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Have you noticed the rightward drift of National Public Radio? I think it's unmistakable. That hasn't caused me to adopt Mitt Romney's position on the station's defunding. However NPR's validation of spurious right wing commentators has led me to petition my local station (WEKU) to replace "All Things Considered" with Amy Goodman's "Democracy Now!" After all, the right has enough air space with its nearly absolute domination of AM radio.
Case in point: On yesterdays "All Things Considered," Melissa Block interviewed Elliot Abrams about the pending appointment of Chuck Hegel, the former senator from Nebraska, as Secretary of Defense. Though a Republican, Hegel has been tapped by President Obama for this important cabinet post. His Republican credentials however have not prevented him from being opposed by neo-conservatives like Abrams who see him as "anti-Semitic."
Abrams' charge is based on Hegel's criticism of "the Jewish lobby." Apparently, the ex-senator is suspect not only for his use of that somehow objectionable phrase, but for pointing out that he had been elected a senator from Nebraska, not from Israel.
Additionally Abrams contests Hegel's appointment because of the former Vietnam veteran's seeming reluctance to endorse possible military action against Iran over its alleged nuclear ambitions. Hegel is suspect because he sees diplomacy and dialog as less destructive and more productive than yet another war in the Middle East.
Before voicing such opinions, Abrams was introduced as a former advisor to Presidents Reagan and George W. Bush, and as Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. What the NPR interviewer didn't say was that Abrams himself is part of "the Jewish lobby." He is also a convicted felon. Abrams, you'll recall, was found guilty of criminal activity for his role in the Iran-Contra affair and was later pardoned by George W. Bush.
Also unmentioned was Abrams' role as point-man in Reagan's wider illegal U.S. policy in Nicaragua costing the lives of nearly 100,000 Nicaraguan peasants at the hands of U.S.-supported terrorists. I remember quite well his interviews during the 1980s when he endorsed Reagan's ridiculous characterization of the vicious Contras as "the moral equivalent of the Founding Fathers." He also repeatedly (and falsely) described the Sandinistas as "totalitarian, Communist dictators."
Despite such discredits, Block treated Abrams as a trustworthy objective authority from just another Washington think-tank. In reality, she might just as well have been interviewing Oliver North, G. Gordon Liddy or Rush Limbaugh.
That NPR should validate Abrams' commentary without reminding its audience of such important elements of Abrams' biography is inexcusable. Similarly unpardonable is Ms. Block's failure to ask the obvious: (1) Is there a "Jewish lobby" or not? (2) Might Abrams be considered part of that lobby? (3) Was Hegel wrong in identifying himself as primarily responsible to his Nebraskan constituents rather than to Israel? (4) Why has Israel (unlike Iran) not signed onto the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty? (5) If Iran should be sanctioned and threatened for its alleged nuclear ambitions, why not Israel for its de facto possession of hundreds of nuclear weapons?
NPR habitually ignores such obvious questions. "Democracy Now!" never does. That's why I tune in more often to the latter than the former.