ABSTRACT

Jerome Segal is reported as describing himself in newspapers as "the Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO's) Jewish adviser". Segal represents a whole phalanx of Golah-Jews writing about what the State of Israel should or should not do to solve its problems. Stockholm presented the spectacle of citizens of one country negotiating with a second country about the vital—the most vital—concerns of a third country, and that seems to the author simply unprecedented in the affairs of states and nations. Except of course for the absurdity of Stockholm and what it represents: the meddling of Golah-Jews in Israeli public policy. And there is the case of Rita Hauser, also of the Stockholm Five, now described as "a high-profile New York philanthropist whose former law firm was a registered agent of the Palestinian Authority". The counterpart to the imaginative world of the Stockholm Five is the mentality of Jonathan Pollard, but he paid for his commitment, and for them it was without charge.