ADL chief: Pollard case ‘on the verge of anti-Semitism’

Abraham Foxman says Israeli spy’s lengthy incarceration is sign of ‘ongoing vendetta’ against the American Jewish community

Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League (Miriam Alster/Flash90/File)
Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League (Miriam Alster/Flash90/File)

The Anti-Defamation League’s national director, Abraham Foxman, criticized the continued imprisonment of convicted spy Jonathan Pollard, calling it “on the verge of anti-Semitism.”

Foxman was quoted on the Pollard case in several Israeli news outlets on Tuesday, and echoed a statement he issued on the case earlier this month.

Someone is trying to teach the American-Jewish community a loyalty lesson, Foxman asserted in an interview Tuesday with Israel’s Army Radio. ”That to me is on the verge of anti-Semitism,” he said.

In a January 16 statement, Foxman said that when Pollard was sentenced in a plea bargain 28 years ago, many claimed that the sentence was anti-Semitic; however, an ADL investigation concluded there was no basis for such an accusation.

Still, Foxman said, the fact that Pollard remains in prison despite having spied for an ally shows that there is an “ongoing vendetta” against him.

Foxman adds: “If it were only a vendetta against one individual it would be bad enough. But it has now become one against the American Jewish community.”

Jonathan Pollard speaking during an interview at the Federal Correction Institution in Butner, NC, in May 1998. (photo credit: AP/Karl DeBlaker/File)
Jonathan Pollard speaks during an interview at the Butner Federal Correctional Complex in Butner, NC, May 1998 (photo credit: AP/Karl DeBlaker/File)

Foxman called for Pollard’s parole on humanitarian grounds. He called Pollard’s continued imprisonment “an effort to intimidate American Jews. And, it is an intimidation that can only be based on an anti-Semitic stereotype about the Jewish community, one that we have seen confirmed in our public opinion polls over the years, the belief that American Jews are more loyal to Israel than to their own country, the United States.”

The Foxman statement was in response to an editorial in Tablet Magazine which called for clemency for Pollard.

An increasing number of figures involved in government when Pollard was given a 1987 life sentence for spying for Israel now believe his sentence should be commuted and have been calling for clemency.

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