As'ad Abukhalil: America's Hezbollah Propagandist
By: Attorney John Hajjar
Family Security Matters
http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.10599/pub_detail.asp
Republished on the LCCC on 04/11/11
There is much more to As’ad AbuKhalil than his faculty position at the
California State University (CSU) Center for Public Policy Studies. The
self-described “Marxist-Leninist”-turned-anarchist,” “feminist,” and “atheist
secularist” is also an America-bashing, jihad-promoting, anti-Semite.
As'ad Abukhalil is not your regular left wing, anti-American, pro-Jihadist,
anti-Israel instructor who misinform students in the classrooms in which he
lectures at a California college. Far worse than that, he is the top unofficial
US-based propagandist for Hezbollah and its terrorist acolytes. The Lebanon-born
militant is known in the Lebanese and Middle Eastern American communities as the
mouthpiece of Hassan Nasrallah in the world of petrodollar-funded Middle East
Studies of America. Abukhalil owns a blog called "The Angry Arab," dedicated to
bashing the political enemies of Hezbollah in Lebanon, from US leaders such as
George Bush and Joe Lieberman to Arab governments including the Saudi,
Jordanian, Bahraini and Moroccan monarchies as well as Iraqi and Lebanese
politicians opposed to Iran and Hezbollah, such as Sunni PM Saad Hariri.
But one favorite person Abukhalil targets systematically is American-Lebanese
Professor Dr. Walid Phares. Abukhalil’s Phares derangement syndrome is deeply
rooted. Sheikh Hasan Nasrallah, the Secretary General of the terror group
Hezbollah, named Phares during the Cedars Revolution of 2005 as one of the
instigators of a 2004 UN resolution to end Syria's occupation of Lebanon and to
disarm Hezbollah. Since then, the California-based blogger harasses Phares
online and levels unfounded and untrue attacks against him.
Abukhalil’s latest demonization of Phares was triggered as soon as Republican
frontrunner Governor Mitt Romney released his elaborate foreign policy platform
and the names of 25 prominent advisors on national security, including Professor
Phares. Abukhalil, an "expert" in demonization over the years, published a long
diatribe against Phares, filled with lies and fabrications and, most
importantly, omissions. Both Middle Eastern communities in America and Middle
East studies experts were shocked by the extent of Abukhalil's rampage.
The propagandist wrote that "Phares’ first career began early in the Lebanese
civil war of the [sic] 1975-1990 when he allied himself with the right-wing
militias, armed and financed by Israel." In fact, Dr. Phares, a lawyer and
writer since the early 1980s, was a law student when the civil war started in
1975. His first public action was when he published his well known book in
Lebanon in 1979, titled "Pluralism in Lebanon”. It was in Arabic, and it in he
called for the recognition of the country's multi-ethnic society and called for
a federal solution.
Abukhalil ignored Phares' book - and all other books he published between 1980
and 1987 including "Democratic Dialogue," "Thirteen Centuries of Struggle,” "The
Lebanese Christian Democratic Thought" as well as "The Iranian Islamic
Revolution." Abukhalil also ignored the hundreds of articles Phares published in
al Nahar, al Liwa, al Amal, al Ahrar and, in Phares' own publication Mashreq
International, focusing on the identity of Lebanon, the minorities in the Middle
East, Islamic Fundamentalism and other hot issues of the time. Abukhalil seems
to dislike the fact that Phares "in his official curriculum vitae, describes
himself as a writer and lawyer in Lebanon at this time." Is it because
Abukhalil’s record didn't even exist in Lebanon's debate in the 1980s?
Dr. Phares’ literature and research were recognized in Lebanon throughout the
1980s, like it or not. Moreover, Dr. Phares headed a number of NGOs such as the
"Gathering of the Christian intellectuals" and the "National Committee of
writers" and helped launch a Labor Union in 1988. All that evaporates in "The
Angry Arab" trash piece. What the Hezbollah propagandist is interested in doing
is to insist that Dr. Phares "assumed a political position in the hierarchy of
the militias and founded a small Christian party in the late 1970s and early
1980s." Again, Abukhalil is not well informed.
For Phares was a leading member of a small political movement promoting
Christian-Democracy, headed by his brother in the early 1980s, before it was
revamped as a "Christian Social Democratic Party" in 1987, a party which, by
European political norms, would have been positioned in the center, politically.
The micro-politics of Lebanon's Christian community escapes Abukhalil who never
researched it or published anything about it, according to archives.
Distorting history at will, Abukhalil writes that
"after General Michel Aoun assumed the presidency of Lebanon in 1988, Phares
joined the right-wing coalition known as the Lebanese Front, which consisted of
various sectarian groupings and militia. The Front backed Gen. Auon in his
struggles against the Syrian regime of Hafez al-Assad and the Muslims of
Lebanon."
Again, Abukhalil - who claims he is a Middle East scholar - blunders.
Aoun didn't assume the Presidency but was appointed as a Prime Minister in 1988.
The Lebanese Front headed by Danny Chamoun wasn't formed when Aoun became a
Prime Minister in 1988, but in 1990 when the Christian areas of Lebanon split
between Aoun and the Lebanese Forces of Samir Geagea. The Lebanese Front of
Danny Chamoun, which invited Phares’ social democratic party, later called the
"Labor Party", to join the coalition, was precisely the one that called for
disbanding the militias, and obviously didn't include militias. The Lebanese
Front which had Dr. Phares serving as Foreign Affairs director included the
National Liberal Party and a number of independent political personalities such
as MP and publisher Gebran Tueni (later assassinated by the Syrians), at the
exclusion of the Phalanges and of the Lebanese Forces. The latter, towards the
end of the Lebanese conflict, were in disagreement with the Lebanese Front. Dr.
Phares left Lebanon the year the Syrian army invaded the last free enclave and
as the Lebanese Front was disbanded. Abukhalil has no clue of this world of
Lebanese politics that ended in 1990. He definitely is no expert in Lebanon's
political history, let alone the Middle East. He simply doesn't read, but
proceeds only with hearsay.
He continues by referring to what he called Beirut newspaper accounts, two
clippings he photographed and claimed as research, to state that Dr. Phares
"served as vice chair of another front’s political leadership committee, headed
by a man named Etienne Saqr." Again, the so-called instructor of Middle East
studies in California is confused.
Phares' statements and lectures in the Lebanese press and his appearances on TV
and his radio interviews are in the hundreds and available in archives. The
"propagandist" is no researcher at all. For the Lebanese Front seized from
existence in 1990 with the assassination of his president Danny Chamoun, head of
the Liberal Party. Abukhalil was fooled by a clipping from the daily al Nahar
stating that former members of that political coalition, then in exile, were
planning to re-launch the coalition overseas in 1991, one year after the end of
the Lebanese conflict. It never materialized. But the "propagandist" instead
goes on to claim that there was a slogan that appeared on Beirut's walls a
decade and a half earlier, during the real civil war of 1975 and quoted it
wrongly. There was no slogan by the the Guardians of Cedar militia stating “Kill
a Palestinian and you shall enter Heaven," but rather graffiti appeared on
Beirut’s walls in 1976, among thousands of other similar ones, that every
"Lebanese (fighter) should kill a Palestinian (fighter)" - a slogan rejected
anyway by the first Lebanese Front launched in 1977. Abukhalil then enters the
chaos by claiming that "the Front was also backed by Iraqi president Saddam
Hussein, a bitter foe of the Syrians." He meant the Lebanese Forces and General
Aoun as well during 1988, which was true, but this has nothing to do with Dr.
Phares who blasted the Iraqi Baathist regime in his writings of the 1980s, for
massacring the Kurds and Assyrians of Iraq.
Commenting on the departure of Phares from Lebanon and his emigration to the
United States, Abukhalil describes it as "resurfacing in Florida where he began
a second career as an academic 'expert on terrorism.' He obtained a PhD at the
University of Miami and seemed to model himself after conservative writer Fouad
Ajami, but without Ajami’s claims to scholarship." This bashing of an eminent
scholar who projected the rise of urban Jihadism in the West in three books and
of the coming revolts in the Arab world, unmatched by any other book, is
indicative of Abukhalil's obsession with Phares' successful career.
He goes on to say, "I remember attending the founding meeting for the Lebanese
Studies Association in the 1990s, Phares entered the room hoping to become a
member. Once people knew who he was, the hostile glances were sufficient to
drive him out." This episode as described never happened, for Dr. Phares was a
member of the Middle East Studies Association for years and attended and spoke
at many of its panels and had received an invitation to join the Lebanese
Studies Association. This could be Abukhalil's angry imagination, easily
detectable from his blog's name "The Angry Arab."
Abukhalil rages against Phares' career and successes showing significant
personal jealousy, perhaps. Abukhalil's problem - he may not realize yet - is
that he is anti-American to the core, while the scholar he criticizes is
unashamedly a proud American. Most Americans would prefer the latter to the
rabid anti-Americanism of the Hebollah apologist. He fumigates at Walid Phares’
"Arabic name" that gave him “an indigenous aspect”, as if As'ad had eaten more
Hummos or Tabbuli in his life, or looks more Middle Eastern than Walid Phares.
Abukhalil hates it when Phares uses Arabic words, because perhaps the San
Francisco-based expert feels he owns the exclusive use of that language and only
anti-Americans can enjoy the use of Arabic.
But ridiculous statements aside, Abukhalil leaps into an obvious lie by claiming
that Dr. Phares "articulated Israeli definitions of 'terrorism,' in which
indiscriminate violence against civilians, even the killing of children, when
perpetrated by Israel, do not qualify." On this charge, a good lawyer (even a
bad one) can take this reprobate to court for libel. Not only nowhere does Dr.
Phares ever use such sentences, but he devoted 30 years to expose genocide and
mass abuses from Sudan to Kurdistan to Iran. Abukhalil lost it right there and
will probably feel the heat of public questioning about this fabrication.
Next, Abukhalil reveals more of his personal antipathy for Dr. Phares when the
darling of al Jazeera and Iran-funded al Manar is frustrated that Dr. Phares
"became a regular on Arabic news channels, mostly on Lebanese right-wing news
channels, but also on channels controlled by the Saudis." The man doesn't have
his math right. For Professor Phares didn't appear on Lebanese TV, (let alone on
right wing ones if they exist at all in Lebanon) for 19 years. But he certainly
was sought by Arab TV across the region including al Arabiya, the national
channels in Egypt, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Emirates, Algeria, Tunisia,
Iraq and more, in addition to the Arabic services of BBC, France 24, Russia al
Yom and, of course, al Hurra TV out of the US. In the Arab media sphere,
Abukhalil is known as the anti-American clown ranting against everything the US
does, and slamming any enemy of Iran's regime, including the Saudis and the
Lebanese, Iraqi and other Sunni leaders; while Phares is sought constantly as a
calm analyst explaining, with precision, US policies even though Arab anchors
and producers know very well where Dr. Phares stands on issues. Abukhalil is a
rabid talker, not very much liked in the Arab media, precisely because he
doesn't explain the issue well while Dr. Phares explains it articulately, in
context, and when needed, provides his opinion.
Abukhalil moves to his next frustration as he conceded that Dr. Phares
"has even made appearances on Aljazeera" and claims that "there is a curious
difference in Phares’ commentary for the Arab media. On Arab TV, he speaks
cautiously and does not make outlandish claims about Islamic terrorism. For all
his pro-Israeli statements in English, he never articulates them in Arabic."
Abukhalil makes at least one factual blunder in each one of his statements.
For by visiting al Jazeera's web site, one can easily view Phares' many
appearances on cross fire shows where he strikes back with strength against
propagandists who are both Salafists and Khomeinists. On al Jazeera, Phares
predicted an Iranian uprising and an Arab spring years before his book The
Coming Revolution was published. Abukhalil and his acolytes in the anti-American
propaganda machine know that all too well, as do the anti-Jihadist liberals who
speak the language. Dr. Phares has received mail from as far away as Iran's
Ahwaz Arabs, Sudan, the Berbers and women's groups in support to his calls for a
rise against authoritarianism and Jihadism. Abukhalil serves the interests of
the Iranian regime; therefore, he isn't popular with the democracy forces in the
region.
But it seems that deep below the surface of frustration with Phares’
achievements, Abukhalil has a personal beef. For Phares has refused to be on the
same panel with him, several times over the years, despite the fact that he
faced off with other authentic radical commentators. As early as a few weeks
ago, al Jazeera invited Phares to a panel with Islamist leaders who oppose his
views. He agreed to being on the panel but not with Abukhalil, precisely because
of the latter's unprofessional behavior and his disrespectful blogging style.
Abukhalil - and some in the Blogosphere - are light analysts. They don't see the
nuances in an academic analysis. He claims for example that Phares’ writings
"switched to a new argument: that Islam was the real threat to Western
civilization.” He adds "that toward that end, Phares can find—or concoct—links
between very different Islamic groups. In his analysis, Hezbollah, Hamas, and
Al-Qaeda amount to one global organization." This last blunder on substance is
inexcusable.
If Abukhalil is indeed a professor of Political Science as he claims, he can
surely grasp what Professor Phares is stating, that precisely, it is a Jihadi
Islamist movement that is confronting the West, not Islam as a religion. In his
book The War of Ideas: Jihadism against Democracy. Phares masterfully introduced
the notion that the Islamists and the non-Islamist Muslims are in a
confrontation inside the Muslim world. Abukhalil and his brand avoid this
debate, which would turn immediately to their disadvantage.
Last, consider Abukhalil’s cheap shot against his target. He writes that Dr.
Phares is not a "scholar” because he "has not been seen in Middle East Studies
conferences for many years." As if the petrodollars-funded Middle East Studies
Association are the measurement of scholarship. Professor Phares is absolutely
right not to waste his time in the company of those compliant scholars who
thrive from Gulf or Iranian money gifted to their programs. Luckily a new
petrodollars-free association is now up and running, The Association for the
Study of the Middle East and Africa, headed by Professor Bernard Lewis, where
Professor Phares delivers his addresses.
In the end we must disclose why we qualify Abukhalil, and his ilk, as "Hezbollah
propagandists." He appears constantly on Hezbollah-manned, Iranian-funded al
Manar TV, banned by the US Government for incitement to violence and
anti-Semitism. He also appears on Press TV, owned by the Pasdaran Iranian
revolutionary Guards - but not to defend the US, rather to bash it. In addition
he writes columns for the daily al Akhbar, funded by the Iranians in Beirut. And
to top it off, by his own words and broadcast on US radio, he meets with the
leader of a terrorist organization that killed hundreds of Americans in the
Middle East, the man he calls "Sheikh Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah." It is ironic
that, when Hezbollah guides terrorists in Iraq to kill US military, let alone
been involved per the UN tribunal in the assassination of Rafiq Hariri, As'ad
Abukhalil is in the business of meeting with the head of a terrorist
organization and bragging about it in public.
And speaking of the Arab Spring, ask Syrian protesters about their frustration
with the Hezbollah propagandist who, out of the US, blasts the Syrian opposition
in the media, while Hezbollah kills innocent Syrians on the streets of Syrian
cities. While Congress and the Obama Administration have committed to bring down
Assad the dictator, US citizen As'ad Abukhalil blames the demonstrators rising
against Iran's ally Bashar Assad.
As'ad Abukhalil, we know him, and the youth of the Arab spring know his advocacy
of Hezbollah. What puzzled us was the fact that Salon.com would open its pages
to a propagandist of this objectionable sort without even verifying the facts of
his story. As Abukhalil sinks in credibility, he takes the ship of Salon.com and
its parent company with him, down.
Family Security Matters Contributor Attorney John Hajjar is the US Director for
the World Council for the Cedars Revolution (WCCR). He has appeared on various
media, including Fox News; he debates Iranian commentators on Press TV; and he
is part of Lebanese and Middle Eastern NGO delegations briefing the US Congress,
the State Department and the United Nations.