Keeping Watch On Campus Philadelphia established the intellectual premises for Campus Watch. hat has Campus If Campus Watch, headed by Watch (www Winfield Myers, has interrupted campus-watch. this charmed academic life by org), a project to critique and exposing what Martin Kramer improve Middle East studies in of the Washington Institute for the United States and Canada, Near East Policy has termed the Daniel Pipes achieved since it opened its "failure of Middle Eastern stud- Special to the doors this week in 2002? ies in America," it is because we Jewish News Along with like-minded consider the work of these spe- organizations — the National cialists too important to be left Association of Scholars, the David Horowitz uncritiqued. We hover over their shoulders Freedom Center, National Review and the and remind them that their egregious Manhattan Institute — it assesses what statements might well end up ridiculed professors are saying and doing, thereby as our "quote of the month',' or even cause helping to challenge academia's status quo. them trouble when they try to win tenure Critiquing professors is more revolu- or get a new job. tionary than it may sound, for academics As Middle East specialists themselves have long been spared public criticism acknowledge, this new accountability such as that directed toward politicians, wrought by Campus Watch has overturned business leaders, actors and athletes. Who their once-insular world. Their back- would judge them? Students suppress their handed endorsements in the form of testi- views to protect their careers; peers are monials of living in abject fear of Campus reluctant to criticize each other lest they, Watch offer one colorful example. Another in turn, suffer attacks; and laymen lack the is the statement by Miriam Cooke of Duke competence to judge arcane scholarship. University that "Campus Watch is the As a result, academics have long enjoyed a Trojan horse whose warriors are already unique lack of accountability. changing the rules of the game not only Ivory Towers on Sand by Martin Kramer in Middle East studies but also in the U.S. W Sponsored Trips from page 30 isn't right." Second, the assumption is — never proven — that when the guests return home, these officials will automatically support Israel. Why this was considered the expected outcome was never clear. I don't know of any study that has mea- sured the effectiveness of the trips by track- ing the public record on Israel of those who visited Israel on the organizations' dollars. Is it possible that at times information gathered on these educational trips only proves the point for those who are anti- Israel? Is it possible that some may not like what they see? A few years ago, when David Lawrence was publisher of the Detroit Free Press, he presided over, what at the time, argu- ably, was the most anti-Israel paper in the country. He was invited on one of these trips — as if the Free Press could not afford it — and after he returned, of course, noth- ing changed in the editorial pages. Indeed, Lawrence continued to write anti-Israel Sunday columns. (One local Jewish organization even tried appeasement: It, inexplicably, named him its annual honoree, again, while his paper continually castigated Israel). Third, many of the trips invite state, county and municipal politicians who have absolutely no decision-making authority or influence over U.S. foreign policy. The indirect benefit of turning a Detroit Council member, for instance, into an ally for Israel is questionable at best. Do Jewish community councils really believe that when such issues as sell- ing aircraft to Arab countries is before Congress, state legislators, county com- missioners or city council members will use their limited power to attempt to affect a vote on this issue? Given this limited power it is doubtful they would even be able to speak to the decision makers. Even if the trips were successful in turning some of these offi- cials into supporters of Israel, the value of this political friendship is debatable. But, the organizational sponsors of the trips respond, "We have had nothing but favorable feedback!' Indeed. What should the guests tell their hosts other than they are grateful for the trip, learned much about Israel and its his- tory, now understand the complexity of the issues much better and, if they have enough chutzpah, add that they would not mind doing it again some day — perhaps soon. If trip sponsors have understood some university as a whole." More positively, the Taskforce on Middle East Anthropology published a handbook on professional responsibility in early 2007 that calls for the implementation of steps long encouraged by Campus Watch. That said, the field's basic problems remain in place: analytical failures, the mixing of politics with scholarship, intol- erance of alternative views, apologetics and the abuse of power over students. Campus Watch's highest priority is to help stimulate a diversity of opinion, so that pro-American scholars — who today make up perhaps 5 percent of Middle East specialists — reach parity with the anti- Americans. This goal has two implications: • That professors today can no longer be expected to engage in disinterested scholarship and instruction, but must be balanced by those who will promote an alternative viewpoint. It is sad to see the ideal of objectivity crumble, but this is a reality one must adapt to. • That the anti-Americans do not have a monopoly on intelligence or skills, just a near-monopoly on power. The 5 percent figure does not mean that bright histori- ans, political scientists, economists, soci- ologists, anthropologists, literature and of the weaknesses of the financed-trips to Israel but, for whatever reason, were reluc- tant to end the practice, the Montgomery County Ethics Commission has given them the opportunity without taking any blame. If some officials who had planned to join the next trip are asking for an infor- mation package, the organizations can now quote the ethical problem as defined Legislators Tour Israel In search of economic development opportunities for Michigan, eight state legislators, representatives from the MEDC (Michigan Economic Development Corporation) and the Michigan Israel Business Bridge as well as several Jewish communal pro- fessionals and lay leaders traveled on a legislators' mission to Israel Aug. 13-18. The goal was to explore economic development opportunities and research collaborations between Michigan and Israel. Participants met with representatives from many sectors including biotechnology incu- bators in Nazareth and Haifa, Elbit Industries, Phoenicia Glass, Hadassah Hospital, the Israel-America Chamber language specialists, et al., are 19 to 1 anti- American, but that this faction has, since the late 1960s, gained a near-stranglehold over their departments. Just as a great ocean vessel requires time to turn, so does the university, where career-tenured faculty rule. Tenure not only guarantees them decades-long job security, but it also inures professors to the demands of the market place or the wishes of students, donors, and other stakeholders. It will take time, but there are grounds for optimism about Middle East studies, which underwent a seismic shift in the aftermath of the 9 11 atrocities. That event led to a surge in enrollments and attracted a new sort of student to the field, one less marginal politically and more publicly ambitious. As this post-9-11 cohort wends its way through the system, expect to see significant improvements. Campus Watch will be there to wel- come them. With luck, its mission will be accomplished, and it can then close its doors. LT] - Daniel Pipes is the founder of Campus Watch and director of its parent organization, the Middle East Forum. by the Montgomery commission. That should put an end to it because we all understand that the first consideration of any public official is ethics. I I A former political reporter, Berl Falbaum, a Farmington Hills-based author and public rela- tions executive, teaches journalism part time at Wayne State University in Detroit. of Commerce, the American Embassy, Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute and Johnson and Johnson. The mission was sponsored by the United Jewish Foundation. Participating in the mission were Sens. Ron Jelinek and Mark Schauer and Reps. Pam Byrnes, George Cushingberry, Kevin Elsenheimer, Gabe Leland, Marty Knollenberg and Steve Tobocman; Howard Edelson from the MEDC; Chuck Newman from the Michigan Israel Business Bridge; Susan Herman, Michigan Jewish Conference director; Linda Blumberg, planning director, Jewish Federation; and Greg Aronin and Beth Gotthelf from Federation's government rela- tions oversight committee. September 27 • 2007 31