Republicans condemned for smearing impeachment witnesses born abroad
Republicans and Donald Trump have sought to smear
key witnesses in the impeachment inquiry against the president as having dual
or mixed loyalties to the US, due to being born abroad.
The move has sparked condemnation as a bigoted
tactic that has maligned career US diplomats and officials as being potentially
disloyal to their adopted country due to not being born in America.
The attacks have focused on the Ukraine ambassador
Marie Yovanovitch, the National Security Council Ukraine expert Alexander
Vindman, and the former White House Russia security expert Fiona Hill.
Trump called the Canadian-born Yovanovitch “bad news”.
The British-born Hill told congressional investigators that accusations against
Yovanovitch related to a “mishmash of conspiracy theories … an idea of an
association between her and George Soros”.
Hill also said far-right conspiracy theories that
she herself was a “Soros mole in the White House, of colluding with all kinds
of enemies of the President, and, you know, of various improprieties”
resurfaced after her deposition before the House intelligence committee was
announced.
Having links – real or imagined – to Soros, a
Hungary-born billionaire philanthropist who survived the Holocaust, has become
a “dog-whistle” for antisemitic abuse.
The attacks against Vindman – who was born to a
Jewish family in Ukraine and fled the Soviet Union with his family at age
three, subsequently settling in Brooklyn, have been particularly visceral.
Vindman is also a decorated US veteran who served in Iraq.
The Fox & Friends television host Brian
Kilmeade, for example, said of Vindman: “We also know he was born in the Soviet
Union, emigrated with his family young. He tends to feel simpatico with the
Ukraine.”
The former Republican congressman Sean Duffy claimed
on CNN: “It seems very clear that he is incredibly concerned about Ukrainian
defense. I don’t know that he’s concerned about American policy … We all have
an affinity to our homeland, where we came from.” On Twitter, Trump’s lawyer
Rudy Giuliani said in relation to Vindman: “A US gov employee who has
reportedly been advising two gov’s? No wonder he is confused and feels
pressure.”
The assaults on the trio’s characters reflect an
anti-immigrant – and often, antisemitic – belief that foreign-born US officials
maintain a dual loyalty to some outside homeland. While immigrants to the US –
including those from the former Soviet Union – might maintain familial or
cultural ties, they overwhelmingly embrace being American, experts told the
Guardian.
“The theme of dual loyalty runs like a thread
throughout American history and the reason for that is immigration has had an
important role for the people in North America,” said Alan Kraut, a history
professor at American University and member of the school’s Jewish Studies
faculty.
In the United States’ early years, people questioned
others’ purported allegiance to France or Britain. During the second world war,
the internment of Japanese Americans stemmed from the erroneous belief they
were “a national security risk because they were accused of having dual
loyalty”, Kraut explained. Irish Americans were sometimes seen, because of the
strength of their Catholic faith, as having an allegiance to the pope.
Antisemites
use the charge of dual loyalty to fuel antisemitism
Since 1948, the “dual loyalty” claim against
American Jews has generally been that they “have a dual loyalty to Israel more
than the United States”.
“Antisemites use the charge of dual loyalty to fuel
antisemitism,” Kraut said . “While it might be sort of déclassé to say, sort
of, ‘Jews are an inferior race’, it’s not déclassé to say ‘the problem with
Jews in America [is] dual loyalty’.”
Kees Boterbloem, a professor and history graduate director
at the University of South Florida, said of Vindman: “I have no doubt that he
and his twin brother are absolutely loyal to the United States,” especially
since the country they were born in – the Soviet Union – no longer exists.
“How can you be loyal to something that’s no longer
there?” he said.
Alina Polyakova, a fellow at the Brookings
Institution who is an expert on Ukraine, Russia, and Europe, said there
persisted an antisemitic narrative that Jewish immigrants were “never fully”
part of their new countries.
“Certainly, [Vindman’s] parents would have
experienced that exact same notion because of their Jewish identities. They
weren’t ‘actually’ Ukrainian. They weren’t ‘actually’ Russian. They weren’t
‘fully’ citizens of the Soviet Union,” she said.
The attacks were brought up in the hearings last
week.
George Kent, the deputy assistant secretary of state
who leads Ukraine policy, ended his initial statement with a resounding defense
of his colleagues.
“I would like to conclude my opening remarks with an
observation about some of my fellow public servants who have come under
personal attack,” Kent said to the House intelligence committee, naming
Yovanovitch, Vindman, and Hill.
“Masha, Alex, and Fiona were born abroad before
their families or they themselves personally chose to immigrate to the United
States. They all made the professional choice to serve the United States as
public officials, helping shape our national security policy, towards Russia in
particular. And we and our national security are the better for it.”