[Salon] ‘What America Can Learn from Israel’: An Interview w/ Author & Commentator Pete Hegseth | Israel Heritage Foundation



Title: ‘What America Can Learn from Israel’: An Interview w/ Author & Commentator Pete Hegseth | Israel Heritage Foundation
Getting to know Trump's SecDef designee Pete Hegseth. With his fascist line of thinking in the usual brown (for Fascist) highlight. 

For background, along with the Quincy Institute and The American Conservative (if Koch is still funding them, or just his militaristic allies of what is in effect also a Koch front group?): https://time.com/4310241/concerned-veterans-america-target-debt-koch-brothers/
"A veterans’ group with ties to the conservative Koch brothers is set to launch on Thursday a national anti-debt campaign, starting in four states with crucial Senate races this fall.
. . . 
"The group is organized under the tax code’s non-profit rules, which means it can accept unlimited cash without having to disclose its donors. The rules, however, insist that electoral politics cannot be its major focus." 
TP-Explaining the "balanced" QI, overwhelmingly NatCon, but with just enough "balance" to stay within non-profit rules, in my opinion. So you get a couple of decent writers, and then you get the New Right, NatCons, putting on events promoting far-right militaristic politicians, like Vance, Ramaswamy, and far-right ideologues like Mollie Hemingway, Saurabh Sharma, and the New Right promoting moderator on those events. 

"The fight over veterans’ health care has been long, brutal, and largely one-sided. Hegseth kicked it off in the early days of Barack Obama’s second term. Back then, he was CEO of a fledgling Koch-backed group called Concerned Veterans for America (CVA). He and other CVA surrogates mostly spun stories that framed the VA as a failed experiment in socialized medicine."


This is from my local paper. As background for context, Katherine Kersten is whom I first became active with as a "Conservative," in the 1980s with the two of us, and some college and law school professors whom we brought into it, the founders of the Minnesota Association of Scholars. That's the MN chapter of the National Association of Scholars. I was actually the principal organizer as I had made contact with Herb London and Steven Balch the founders of the NAS of NYC who encouraged me to organize a chapter. At the time, about 1987, I was neither a lawyer, nor a professor, and not even a college graduate, which surprised a few people, but wasn't an obstacle to forming the group as I fit in quite well with the dozen or so professors who joined us.  And with the Zuckers, is where I first began to learn about Straussianism in greater depth.

Working with Kersten, who is an attorney, is what first gave me the idea of becoming an attorney, in fact. Which is what I've attempted to do with my law degree ever since 9/11, to atone for founding the MAS! Which had some good, moderate,  people in it, such as Robert Spaeth a leading Democratic Party leader of St. Johns in MN, and Jerry Reedy of Macalester in St. Paul. I recruited him after seeing his name in a Heritage Foundation publication. He was pretty liberal in fact, but was a "Classicist," and became more Conservative at time went on. It's also where I met the Straussian Zuckerts, a wonderful couple, except for their political theory, as I came to know years later. Needless to say I hope, I no longer have any association with any of them, nor with the MAS, with Kersten going on to become, as a loyal Republican Conservative, the biggest warmonger in MN, at least until Hegseth came along. I may even have had a hand in getting the Center for the American Experiment off the ground in sharing some contacts that I'd made, and put the founder of it in touch with them. I have a lot to atone for. Now I find myself once again in "Bad Conservative Company," on this email list, with the many Traditional/National Conservatives here :-( With the former the ideological forefathers of the NeoConservatives I was associated with in the 1980s, and the latter the culmination of the Traditional Conservatives who first founded the Conservative Movement. With many of the latter coming out of the Fascist favoring side of the pre-WW II America First Movement. 


"In 2005, the then-lieutenant spoke to the newspaper about the conditions of the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, where he defended the facility against criticism.

“Photographers sometimes take pictures that make it look like American soldiers are putting the detainees in dog cages,” he told Star Tribune columnist Katherine Kersten. “That’s very misleading.”

"A year before that, three British Muslim prisoners had reported several instances of torture, forced drugging and religious persecution.

. . .
"While relatively unknown in Minnesota at the time, Hegseth had a burgeoning national profile due to his work as a fellow at the Center For The American Experiment."

Here's Hegseth's associates with the so-called "Vets for Freedom," like Concerned Veterans for America, an ultra-hawkish "Conservative/NeoConservative/Libertarian war-mongering group funded by the Koch!




"The group is part of a network of politically active nonprofit groupsbacked by the industrialist Koch brothers and other wealthy conservative donors. The Kochs have been a political lightning rod for years, drawing Democrats’s ire for using their wealth and political network to push a small-government agenda and influence Republicans.     (TP-It's far worse that, with their endless work to subvert the Constitution!)
. . .
"The group’s influence can be seen in two of the top contenders emerging to run VA. Trump met this week with Pete Hegseth, a Fox News contributor, Iraq War veteran and former president and chief executive of CVA."

And obviously as all things Koch, the "long game" is to enrich further libertarian Oligarchs beyond what they they make as integral parts of the Military Industrial Complex, which is where their main enrichment came from. And consequently, fills me with disgust as I encountered a loyal antiwar libertarian defender of Charles Koch who was so outraged by my criticism of him, that I could almost feel his spittle coming though my phone in his sputtering fury at me last spring. Needless to say, libertarians, and former intell officers and other Trump maniacs who believe his lies, are preemptively throwing up a shield around Trump with suggestions that the "NeoCons" are once again preparing to subvert him, even though they're Trump's handpicked cabinet!


‘What America Can Learn from Israel’: An Interview w/ Author & Commentator Pete Hegseth

Secretary of Defense designate Pete Hesgeth at a 2019 TPUSA event. Photo: Gage Skidmore. CC 2.0

by Sara Lehmann

11/13/2024, 11:44:10 PM

Those who love America often love Israel as wellPete Hegseth is in a singular position to appreciate the shared uniqueness of the two countries.

A military veteran who holds two Bronze Stars and a Combat Infantryman Badge for his service in Iraq and Afghanistan, he is a former CEO of the Concerned Veterans for America and a former chairman of Vets for Freedom as well as a graduate of Princeton University with a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Hegseth writes regularly for National Review and FoxNews.com in addition to being a Fox News contributor and analystHis new book, “In the Arena,” is an ardent plea for citizen commitment in an era of apathy. And it is an apt description of Hegseth’s enthusiasm as he eagerly entered the arena of Israel advocacy on his recent fact-finding mission to Israel attended by this reporter and organized by Dr. Joseph Frager, Dr. Paul Brody, and Odelya Jacobs.

The Jewish Press: What can you tell us about your background and how it influenced your relationship with Israel?

Hegseth: My parents come from a small town in Minnesota where I grew up as a Baptist. I never met a Jewish person until I went to college. When I did, the first thing I said to him was, “I read about you in the Bible!” It was from there and beyond that I gained a true understanding of Jews. Growing up an evangelical, I obviously had an enormous amount of respect and understanding of the historical resonance of Abraham and religions and how they’re intertwined.

After being in the military and having served in Iraq, I saw other views of the world and started to understand where Israel fits and where anti-Semitism comes from; how it is fostered in higher education and how lack of support for Israel is very indicative of other things. Through meeting wonderful people like Joe [Frager] and leaders in the senate and government, I have come to really appreciate the Jewish heritage and the Jewish state. I understand how geopolitically we are linked and how critical it is that we stand by such a strong ally.

From the perspective of a news commentator, how important is telling Israel’s story in the media?

I learned from serving in the Iraq war that you can’t refute what’s happening on the ground. Truth prevails. But it’s a matter of punching through the overwhelming wet blanket of the leftist mainstream media. I served in Iraq in 2005-2006. I came home from my tour during what looked like the darkest, most difficult days in Iraq in 2006, when the antiwar movement was at its height and when everyone said the war was inevitably going to fail. Yes, there were a lot of problems, but I saw seeds of progress. I saw that we could turn the corner with the right strategy and enough troops. I came back and led an advocacy group to make the case for a new counter insurgency strategy and more troops on the ground. Just so happened that we had a president at that moment who thankfully decided to do the exact same thing.

That taught me that even the overwhelming weight of the predictions by The New York Times and others that we were going to lose can be overcome by a concentrated view backed by a dedicated mission and the willingness to speak truth and then amplify it. But you’ve got to have people in the media and on the ground willing to amplify it. Because you can win on the ground, but if you’re not telling that story at home people will be seduced into whatever storyline they’re being told by news broadcasts and websites. You got to get the facts first so that you can beat the spin second.

Israel faces an unconventional enemy in the form of isolation through BDS, lawfare, campus intimidation, etc. With your background in the media and the military, what would you recommend to best fight this enemy?

There has been a long history of bipartisan support for Israel in the United States and I would want that to be the case now. Unfortunately, it’s become much more of a partisan issue. We have given away so many of our educational institutions that the next generation of citizens and voters in our country are not fortified with the basic beliefs and building blocks of previous generations. That is a scary thing and it makes what I do at Fox that much more important as we attempt to educate the next generation.

There are seeds of anti-Semitism that are still found in higher education. We’re taught about tolerance and safe spaces on college campuses except for things like anti-Semitism. We have to provide and support alternative viewpoints regarding Israel on campuses. We need veterans – who have actually seen the enemy and understand what our allies look like and what they’re facing – to articulate it throughout our institutions. We have to be more willing to publicly talk about Israel among citizens who think of it as an abstraction, who don’t truly understand the existential threat to it. And what can Israel do? Keep bringing more Americans to Israel in order to truly understand it and then they can go back to the U.S. as spokesmen. The more groups that can bring Americans here – evangelical Christians, Republicans, Democrats, Jews – the better. Because seeing is understanding.

How does seeing biblical and historical facts on the ground in Israel impact your impressions of the Holy Land?

It reaffirms the ties the Jewish people have to this land that have historical and real geopolitical resonance today. This is not some mystical land that can be dismissed. It’s the story of God’s chosen people. That story didn’t end in 1776 or in 1948 or with the founding of the UN. All of these things still resonate and matter today.

The facts on the ground and the truth of what actually happened can settle debates. It’s just a matter of affirming it. Because if you can rewrite history you can rewrite anything. If you can prove and demonstrate something, that changes the discussion completely.

What are some of the highlights about your trip to Israel that you hope to convey to Americans?

I came to Israel with an open heart and open mind to truly understand what it is to be Jewish, to live there with the threats the country faces, and to bring those truths back to America. Most people have almost no idea what it’s like to live in Israel and face the threats Israel faces. In fact, they’re infected by the left-wing narrative that always points the finger at Israel. Just like it always points the finger at America and finds every reason to place blame in the wrong spot.

I’ve been asked what Israel can learn from America. Each time I hear that I stop and say that you need to reverse that question and ask what America can learn from Israel. What always strikes me about Israel is its pervasive sense of purpose, an understanding that it’s something greater than oneself. This sense is intoxicating and infectious to me because there’s just a small percentage of Americans, most of whom have served in the military, who understand that. Predominantly, American culture today is largely asleep to the realities of the world we face, to the depth of the threats on the horizon. Israel is not asleep. It is forced each and every day to wake up under the umbrella of existential threats. And yet Israelis stand up each and every day and decide to fight back.

When I’m in Israel I’m reminded that history is not over. If there is one nation, one people who can stand and say, “Look how we’ve been treated,” it is the Jewish people. Instead they live in history, cognizant of history, chartering a course forward proactively. America has decided in many quarters that it doesn’t want to live in history anymore. It often looks at Western Europe, where they’ve decided to gut their militaries to pay for their welfare states. They open up their borders and they dump them in, and then they wonder what’s happened in their midst.

God’s people in the state of Israel understand their role. That understanding fortifies their ability to defend free people, democracy, and self-governance – all the bedrock principles of the West. When I look at Israel, these are the principles I absorb and say we need to remind America of.

Can you pinpoint a particularly memorable impression from the trip?

We went to a home in the Muslim Quarter that was purchased and refurbished for Jewish families by Ateret Cohanim and there were about fifteen young boys, aged around 10-16, singing and dancing. They were hopeful and optimistic and not afraid, though they know that they’re doing something difficult in a difficult place. They’re steeped in history. To me this was a powerful thing to see.

Would you attribute that to their religious beliefs?

Of course. That colors it, no doubt. But I also think that when a country is under siege and people want to wipe it off the map, it has an infectious sense of purpose that drives it to first principles that other countries completely ignore. It is not just patriotism for patriotism’s sake. It’s a turning to the Torah, to the Bible, to faith, to family and community. It’s a deep belief in having gotten back your country and defending the state God has given you.

In the twenty-first century the trend is very much the opposite, and I think that’s part of the reason why there is such condemnation of Israel. Israel is asserting its right to exist when the rest of the world is saying, “We’re over flags and nations and allegiances and faith.” It’s a multicultural, secular, humanist world coming in contact with and pushing back against a patriotic state of faith that is prosperous, pluralistic, and treats people fairly. These are all the things the world says it wants yet ironically rejects it in the one place where it’s happening.

It goes back to faith. If I hadn’t grown up with a steady stream of the Bible, with the stories of Abraham, Isaac, Moses, and David, then I wouldn’t understand this or appreciate it the way that I do. A lot of Americans aren’t growing up on that the way they used to.



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