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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
05.06.2008
Where it all Began

Today marks forty years since Robert Kennedy was assassinated in a kitchen off a big ballroom at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. He had just left the cheers of his supporters upon winning the California primary in which Eugene McCarthy and Hubert Humphrey were his opponents.

Even though Martin Luther King, Jr. had been assassinated barely two months before, Secret Service protection for presidential candidates did not yet then seem an especially formidable obstacle to mayhem and mischief. I worked on the McCarthy campaign and, believe me, anyone with the intention and a gun could have murdered Gene easily.

Anyway, an assassin chose Bobby as his victim. The assassin's name was Sirhan Sirhan. Almost nobody picked up on the fact that his name was an Arab one and that his identity was Palestinian, Christian, as it happens. In any case, this was treated simply as the deed of a nut case.

But that was not the real case. Read an article by Sasha Issenberg in this morning's Boston Globe, entitled "Slaying gave US a first taste of Mideast terror" with the subhead, "Analysts call Robert Kennedy's death a prelude to kidnappings and attacks."

Of course, as the historically astute reporter points out, the word "Palestinian" was not in currency at the time, a fact that I remind readers again and again as evidence the Palestinians themselves aren't especially tuned into anything remotely like Palestinian nationalism. In any event, Resolution 242, which was the UN's coda to the Six Day War, never mentioned the Palestinians either, let alone Palestine.

As it happens, the 1968 campaign within the Democratic Party was mostly about the Vietnam War. McCarthy entered the race, first against Lyndon Johnson who was forced out by Gene's triumph in Wisconsin. Poaching a bit on Gene's glory, Bobby entered the race. And poor Hubert, well, being vice president put him in the difficult position of having to support the war while as a candidate having to attack it, another indignity of being Johnson's second.

Vietnam was not on Sirhan Sirhan's mind when he shot Bobby Kennedy. Israel was. Sirhan probably did not know that twenty years prior, as a young man visiting Palestine, Kennedy had written four articles for the Boston Post, a now long-defunct local daily, deeply supportive of the Zionist cause. Read them here, with a short intro by Lenny Ben-David.

What he did know was that Kennedy was a backer of Israel, that Kennedy wanted American air power to be transferred to Israel. Enough for Sirhan, as he admitted to David Frost on television. Twenty-four years old when he committed his crime, he had come to the U.S. as a teenager, and with his baggage he carried the hatreds of the old country and acted them out in America.

There's been research done on Sirhan Sirhan that fills some of the details in. It is interesting to speculate why Americans were not intrigued by the Palestinian theme in the Kennedy assassination to ferret it out at the time. But, by now, much American blood has been shed by and for the Palestinian cause. And this is where it all began.

 

Posted: Thursday, June 05, 2008 3:08 PM with 6 comment(s)

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liberal reformer said:

I recall that sad June day; I was not yet fifteen and MLK had been assassinated just weeks before. I thought that there was going to be a race riot after the latter's murder at my junior high school but cooler heads prevailed. The 60's were apocalyptic times, or so it seemed then.

June 5, 2008 3:47 PM

thejauntyboulevardier said:

peretz,

You are right that the motive behind the killer Sirhan was Kennedy's support of Israel, and yes, that has never really been thoroughly discussed or even recognized.

I gave my recollections on that sad day on talkback about a week or so ago. I heard cbsnews do a tribute today on Bob and the recordings of that night and Teddy's eulogy in that quavering voice. It brought tears to my eyes again, as it always does.

June 5, 2008 4:53 PM

nbarry said:

Ah, yes, the motive that dare not speak its name in the mainstream media.

June 5, 2008 5:39 PM

LISAH said:

The "West," back then paid almost no attention to the growing threats from the likes of the Red Brigades, the Japanese Red Army, the Bader-Meinhoff gang, "Carlos," et.al. and the growing Mideast connections. So much of what's happening now traces back to those times...you sorta wonder along the lines of what if people had looked at what was happening outside the Vietnam war issue which so dominated attention...Governments seemed to make little or no effort to draw the lines that might have connected the dots...

June 5, 2008 5:53 PM

jacksondyer said:

"I recall that sad June day; I was not yet fifteen and MLK had been assassinated just weeks before."

I wa sin the service at the time and walked into a room with a TV set in the barracks and saw dozens of Black soldiers crying. It brought tears to my eyes too, especially since on my way to Basic Training MLK got on the plane in Atlanta which was taking me to Texas. I walked up to him and asked him to autograph a book I was reading. He looked at it, looked at me and then signed it. He didn't smile or say anything.

I wondered about it. When I got to my base all our books were confiscated and were never returned.

Years later I got around to reading a different edition of De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America" and understood why MLK didn't smile.

In the middle of that brilliant study there were some pretty racists comments about Black slaves in the US. I learned a lot from that book and one of the things I learned is that even great and wise books can be seriously marred by racist comments.

Had I never met MLK I probably would not have given those passages in the book a second thought.

June 5, 2008 9:17 PM

thejauntyboulevardier said:

jack,

that was a beautiful post...thanks.

June 5, 2008 10:02 PM

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