Max Blumenthal gives the most thorough rundown, of Christopher Hitchens and his hypocracy that I have ever seen.

The Blog | Max Blumenthal: Hitchens Tries S&M | The Huffington Post: “Take Hitchen’s July 12, 2001 column for the Nation magazine eulogizing Israeli peace activist Israel Shahak. Here, Hitchens makes practically the same points he condemns Sheehan for supposedly making (sentiments that I don’t necessarily disagree with, but which are nonetheless hypocritical for Hitchens to now denounce):

Crossposted from Dameocrat Blog

Only the other day, I read some sanguinary proclamation from the rabbinical commander of the Shas party, Ovadia Yosef, himself much sought after by both Ehud Barak and Ariel Sharon. It was a vulgar demand for the holy extermination of non-Jews; the vilest effusions of Hamas and Islamic Jihad would have been hard-pressed to match it. The man wants a dictatorial theocracy for Jews and helotry or expulsion for the Palestinians, and he sees (as Shahak did in reverse) the connection. This is not a detail; Yosef’s government receives an enormous US subsidy, and his intended victims live (and die, every day) under a Pax Americana.

Hitchens’ expressed his opinion of Zionism more explicitly in a barely coherent November 14, 2001 op-ed for the Guardian, called ‘Ha, ha, ha to the pacifists.’ Accusing ‘the peaceniks’ of harboring a conciliatory attitude towards radical Islamic terrorists, Hitchens wrote:

    Come Yom Kippur I tend to step up my scornful remarks about Zionism. Whatever happened to the robust secularism that used to help characterise the left? And why is it suddenly only the injured feelings of Muslims that count?

Hitchens criticism of Sheehan is, of course, rooted in his role as a Hoover Institute-funded cheerleader for the failed policies of his newfound neocon fantasist friends. If we harken back to the days of the Clinton administration, however, we’ll see how Hitchens took a decidedly different tack on US foreign policy.”

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