Sarah N. Stern/Israel Hayon: Vilifying Walid Phares‎

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Vilifying Walid Phares‎
Sarah N. Stern/Israel Hayon/November 22/16

History has a strange way of judging people. American history honors ‎warriors of the past such as George Washington, Andrew Jackson, Douglas ‎MacArthur and Dwight D. Eisenhower, who struggled and fought for America’s ‎freedom and independence. However, the closer one gets to our current age of ‎moral relativism, the more critical we are of those who are thrust into a state of ‎conflict — those who have had to realize that their people’s survival sometimes ‎depends on defeating an enemy.‎

Walid Phares was born in 1957 to a Maronite Christian family in Beirut. By ‎the time Phares was in his 20s, Lebanon, which has always been more of a ‎mosaic of various religions and communities than a unified nation, had ‎plunged into a bloody civil war. Naturally, Phares supported his own Lebanese ‎Maronite Christian community’s efforts to defend itself in this brutal, ‎existential struggle against Syrian occupation on the one hand and Palestinian and Lebanese Sunni and Shiite terror on the other.‎

As a young man just graduating from law school, he published a book on ‎pluralism, promoting a federal system in Lebanon as a way to halt the war and ‎protect minorities. Always prolific, he published many books on history and ‎politics, submitted hundreds of articles and was widely interviewed. He also ‎published a weekly magazine promoting Middle East minorities. At last he ‎formed a small political party, the Christian Social Democratic Party, in ‎East Beirut. The young lawyer wasn’t involved in war but rather in ‎campaigns to raise awareness about the suffering in his ancestral land. He ‎traveled around the world to draw international attention to the conflict in ‎Lebanon and to offer solutions.‎

In 1986, toward the end of the conflict, he represented his small democratic ‎party in the representative political council of the local de facto government ‎known as “Lebanese Forces,” opposing the Syrian occupation, much like the ‎American continental army resisted British colonial occupation. Phares’ ‎intellectual skills ended up landing him with a task of diplomatic relations with ‎the outside world and reaching out to emigres. In 1990, after Hafez Assad’s troops ‎invaded all of Lebanon, he decided to immigrate to the U.S. to pursue his ‎doctoral studies and warn the West about the impending jihadi terror threats.‎

In the United States, he received his doctorate and has authored 14 ‎books. He taught at Florida International University and Florida Atlantic ‎University and has testified before various congressional committees. Phares ‎has continued to be a champion of human rights for persecuted minorities ‎throughout the region. He is a pre-eminent scholar of the Middle East and has an ‎uncanny ability to decipher the various players on the many Byzantine Middle ‎Eastern chessboards and what their ultimate objectives are. He has a piercing ‎intellect and a thorough grasp of the region that makes him a national treasure ‎during these complicated times.‎

Professor Phares is highly regarded and is a respected American intellectual ‎after 26 years of service to his adopted country. Since 2008, he has been an ‎adviser to Congress and the European Parliament. His book “Future Jihad” ‎‎(2006) became a best-seller, while his prescient book “The Coming Revolution” ‎‎(2010) correctly predicted the Arab Spring before it ‎happened. His most recent book, “The Lost Spring” (2014), warned about the rise of Islamic State ‎before it surged, correctly predicted the Iranian expansion and once again ‎called for Western support for civil societies in the Middle East.‎

In 2011, Phares was appointed as a national security adviser to presidential candidate Mitt Romney, and in 2016, Republican nominee Donald Trump named him as one of his foreign policy advisers. Phares defended ‎Trump’s platform on foreign affairs and Middle East policies and engaged in ‎diplomatic missions to explain the alternative policies of his candidate amid ‎intense criticism in the press. Among these policies were Trump’s opposition ‎to the Iran deal and his determination to confront radical Islamic terrorism. ‎These two defenses drew the ire of the Iranians and the Muslim Brotherhood ‎against the adviser.‎

Thus, both lobbies used the classic charge of Islamophobia against Phares, just ‎because he warned against jihadism. But beyond the usual Islamist talking ‎points, his detractors waged a smear campaign based on fallacies and lies. ‎They targeted his early life during the Lebanese civil war, since the public ‎today has little information about that conflict and the U.S. press cannot easily ‎fact-check the Lebanese press (printed in French and Arabic) from that time ‎period.‎

Because he lived his younger years through the bloody days of the civil ‎war and championed a free area to defend his Christian community, Phares ‎has been tarred and feathered by progressive left-wing publications such as Mother ‎Jones. The false reporting was debunked several times, for example in Family Security Matters and Breitbart News, ‎but the lobbies keep using it nevertheless. ‎

I expect this from Mother Jones, but I was shocked to see ‎that these exact same allegations have been repeated word for word in an ‎article in The Jerusalem Post by Ben Lynfield. The piece alleged ‎statements that Phares did not make and selectively chose parts of analyses ‎developed in academic seminars to draw conclusions he did not make. Senior ‎Israeli academics and former officials who knew what was happening in ‎Lebanon are now responding to this tract and more will do so soon.‎

Phares is a national treasure, and the incoming U.S. administration could well ‎use his depth of knowledge of the region, his piercing intellect and his infinite ‎sense of compassion and justice for persecuted religious minorities all over the ‎world. Phares has been a strong proponent of a Lebanon free of the ‎suffocating choke-hold of Syrian and Iranian-backed Hezbollah forces. He ‎understands the clear and present danger that radical Islam poses to the region, ‎and to the world. And he has been on the right side of history.‎

**Sarah N. Stern is founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth, a pro-Israel American think tank and policy institute in Washington, D.C.‎

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=17717