SPECIAL REPORT Presidential Debate U.S., Israel Need Kerry Now E very four years under our Constitution, we have the privilege of deciding which presidential nominee is best for America. In my opinion, both our national good and the security and independence of the State of Israel require us to retire George W. Bush and elect John F. Kerry. John Kerry has been an unabated supporter of Israel for his 20 years as senator. Why should he change? He has publicly supported every Israeli issue we care about, including the West Bank security fence, non- recognition of the Palestinian Authority's Yasser Arafat, Israel's right to respond to terrorism and retaining Israel's military superiority. Mandell L. "Bill" Berman is a Southfield-based philanthropist, Jewish communal and Detroit civic leader, founder of the national Jewish Experiences for Families program and past president of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. He's the guiding force behind Jewish education in metro Detroit. He helped fund U.S. Jewry's lat- est population survey. He has been a strong supporter of financial aid to Israel and the U.S. backing of Israel at the United Nations. Israel's greatest current threat is Iran. Kerry understands that a nuclear-armed Iran poses an unac- ceptable risk to the U.S., to Israel and to the free world. Does Bush? Look at his record. We've invaded Iraq with no weapons of mass destruction and have ignored Israel's most dangerous enemy, Iran. During the past two years, Bush has distanced the U.S. from Israel — from active, in-place American sup- port. Kerry has promised — and I believe him — the U.S. will, through a full-time representative in the Middle East, work for a real Palestinian effort to establish securi- ty, and give real support to ensure that Gaza, after withdrawal, will not remain a haven for terrorists. Kerry has promised never to make conces- sions to compromise Israel's security. Bush has confused us and failed to admit mistakes in Iraq or in our relationship to our allies around the world. Why should we Bush came into office with a believe that he would be bet- surplus of $263 billion. ter for Israel than Kerry? Today, four years later, the Internationally and diplo- country has a deficit of matically, we've alienated our something close to $413 bil- friends. Globalization lion. What will it be four requires that America not try years from now? to go it alone. Kerry will In four years, Bush has repair our worldwide rela- MANDELL never vetoed a spending bill. tionships. Our future and L. BERMAN This administration has our children's future security Special to the brought fiscal irresponsibility depends upon having allies to a level unseen in a modern Jewish News who will work with us as we era. As the New York Times face all of the challenges of a fast- has said, "If he wins re-election, changing world, darkened by terror- domestic and foreign financial mar- ism, spawned by the disaffected and kets will know that fiscal recklessness religiously intolerant in the Arab will continue. Along with record world. In my view, to fight global trade imbalances, that increases the terrorism, we need a president who chances of a financial crisis, like an will admit mistakes and will work uncontrolled decline of the dollar, open and constructively with our and higher long-term interest rates." Allies to protect America. That's On Bush's watch, we have lost 1.6 John Kerry. million private-sector jobs, making him the first president to lose jobs since Herbert Hoover. Kerry claims Bush's Shortcomings to have a plan to turn this around. I What we don't need, and cannot risk admit that is not going to be easy in retaining, is a closed-minded "born- this globalized era, but the loss of again" who can't admit error. George high-paying jobs in Michigan and Bush: A N an I Know, Respect 0 ne of the many benefits of growing older is the ability to reflect on the accumulation of life experiences and the character of the great many people you come to know. I lived through the Great Depression, a time so uncertain that vast segments of our society were in doubt as to when their next meal might come. I lived through a time when the burning seeds of hatred began to grow in Europe and Japan. I watched as America withdrew from the world, and for which both America and the world would later suffer. I watched as the Western democra- cies refused to confront the malignan- JIST 10/22 2004 46 Max M. Fisher is a Franklin-based industrialist, philanthropist, Jewish com- munal and Detroit civic leader, and adviser to U.S. presidents and Israeli prime ministers. He's the acknowledged patriarch of Detroit Jewry, the driving force behind Federation's Annual Campaign and a past president of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. He funded the new Max M Fisher Music Center in Detroit. cy of fascism, in the fervent hope that this ideology would somehow dissipate on its own. I watched as well-inten- tioned leaders sought to accommodate the demands of dictators to ensure peace at all costs. And I watched as the efforts to save a relatively few lives by failing to confront fascism early on resulted in the death of more than 50 million people, the genocide of European Jewry, and the virtual destruction of Europe. As tragic as were the mistakes that drove the Western democracies to fol- low the wrong path, those lives were not lost in vain, for we learned from such mistakes. We recognized the need for a Jewish state to ensure that such tragedies as the Holocaust would not happen again — and we made it so. We recognized that the spread of freedom and democracy were the best inoculation against the warping effect of totalitarian regimes. In critical times, we came to choose leaders, like Winston Churchill, who never wavered in their absolute conviction that we must never entreat tyranny, that we must confront it at all costs, even at the risk of losing everything we hold dear.Leaders like Churchill do not win wars. Armies win wars. The civilian populations that back them up win wars. What leaders can do is act as our moral compass, guiding us through the treacherous straits of war, act as our standard bearer, and personify the resolve we all wish we had in uncertain times. and conviction, the free world was ultimately saved from the barbarity of fascism. I person- ally know another such leader — George W. Bush. I have watched him come of age politically. And I have seen that for which he is willing to MAX M. be disliked. I have watched FISHER him stand by Israel, and suffer Special to the the deprecation of most Arab Jewish News and most European leaders as True To Principle a result. I have watched him I have been fortunate to know stand fast when lesser leaders many leaders, including a few great would have taken the diplomatically leaders. One characteristic that all expedient route of putting greater pres- leaders share is the desire to be liked. sure on Israel. But what distinguishes truly great lead- I have watched the true measure of ers from the rest is not that for which the man as he stood in an unscripted they are willing to be liked; rather the moment at the gravesite we call mark of a truly great leader is that for Auschwitz to declare, "This site is a which they are willing to be disliked. sobering reminder that when we find Churchill remained isolated and anti-Semitism, whether it be in Europe ostracized for years leading up to or anywhere else, mankind must come World together to fight such dark impulses. War II because he had the moral And this site is also a strong reminder clarity to recognize the threat of fas- that the civilized world must never for- cism for what it was, and he never get what took place on this site. May wavered from his conviction. Lesser God bless the victims and the families people would have given up. He did of the victims, and may we always not, and as a result of his leadership remember." I know first hand that