Noah Feldman

From SourceWatch
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Noah Feldman is a NYU Professor of Law who was appointed in 2003 by the Coalition Provisional Authority as chief U.S. advisor to Iraq for the writing of the country’s new constitution. On 7 Dec 2006, Harvard Law School announced that Feldman will join the Harvard faculty[1]. Feldman is an Orientalist, someone interpreting Islamic/Arab society.

Fledman clerked for Judge Harry Edwards, who was appointed by Carter, and David Souter.

Comment by Scott Ritter

On March 16, 2005, Scott Ritter was interviewed by Dennis Bernstein on KPFA's Flashpoints program and had this to say about Feldman:

The Shia contend that they won more than 60% of the vote. If in fact the Shia did win 60% of the vote, they now control a national assembly that is charged – it has one task only – that is, in August 2005 to vote on a Constitution for Iraq. Now, the United States presented the interim government of Iyad Allawi with a draft Constitution that was put together by a New York Univ. scholar named Noah Feldman. Noah Feldman is an Islamist, he knows Islam, he is also an orthodox Jew. Now, I am not saying this from an anti-semitic standpoint, … But I know Iraq very well; to have an American Jew draft the Iraqi constitution in which is stated that Islam will not be the state religion is an insult to the sensibilities of all Iraqis.
If you go to Iraq today, if you have contact with Iraqis, and you mention Noah Feldman's name they know who he is – most Americans don't. Almost every Iraqi does, and they know what he did – he drafted a constitution, which if the Shia have their way, will be rejected. Now, if the Shia reject this constitution it also rejects all the interim law that was passed by Paul Bremer that is still in place today. There is no Iraqi government governing Iraq; the law that is governing Iraq was passed by Paul Bremer, and gives the United States total control of the country. And we have total control as we speak today. If this constitution is voted out, not only will the Shia bring in a theocracy based on Islamic law, but also they will reject the transitional law that is in place today. This is what the U.S. cannot afford to happen; we say that we want democracy in Iraq, but when democracy occurs, and the majority wins, we cannot respect the result.

Affiliations

Feldman articles/books

External Resources

Contact

New York University School of Law Vanderbilt Hall 40 Washington Square South, Room 411C New York, NY 10012-1099 Tel: (212) 998-6711 Email: noah.feldman@nyu.edu

NYU webpage: www.law.nyu.edu/faculty/profiles/fulltime/feldmann.html

  1. Advisory Board, Project on Middle East Democracy, accessed November 18, 2008.