Clinton, Obama: The Anti-Israel Factor
Here we are, days from Super Tuesday, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has barely been mentioned by any of the candidates. If past history is any guide, it won't be mentioned much and, when it is, only in front of Jewish audiences where effusive utterances of support for Israel will be offered. We all know why. Candidates fear to speak with any candor about Israel because they suspect, and not without cause, that the only people paying attention to what they say will be zealots.
Candidates are not dumb. They have seen the polls, which show that the overwhelming majority of pro-Israel Jews support the two-state solution and the peace process. But they also know that, overwhelming as that majority may be, it is a soft majority. Pro-Israel voters who favor negotiations do not vote solely on the basis of a candidate's position on the Middle East. They vote, like most Americans, on a host of issues that affect all Americans. Zealots don't vote that way. They vote (and make political contributions) based on one issue. Like all single-issue blocs they have a disproportionate influence on the way a candidate addresses their sole concern. In fact, the single-issue voter does not require all that much to gain his support. All he wants is for a candidate to mouth hawkish pieties and never ever to indicate any sympathy for Palestinians. Of course, these ritualistic endorsements of the status quo do nothing for either Israel or for the United States. Moreover, there is not a single candidate running for President who does not know that continuation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict grievously damages US interests in the Middle East. It is just that the candidates fear that saying so will grievously damage their political prospects. They are wrong. Americans of all backgrounds understand that America and Israel are both injured by the seemingly endless conflict. Just because they are not single-issue voters does not mean that they are indifferent to what a candidate says about it. They understand that you can't change the world if you aren't ready to change US policies in the Middle East. Most notably, we have to return to the proactive diplomacy of the Carter, Bush 1 and Clinton years in the understanding that simply abandoning US leadership means more death and suffering on all sides. And, of course, maintaining the status quo doesn't help Israel in the slightest. Candidates need to realize that the people who are demanding that they stick to tried and failed formulas are not so much concerned with Israel as they are determined that their standing as influence peddlers not be challenged. Getting Presidential candidates to grovel is heady stuff, and anyone who believes that the joy of it derives from love of Israel is awfully naïve. It's not about Israel. It is just fun and games. "Look what I got candidate X to say. See how he showed up at our dinner. Listen how he bashed the Palestinians." Then there is the truly ugly part of the game – this one played not by the power brokers but by the ideological zealots and bigots. That is the smearing of candidates as anti-Israel or anti-Semitic by invoking utterly meaningless past actions (Clinton's kissing Suha Arafat) or or flatout lies (devout Christian Obama is a secret Muslim). The Internet has revolutionized the delivering of information but, even more, the delivery of disinformation, lies and smears. The smear campaigns may not damage the candidates but they could do serious damage to long-standing strong relationships between America's various minority groups. It was the last century's most vile totalitarians who articulated the "big lie" theory. They asserted that if a lie is big enough, and repeated often enough, it will be believed. They were right. The lies about the candidates are not nearly as consequential but they are nonetheless destructive. The idea that these attacks are emanating from the lunatic fringe of the Jewish community is as ironic as it is troubling. Even more troubling is that supposedly intelligent people believe racist libels simply because they show up in their in-box. Meanwhile, of course, Israel's travails continue. The very policies pushed on public officials and candidates by supposedly pro-Israel advocacy groups have produced disaster for Israel. They ensured that US assistance to Abu Mazen's Palestinian Authority would be so stingy that Hamas would beat Fatah in the Palestinian elections. They supported only Israel's unilateral withdrawal from Gaza but not a negotiated agreement with the Palestinians that would have gotten Israel out of Gaza without encouraging the transformation of Gaza into a terror launching pad. They pressured the Bush administration not to insist on the immediate dismantling of the illegal outposts and checkpoints not needed for Israeli security even though such actions would have boosted Abbas and harmed Hamas. They encouraged neither prisoner exchanges nor cease-fires, nor a permanent settlements freeze, oblivious to how they were strengthening Hamas. In short, these status quo positions – which candidates are pressured to endorse – have done nothing for Israel, other than to perpetuate the misery typified by the words Gaza and Sderot. So what is a candidate to say, particularly about the Arab-Israeli conflict? I've written this before. A candidate should say: "If I am elected President, I will do everything in my power to bring about negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians with the goal of achieving peace and security for Israel and a secure state for the Palestinians. As a supporter of Israel, I believe that Israel's surest route to security is by reaching an agreement with the Palestinians. Furthermore, I believe that achieving an equitable Israeli-Palestinian agreement will advance America's interests throughout the Middle East and the Muslim world. Peace between Israel and the Arabs will only be achieved by means of US leadership and I intend to provide it." That should be the basic message just as it should be our basic policy. Grandstand rhetoric about a candidate's undying love for Israel is meaningless if not coupled with the promise of leadership to help bring it peace. This does not mean that a candidate should avoid expressing warm feelings about our Middle East ally. A majority of Americans share those feelings and would agree with any candidate who said that one of his priorities will be to ensure that Israel survives and thrives. But no candidate should be allowed to simply stop there. Americans, all Americans, need to know what a candidate would do end a conflict that not only threatens Israel's survival but has harmed American interests throughout the world. Pro-Israel policies should produce results that are good for Israel. That is obvious. Equally obvious is that the policies promoted by the single-issue crowd have produced the opposite. Pro-Israel? I think not.















just checking if this is working
February 4, 2008 4:00 AM | Reply | Permalink
Here's another reason why neither candidate is speaking about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict - Americans have - gasp! - more important issues right now than "Israel's travails." There are still some Americans who are selfish enough to think that perhaps we had better get our own house in order before we start in on the neighbor's.
February 13, 2008 4:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
BevD, for the amount of funding and other support we provide, Israel might as well be part of "our own house."
Not to mention that our myopic policy toward Israel is a major source of animosity towards us in the Middle East, as well as a font of recruiting propaganda for terrorists.
Great write-up, M.J. Rosenberg. Isn't the posture you suggest more or less where the rest of the Western world sits on the conflict, as well?
March 26, 2008 3:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
Wow. Excellent and spot-on. Kudos!!!!
-Mark
April 18, 2008 10:58 AM | Reply | Permalink