Difference between revisions of "Benjamin Weinthal"

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==Views on Iran==
 
==Views on Iran==
  
In November 2010 Weinthal was identified by investigative journalists Jim Lobe and Ali Gharib as part of the group of "Neo-conservatives and other war hawks" who responded to the anti-Iran tilt of the first round of "Cablegate" (a collection of classified diplomatic cables leaked by WikiLeaks) "with barely concealed glee."<ref>Ali Gharib and Jim Lobe, [http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53704 "Wikileaks Reveals Treacherous Terrain for Iran Policy"], IPS, 29 November 2010</ref> In an article titled "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right" published by the [[National Review]] Weinthal writes:  
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In November 2010 Weinthal was identified by investigative journalists Jim Lobe and Ali Gharib as part of the group of "Neo-conservatives and other war hawks" who responded to the anti-Iran tilt of the first round of "Cablegate" (a collection of classified diplomatic cables leaked by WikiLeaks) "with barely concealed glee."<ref name=lobe>Ali Gharib and Jim Lobe, [http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53704 "Wikileaks Reveals Treacherous Terrain for Iran Policy"], IPS, 29 November 2010</ref> In an article titled "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right" published by the [[National Review]] Weinthal writes:  
  
:...the most interesting thing to come from the latest WikiLeaks round is Arab world leaders’ being forced to come out of the diplomatic closet and declare Iran’s regime the number one enemy in the Middle East. In the Israeli media, defense analysts are concluding that the leaked comments vindicate Israel’s longstanding position on the need for swift and powerful action against Iran’s out-of-control regime.<ref>Benjamin Weinthal, [http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/254040/according-wikileaks-israel-was-right-benjamin-weinthal "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right"], National Review Online, 29 November 2010</ref>
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:...the most interesting thing to come from the latest WikiLeaks round is Arab world leaders’ being forced to come out of the diplomatic closet and declare Iran’s regime the number one enemy in the Middle East...In the Israeli media, defense analysts are concluding that the leaked comments vindicate Israel’s longstanding position on the need for swift and powerful action against Iran’s out-of-control regime.<ref>Benjamin Weinthal, [http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/254040/according-wikileaks-israel-was-right-benjamin-weinthal "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right"], National Review Online, 29 November 2010</ref>
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Gharib and Lobe also noted American diplomat and author Chas Freeman's response to the Israel lobby's favorable response to Cablegate: "The corollary to this is that Arab leaders very generally will not speak to Americans – though they will speak to others – about their fear of Israel. So the fact that Israel doesn't feature in these conversations says nothing other than the Arabs are tactfully obsequious."<ref name=lobe>Ali Gharib and Jim Lobe, [http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53704 "Wikileaks Reveals Treacherous Terrain for Iran Policy"], IPS, 29 November 2010</ref>
  
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==

Latest revision as of 14:00, 2 December 2010

Benjamin Weinthal is a Berlin-based journalist and fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies's[1] "Iran Energy Project." He writes for mostly right-wing publications including the Jerusalem Post, New Republic, Weekly Standard, and National Review Online.

Views on Iran

In November 2010 Weinthal was identified by investigative journalists Jim Lobe and Ali Gharib as part of the group of "Neo-conservatives and other war hawks" who responded to the anti-Iran tilt of the first round of "Cablegate" (a collection of classified diplomatic cables leaked by WikiLeaks) "with barely concealed glee."[2] In an article titled "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right" published by the National Review Weinthal writes:

...the most interesting thing to come from the latest WikiLeaks round is Arab world leaders’ being forced to come out of the diplomatic closet and declare Iran’s regime the number one enemy in the Middle East...In the Israeli media, defense analysts are concluding that the leaked comments vindicate Israel’s longstanding position on the need for swift and powerful action against Iran’s out-of-control regime.[3]

Gharib and Lobe also noted American diplomat and author Chas Freeman's response to the Israel lobby's favorable response to Cablegate: "The corollary to this is that Arab leaders very generally will not speak to Americans – though they will speak to others – about their fear of Israel. So the fact that Israel doesn't feature in these conversations says nothing other than the Arabs are tactfully obsequious."[2]

Affiliations

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 FDD, "Benjamin Weinthal", Foundation for Defense of Democracies website, accessed on 8 November 2010
  2. 2.0 2.1 Ali Gharib and Jim Lobe, "Wikileaks Reveals Treacherous Terrain for Iran Policy", IPS, 29 November 2010
  3. Benjamin Weinthal, "According to WikiLeaks, Israel Was Right", National Review Online, 29 November 2010
  4. Iran Energy Project, "About", Iran Energy Project website, accessed on 8 November 2010