n a perfect world, a reporter at last
week's press conference with George Bush and Tony Blair
would have asked Bush, in the presence of his principal
European ally, if he believes the European Union is the
Antichrist.
Although it sounds like the kind of Pat
Robertson lunacy that makes even the wingnuts run for the
nearest exit, it's a question Bush should be forced to
answer. Bush and other leading Republicans have lined up
behind a growing movement of Christian Zionists for whom a
European Antichrist figures prominently in an end-times
scenario. So they should be forced to explain to the rest of
us why they're courting the votes of people who believe our
allies are evil incarnate. Could it be that the central
requirement for their breathlessly anticipated Armageddon --
that the United States confront Iran -- happens to dovetail
so nicely with the neoconservative war agenda?
At the center of it all is
Pastor John Hagee, a
popular televangelist who leads the 18,000-member
Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas. While Hagee has
long prophesized about the end times, he ratcheted up his
rhetoric this year with the publication of his book,
"Jerusalem Countdown," in which he argues that a
confrontation with Iran is a necessary precondition for
Armageddon and the Second Coming of Christ. In the
best-selling book, Hagee insists that the United States must
join Israel in a preemptive military strike against Iran to
fulfill God's plan for both Israel and the West. Shortly
after the book's publication, he launched Christians United
for Israel (CUFI), which, as the Christian version of the
powerful American Israel Public Affairs Committee, he said
would cause "a political earthquake."
At CUFI's kick-off banquet at the
Washington Hilton, attended by over 3,500 members,
Republican support for both Hagee's effort and his drumbeat
for war with Iran were on full view. Republican National
Committee Chair Ken Mehlman
told the group that "no regime is more central to
the global jihad" than Iran. Just two days before, Newt
Gingrich and John McCain made the rounds of the Sunday talk
shows to sound the same message, leading Benny Elon, a
member of the Israeli Knesset, to comment to the
Jerusalem Post that their remarks originated with Hagee.
Rick Santorum and Sam Brownback also addressed the group,
and Bush sent
words of support to the gathering. Republicans, and
even some Democrats, spoke at CUFI events to show their
"support for Israel." But while public and media attention
was on the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, Hagee's
focus continued to be on Iran.
While the crisis at the Israel-Lebanon
border drew more mainstream media attention to CUFI's
activities, Hagee's supporters have long known that leading
Republicans are listening. Rabbi Daniel Lapin, a prominent
Jewish ally of the evangelical right (and friend of Jack
Abramoff) has said that Hagee "without question, yes,
absolutely" has the ear of the White House. Hagee's annual
Night to Honor Israel at his church has drawn prominent
Republicans, including Tom DeLay, who was the keynote
speaker in 2002.
Although Republicans would never admit it
-- they claim their support for Christian Zionists like
Hagee is based on their own support for Israel -- it is
clear that they know they need the votes of this
constituency to win. In the same way that Karl Rove courted
conservative evangelicals in 2004 by appealing to their
homophobia, Republican campaign rhetoric for 2006 and 2008
has already shown signs of playing to voters who have been
hearing hype for a war with Iran for months -- at church.
Ken Mehlman (R) |
While Washington insiders wonder what it
means when Republicans like Mehlman and presidential
aspirants Gingrich and McCain finger Iran as the central
player in an epic clash of civilizations, Hagee already has
spent months mobilizing the shock troops in support of
another war. As diplomats, experts and pundits debate how
many years Iran will need to develop a viable nuclear
weapon, Hagee says the mullahs already possess the means to
destroy Israel and America. And although Bush insists that
diplomatic options are still on the table, Hagee has
dismissed pussyfooting diplomacy and primed his followers
for a conflagration.
Hagee wields "a very large megaphone"
that reaches "a very large group of people," said Rabbi
James Rudin of the American Jewish Committee, who has
studied the Christian right for 30 years. With CUFI, the
pastor has exponentially expanded the reach of his megaphone
beyond his television audience. Thanks to the viral
marketing made possible by the hundreds of evangelical
leaders who have signed on to his new organization, his
warmongering has rippled through megachurches across America
for months. Hagee calls pastors "the spiritual generals of
America," an appropriate phrase given his reliance on them
to rally their troops behind his message.
The CUFI board of directors includes the
Rev. Jerry Falwell, former Republican presidential candidate
and religious right activist Gary Bauer, and George
Morrison, pastor of the 8,000-