brog in its “Forward 50” most influential Jews in America. According to Charisma News, “Brog is the powerhouse behind the Christian organization, yet he’s also a conservative (non-Messianic) Jew.” The article reports: “Brog, who was chief of staff to liberal Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania for seven years, is said to run CUFI like a political campaign. He has talking points, stays focused and rallies his constituency.” Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak is Brog’s cousin.”

The current Co-Executive Director is Shari Dollinger, also Jewish, who was listed in the Jerusalem Post‘s “50 Most Influential Jews.” The titular founder of CUFI is John Hagee. CUFI, which distorts Biblical teachings, has high-level contacts with the Israeli government. It has a lobbying arm, called CUFI Action Fund, first reported in The Washington Post, run by Gary Bauer, one of the signers of the Statement of Principles of Project for the New American Century (PNAC) on June 3, 1997. Bauer also serves on the board of the Emergency Committee for Israel. In 2010 he received the Defender of Israel Award from the Zionist Organization of America.

CUFI Action Fund’s Communications Director is Ari Morgenstern, an Israeli citizen who previously served at the Israeli Embassy in Washington. The fund, Bauer said, will have a multimillion-dollar budget and a dozen staffers who will focus on pro-Israel lobbying among members of Congress and presidential candidates. In 2017 it began a scorecard of legislators’ every vote and comment about Israel. Another funder is Bernard Marcus, founder and director of the Republican Jewish Coalition. Despite a budget of $7 million, CUFI may be losing ground as more evangelicals learn the facts about Israel.

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