Len, I think the US has adopted the same policy vis-a-vis Judeofascism as the FDR administration's policy towards Nazism... It's a rather short-sighted policy.
In the 1930s and up to 1941, the US establishment was rather pro-Nazi (Ch. Lindbergh, Henry Ford, Joseph Kennedy, etc.) and the US administration tried to keep a middle-of-the-road approach toward Nazism and democracy (in Europe). Likewise, today, we can see that Prez Bush struggles to stick to a middle-of-the-road position between Judeofascism and freedom for the Palestinian people. Of course, from an "AmericaFirst" viewpoint, such attitude is quite legitimate: so long as America can safely be shielded from Eurasian Judeofascism, there's no need for US authorities to jeopardize America's blissfulness by taking sides with one or the other party abroad. However, as History shows us, Judeofascism, like its Nazi prequel, can spoil the whole of Europe, the Middle East, Russia, North Africa, and, eventually, the US itself...
Gus |