The Israel Lobby
John
Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt
For the past several decades, and especially
since the Six-Day War in 1967, the centrepiece of US Middle
Eastern policy has been its relationship with Israel. The
combination of unwavering support for Israel and the related
effort to spread ‘democracy’ throughout the region has
inflamed Arab and Islamic opinion and jeopardised not only
US security but that of much of the rest of the world. This
situation has no equal in American political history. Why
has the US been willing to set aside its own security and
that of many of its allies in order to advance the interests
of another state? One might assume that the bond between the
two countries was based on shared strategic interests or
compelling moral imperatives, but neither explanation can
account for the remarkable level of material and diplomatic
support that the US provides.
Instead, the thrust of US policy in the
region derives almost entirely from domestic politics, and
especially the activities of the ‘Israel Lobby’. Other
special-interest groups have managed to skew foreign policy,
but no lobby has managed to divert it as far from what the
national interest would suggest, while simultaneously
convincing Americans that US interests and those of the
other country – in this case, Israel – are essentially
identical.
Since the October War in 1973, Washington has
provided Israel with a level of support dwarfing that given
to any other state. It has been the largest annual recipient
of direct economic and military assistance since 1976, and
is the largest recipient in total since World War Two, to
the tune of well over $140 billion (in 2004 dollars). Israel
receives about $3 billion in direct assistance each year,
roughly one-fifth of the foreign aid budget, and worth about
$500 a year for every Israeli. This largesse is especially
striking since Israel is now a wealthy industrial state with
a per capita income roughly equal to that of South Korea or
Spain.
Other recipients get their money in quarterly
installments, but Israel receives its entire appropriation
at the beginning of each fiscal year and can thus earn
interest on it. Most recipients of aid given for military
purposes are required to spend all of it in the US, but
Israel is allowed to use roughly 25 per cent of its
allocation to subsidise its own defence industry. It is the
only recipient that does not have to account for how the aid
is spent, which makes it virtually impossible to prevent the
money from being used for purposes the US opposes, such as
building settlements on the West Bank. Moreover, the US has
provided Israel with nearly $3 billion to develop weapons
systems, and given it access to such top-drawer weaponry as
Blackhawk helicopters and F-16 jets. Finally, the US gives
Israel access to intelligence it denies to its Nato allies
and has turned a blind eye to Israel’s acquisition of
nuclear weapons.
Washington also provides Israel with
consistent diplomatic support. Since 1982, the US has vetoed
32 Security Council resolutions critical of Israel, more
than the total number of vetoes cast by all the other
Security Council members. It blocks the efforts of Arab
states to put Israel’s nuclear arsenal on the IAEA’s agenda.
The US comes to the rescue in wartime and takes Israel’s
side when negotiating peace. The Nixon administration
protected it from the threat of Soviet intervention and
resupplied it during the October War. Washington was deeply
involved in the negotiations that ended that war, as well as
in the lengthy ‘step-by-step’ process that followed, just as
it played a key role in the negotiations that preceded and
followed the 1993 Oslo Accords. In each case there was
occasional friction between US and Israeli officials, but
the US consistently supported the Israeli position. One
American participant at Camp David in 2000 later said: ‘Far
too often, we functioned . . . as Israel’s lawyer.’ Finally,
the Bush administration’s ambition to transform the Middle
East is at least partly aimed at improving Israel’s
strategic situation.
This extraordinary generosity might be
understandable if Israel were a vital strategic asset or if
there were a compelling moral case for US backing. But
neither explanation is convincing. One might argue that
Israel was an asset during the Cold War. By serving as
America’s proxy after 1967, it helped contain Soviet
expansion in the region and inflicted humiliating defeats on
Soviet clients like Egypt and Syria. It occasionally helped
protect other US allies (like King Hussein of Jordan) and
its military prowess forced Moscow to spend more on backing
its own client states. It also provided useful intelligence
about Soviet capabilities.
Backing Israel was not cheap, however, and it
complicated America’s relations with the Arab world. For
example, the decision to give $2.2 billion in emergency
military aid during the October War triggered an Opec oil
embargo that inflicted considerable damage on Western
economies. For all that, Israel’s armed forces were not in a
position to protect US interests in the region. The US could
not, for example, rely on Israel when the Iranian Revolution
in 1979 raised concerns about the security of oil supplies,
and had to create its own Rapid Deployment Force instead.
The first Gulf War revealed the extent to
which Israel was becoming a strategic burden. The US could
not use Israeli bases without rupturing the anti-Iraq
coalition, and had to divert resources (e.g. Patriot missile
batteries) to prevent Tel Aviv doing anything that might
harm the alliance against Saddam Hussein. History repeated
itself in 2003: although Israel was eager for the US to
attack Iraq, Bush could not ask it to help without
triggering Arab opposition. So Israel stayed on the
sidelines once again.
Beginning in the 1990s, and even more after
9/11, US support has been justified by the claim that both
states are threatened by terrorist groups originating in the
Arab and Muslim world, and by ‘rogue states’ that back these
groups and seek weapons of mass destruction. This is taken
to mean not only that Washington should give Israel a free
hand in dealing with the Palestinians and not press it to
make concessions until all Palestinian terrorists are
imprisoned or dead, but that the US should go after
countries like Iran and Syria. Israel is thus seen as a
crucial ally in the war on terror, because its enemies are
America’s enemies. In fact, Israel is a liability in the war
on terror and the broader effort to deal with rogue states.
‘Terrorism’ is not a single adversary, but a
tactic employed by a wide array of political groups. The
terrorist organisations that threaten Israel do not threaten
the United States, except when it intervenes against them
(as in Lebanon in 1982). Moreover, Palestinian terrorism is
not random violence directed against Israel or ‘the West’;
it is largely a response to Israel’s prolonged campaign to
colonise the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
More important, saying that Israel and the US
are united by a shared terrorist threat has the causal
relationship backwards: the US has a terrorism problem in
good part because it is so closely allied with Israel, not
the other way around. Support for Israel is not the only
source of anti-American terrorism, but it is an important
one, and it makes winning the war on terror more difficult.
There is no question that many al-Qaida leaders, including
Osama bin Laden, are motivated by Israel’s presence in
Jerusalem and the plight of the Palestinians. Unconditional
support for Israel makes it easier for extremists to rally
popular support and to attract recruits.
As for so-called rogue states in the Middle
East, they are not a dire threat to vital US interests,
except inasmuch as they are a threat to Israel. Even if
these states acquire nuclear weapons – which is obviously
undesirable – neither America nor Israel could be
blackmailed, because the blackmailer could not carry out the
threat without suffering overwhelming retaliation. The
danger of a nuclear handover to terrorists is equally
remote, because a rogue state could not be sure the transfer
would go undetected or that it would not be blamed and
punished afterwards. The relationship with Israel actually
makes it harder for the US to deal with these states.
Israel’s nuclear arsenal is one reason some of its
neighbours want nuclear weapons, and threatening them with
regime change merely increases that desire.
A final reason to question Israel’s strategic
value is that it does not behave like a loyal ally. Israeli
officials frequently ignore US requests and renege on
promises (including pledges to stop building settlements and
to refrain from ‘targeted assassinations’ of Palestinian
leaders). Israel has provided sensitive military technology
to potential rivals like China, in what the State Department
inspector-general called ‘a systematic and growing pattern
of unauthorised transfers’. According to the General
Accounting Office, Israel also ‘conducts the most aggressive
espionage operations against the US of any ally’. In
addition to the case of Jonathan Pollard, who gave Israel
large quantities of classified material in the early 1980s
(which it reportedly passed on to the Soviet Union in return
for more exit visas for Soviet Jews), a new controversy
erupted in 2004 when it was revealed that a key Pentagon
official called Larry Franklin had passed classified
information to an Israeli diplomat. Israel is hardly the
only country that spies on the US, but its willingness to
spy on its principal patron casts further doubt on its
strategic value.
Israel’s strategic value isn’t the only
issue. Its backers also argue that it deserves unqualified
support because it is weak and surrounded by enemies; it is
a democracy; the Jewish people have suffered from past
crimes and therefore deserve special treatment; and Israel’s
conduct has been morally superior to that of its
adversaries. On close inspection, none of these arguments is
persuasive. There is a strong moral case for supporting
Israel’s existence, but that is not in jeopardy. Viewed
objectively, its past and present conduct offers no moral
basis for privileging it over the Palestinians.
Israel is often portrayed as David confronted
by Goliath, but the converse is closer to the truth.
Contrary to popular belief, the Zionists had larger, better
equipped and better led forces during the 1947-49 War of
Independence, and the Israel Defence Forces won quick and
easy victories against Egypt in 1956 and against Egypt,
Jordan and Syria in 1967 – all of this before large-scale US
aid began flowing. Today, Israel is the strongest military
power in the Middle East. Its conventional forces are far
superior to those of its neighbours and it is the only state
in the region with nuclear weapons. Egypt and Jordan have
signed peace treaties with it, and Saudi Arabia has offered
to do so. Syria has lost its Soviet patron, Iraq has been
devastated by three disastrous wars and Iran is hundreds of
miles away. The Palestinians barely have an effective police
force, let alone an army that could pose a threat to Israel.
According to a 2005 assessment by Tel Aviv University’s
Jaffee Centre for Strategic Studies, ‘the strategic balance
decidedly favours Israel, which has continued to widen the
qualitative gap between its own military capability and
deterrence powers and those of its neighbours.’ If backing
the underdog were a compelling motive, the United States
would be supporting Israel’s opponents.
That Israel is a fellow democracy surrounded
by hostile dictatorships cannot account for the current
level of aid: there are many democracies around the world,
but none receives the same lavish support. The US has
overthrown democratic governments in the past and supported
dictators when this was thought to advance its interests –
it has good relations with a number of dictatorships today.
Some aspects of Israeli democracy are at odds
with core American values. Unlike the US, where people are
supposed to enjoy equal rights irrespective of race,
religion or ethnicity, Israel was explicitly founded as a
Jewish state and citizenship is based on the principle of
blood kinship. Given this, it is not surprising that its 1.3
million Arabs are treated as second-class citizens, or that
a recent Israeli government commission found that Israel
behaves in a ‘neglectful and discriminatory’ manner towards
them. Its democratic status is also undermined by its
refusal to grant the Palestinians a viable state of their
own or full political rights.
A third justification is the history of
Jewish suffering in the Christian West, especially during
the Holocaust. Because Jews were persecuted for centuries
and could feel safe only in a Jewish homeland, many people
now believe that Israel deserves special treatment from the
United States. The country’s creation was undoubtedly an
appropriate response to the long record of crimes against
Jews, but it also brought about fresh crimes against a
largely innocent third party: the Palestinians.
This was well understood by Israel’s early
leaders. David Ben-Gurion told Nahum Goldmann, the president
of the World Jewish Congress:
If I were an Arab leader I would never make
terms with Israel. That is natural: we have taken their
country . . . We come from Israel, but two thousand years
ago, and what is that to them? There has been anti-semitism,
the Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that their fault? They
only see one thing: we have come here and stolen their
country. Why should they accept that?
Since then, Israeli leaders have repeatedly
sought to deny the Palestinians’ national ambitions. When
she was prime minister, Golda Meir famously remarked that
‘there is no such thing as a Palestinian.’ Pressure from
extremist violence and Palestinian population growth has
forced subsequent Israeli leaders to disengage from the Gaza
Strip and consider other territorial compromises, but not
even Yitzhak Rabin was willing to offer the Palestinians a
viable state. Ehud Barak’s purportedly generous offer at
Camp David would have given them only a disarmed set of
Bantustans under de facto Israeli control. The tragic
history of the Jewish people does not obligate the US to
help Israel today no matter what it does.
Israel’s backers also portray it as a country
that has sought peace at every turn and shown great
restraint even when provoked. The Arabs, by contrast, are
said to have acted with great wickedness. Yet on the ground,
Israel’s record is not distinguishable from that of its
opponents. Ben-Gurion acknowledged that the early Zionists
were far from benevolent towards the Palestinian Arabs, who
resisted their encroachments – which is hardly surprising,
given that the Zionists were trying to create their own
state on Arab land. In the same way, the creation of Israel
in 1947-48 involved acts of ethnic cleansing, including
executions, massacres and rapes by Jews, and Israel’s
subsequent conduct has often been brutal, belying any claim
to moral superiority. Between 1949 and 1956, for example,
Israeli security forces killed between 2700 and 5000 Arab
infiltrators, the overwhelming majority of them unarmed. The
IDF murdered hundreds of Egyptian prisoners of war in both
the 1956 and 1967 wars, while in 1967, it expelled between
100,000 and 260,000 Palestinians from the newly conquered
West Bank, and drove 80,000 Syrians from the Golan Heights.
During the first intifada, the IDF
distributed truncheons to its troops and encouraged them to
break the bones of Palestinian protesters. The Swedish
branch of Save the Children estimated that ‘23,600 to 29,900
children required medical treatment for their beating
injuries in the first two years of the intifada.’ Nearly a
third of them were aged ten or under. The response to the
second intifada has been even more violent, leading Ha’aretz
to declare that ‘the IDF . . . is turning into a killing
machine whose efficiency is awe-inspiring, yet shocking.’
The IDF fired one million bullets in the first days of the
uprising. Since then, for every Israeli lost, Israel has
killed 3.4 Palestinians, the majority of whom have been
innocent bystanders; the ratio of Palestinian to Israeli
children killed is even higher (5.7:1). It is also worth
bearing in mind that the Zionists relied on terrorist bombs
to drive the British from Palestine, and that Yitzhak
Shamir, once a terrorist and later prime minister, declared
that ‘neither Jewish ethics nor Jewish tradition can
disqualify terrorism as a means of combat.’
The Palestinian resort to terrorism is wrong
but it isn’t surprising. The Palestinians believe they have
no other way to force Israeli concessions. As Ehud Barak
once admitted, had he been born a Palestinian, he ‘would
have joined a terrorist organisation’.
So if neither strategic nor moral arguments
can account for America’s support for Israel, how are we to
explain it?
The explanation is the unmatched power of the
Israel Lobby. We use ‘the Lobby’ as shorthand for the loose
coalition of individuals and organisations who actively work
to steer US foreign policy in a pro-Israel direction. This
is not meant to suggest that ‘the Lobby’ is a unified
movement with a central leadership, or that individuals
within it do not disagree on certain issues. Not all Jewish
Americans are part of the Lobby, because Israel is not a
salient issue for many of them. In a 2004 survey, for
example, roughly 36 per cent of American Jews said they were
either ‘not very’ or ‘not at all’ emotionally attached to
Israel.
Jewish Americans also differ on specific
Israeli policies. Many of the key organisations in the
Lobby, such as the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) and the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish
Organisations, are run by hardliners who generally support
the Likud Party’s expansionist policies, including its
hostility to the Oslo peace process. The bulk of US Jewry,
meanwhile, is more inclined to make concessions to the
Palestinians, and a few groups – such as Jewish Voice for
Peace – strongly advocate such steps. Despite these
differences, moderates and hardliners both favour giving
steadfast support to Israel.
Not surprisingly, American Jewish leaders
often consult Israeli officials, to make sure that their
actions advance Israeli goals. As one activist from a major
Jewish organisation wrote, ‘it is routine for us to say:
“This is our policy on a certain issue, but we must check
what the Israelis think.” We as a community do it all the
time.’ There is a strong prejudice against criticising
Israeli policy, and putting pressure on Israel is considered
out of order. Edgar Bronfman Sr, the president of the World
Jewish Congress, was accused of ‘perfidy’ when he wrote a
letter to President Bush in mid-2003 urging him to persuade
Israel to curb construction of its controversial ‘security
fence’. His critics said that ‘it would be obscene at any
time for the president of the World Jewish Congress to lobby
the president of the United States to resist policies being
promoted by the government of Israel.’
Similarly, when the president of the Israel
Policy Forum, Seymour Reich, advised Condoleezza Rice in
November 2005 to ask Israel to reopen a critical border
crossing in the Gaza Strip, his action was denounced as
‘irresponsible’: ‘There is,’ his critics said, ‘absolutely
no room in the Jewish mainstream for actively canvassing
against the security-related policies . . . of Israel.’
Recoiling from these attacks, Reich announced that ‘the word
“pressure” is not in my vocabulary when it comes to Israel.’
Jewish Americans have set up an impressive
array of organisations to influence American foreign policy,
of which AIPAC is the most powerful and best known. In 1997,
Fortune magazine asked members of Congress and their staffs
to list the most powerful lobbies in Washington. AIPAC was
ranked second behind the American Association of Retired
People, but ahead of the AFL-CIO and the National Rifle
Association. A National Journal study in March 2005 reached
a similar conclusion, placing AIPAC in second place (tied
with AARP) in the Washington ‘muscle rankings’.
The Lobby also includes prominent Christian
evangelicals like Gary Bauer, Jerry Falwell, Ralph Reed and
Pat Robertson, as well as Dick Armey and Tom DeLay, former
majority leaders in the House of Representatives, all of
whom believe Israel’s rebirth is the fulfilment of biblical
prophecy and support its expansionist agenda; to do
otherwise, they believe, would be contrary to God’s will.
Neo-conservative gentiles such as John Bolton; Robert
Bartley, the former Wall Street Journal editor; William
Bennett, the former secretary of education; Jeane
Kirkpatrick, the former UN ambassador; and the influential
columnist George Will are also steadfast supporters.
The US form of government offers activists
many ways of influencing the policy process. Interest groups
can lobby elected representatives and members of the
executive branch, make campaign contributions, vote in
elections, try to mould public opinion etc. They enjoy a
disproportionate amount of influence when they are committed
to an issue to which the bulk of the population is
indifferent. Policymakers will tend to accommodate those who
care about the issue, even if their numbers are small,
confident that the rest of the population will not penalise
them for doing so.
In its basic operations, the Israel Lobby is
no different from the farm lobby, steel or textile workers’
unions, or other ethnic lobbies. There is nothing improper
about American Jews and their Christian allies attempting to
sway US policy: the Lobby’s activities are not a conspiracy
of the sort depicted in tracts like the Protocols of the
Elders of Zion. For the most part, the individuals and
groups that comprise it are only doing what other special
interest groups do, but doing it very much better. By
contrast, pro-Arab interest groups, in so far as they exist
at all, are weak, which makes the Israel Lobby’s task even
easier.
The Lobby pursues two broad strategies.
First, it wields its significant influence in Washington,
pressuring both Congress and the executive branch. Whatever
an individual lawmaker or policymaker’s own views may be,
the Lobby tries to make supporting Israel the ‘smart’
choice. Second, it strives to ensure that public discourse
portrays Israel in a positive light, by repeating myths
about its founding and by promoting its point of view in
policy debates. The goal is to prevent critical comments
from getting a fair hearing in the political arena.
Controlling the debate is essential to guaranteeing US
support, because a candid discussion of US-Israeli relations
might lead Americans to favour a different policy.
A key pillar of the Lobby’s effectiveness is
its influence in Congress, where Israel is virtually immune
from criticism. This in itself is remarkable, because
Congress rarely shies away from contentious issues. Where
Israel is concerned, however, potential critics fall silent.
One reason is that some key members are Christian Zionists
like Dick Armey, who said in September 2002: ‘My No. 1
priority in foreign policy is to protect Israel.’ One might
think that the No. 1 priority for any congressman would be
to protect America. There are also Jewish senators and
congressmen who work to ensure that US foreign policy
supports Israel’s interests.
Another source of the Lobby’s power is its
use of pro-Israel congressional staffers. As Morris Amitay,
a former head of AIPAC, once admitted, ‘there are a lot of
guys at the working level up here’ – on Capitol Hill – ‘who
happen to be Jewish, who are willing . . . to look at
certain issues in terms of their Jewishness . . . These are
all guys who are in a position to make the decision in these
areas for those senators . . . You can get an awful lot done
just at the staff level.’
AIPAC itself, however, forms the core of the
Lobby’s influence in Congress. Its success is due to its
ability to reward legislators and congressional candidates
who support its agenda, and to punish those who challenge
it. Money is critical to US elections (as the scandal over
the lobbyist Jack Abramoff’s shady dealings reminds us), and
AIPAC makes sure that its friends get strong financial
support from the many pro-Israel political action
committees. Anyone who is seen as hostile to Israel can be
sure that AIPAC will direct campaign contributions to his or
her political opponents. AIPAC also organises letter-writing
campaigns and encourages newspaper editors to endorse
pro-Israel candidates.
There is no doubt about the efficacy of these
tactics. Here is one example: in the 1984 elections, AIPAC
helped defeat Senator Charles Percy from Illinois, who,
according to a prominent Lobby figure, had ‘displayed
insensitivity and even hostility to our concerns’. Thomas
Dine, the head of AIPAC at the time, explained what
happened: ‘All the Jews in America, from coast to coast,
gathered to oust Percy. And the American politicians – those
who hold public positions now, and those who aspire – got
the message.’
AIPAC’s influence on Capitol Hill goes even
further. According to Douglas Bloomfield, a former AIPAC
staff member, ‘it is common for members of Congress and
their staffs to turn to AIPAC first when they need
information, before calling the Library of Congress, the
Congressional Research Service, committee staff or
administration experts.’ More important, he notes that AIPAC
is ‘often called on to draft speeches, work on legislation,
advise on tactics, perform research, collect co-sponsors and
marshal votes’.
The bottom line is that AIPAC, a de facto
agent for a foreign government, has a stranglehold on
Congress, with the result that US policy towards Israel is
not debated there, even though that policy has important
consequences for the entire world. In other words, one of
the three main branches of the government is firmly
committed to supporting Israel. As one former Democratic
senator, Ernest Hollings, noted on leaving office, ‘you
can’t have an Israeli policy other than what AIPAC gives you
around here.’ Or as Ariel Sharon once told an American
audience, ‘when people ask me how they can help Israel, I
tell them: “Help AIPAC.”’
Thanks in part to the influence Jewish voters
have on presidential elections, the Lobby also has
significant leverage over the executive branch. Although
they make up fewer than 3 per cent of the population, they
make large campaign donations to candidates from both
parties. The Washington Post once estimated that Democratic
presidential candidates ‘depend on Jewish supporters to
supply as much as 60 per cent of the money’. And because
Jewish voters have high turn-out rates and are concentrated
in key states like California, Florida, Illinois, New York
and Pennsylvania, presidential candidates go to great
lengths not to antagonise them.
Key organisations in the Lobby make it their
business to ensure that critics of Israel do not get
important foreign policy jobs. Jimmy Carter wanted to make
George Ball his first secretary of state, but knew that Ball
was seen as critical of Israel and that the Lobby would
oppose the appointment. In this way any aspiring policymaker
is encouraged to become an overt supporter of Israel, which
is why public critics of Israeli policy have become an
endangered species in the foreign policy establishment.
When Howard Dean called for the United States
to take a more ‘even-handed role’ in the Arab-Israeli
conflict, Senator Joseph Lieberman accused him of selling
Israel down the river and said his statement was
‘irresponsible’. Virtually all the top Democrats in the
House signed a letter criticising Dean’s remarks, and the
Chicago Jewish Star reported that ‘anonymous attackers . . .
are clogging the email inboxes of Jewish leaders around the
country, warning – without much evidence – that Dean would
somehow be bad for Israel.’
This worry was absurd; Dean is in fact quite
hawkish on Israel: his campaign co-chair was a former AIPAC
president, and Dean said his own views on the Middle East
more closely reflected those of AIPAC than those of the more
moderate Americans for Peace Now. He had merely suggested
that to ‘bring the sides together’, Washington should act as
an honest broker. This is hardly a radical idea, but the
Lobby doesn’t tolerate even-handedness.
During the Clinton administration, Middle
Eastern policy was largely shaped by officials with close
ties to Israel or to prominent pro-Israel organisations;
among them, Martin Indyk, the former deputy director of
research at AIPAC and co-founder of the pro-Israel
Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP); Dennis
Ross, who joined WINEP after leaving government in 2001; and
Aaron Miller, who has lived in Israel and often visits the
country. These men were among Clinton’s closest advisers at
the Camp David summit in July 2000. Although all three
supported the Oslo peace process and favoured the creation
of a Palestinian state, they did so only within the limits
of what would be acceptable to Israel. The American
delegation took its cues from Ehud Barak, co-ordinated its
negotiating positions with Israel in advance, and did not
offer independent proposals. Not surprisingly, Palestinian
negotiators complained that they were ‘negotiating with two
Israeli teams – one displaying an Israeli flag, and one an
American flag’.
The situation is even more pronounced in the
Bush administration, whose ranks have included such fervent
advocates of the Israeli cause as Elliot Abrams, John
Bolton, Douglas Feith, I. Lewis (‘Scooter’) Libby, Richard
Perle, Paul Wolfowitz and David Wurmser. As we shall see,
these officials have consistently pushed for policies
favoured by Israel and backed by organisations in the Lobby.
The Lobby doesn’t want an open debate, of
course, because that might lead Americans to question the
level of support they provide. Accordingly, pro-Israel
organisations work hard to influence the institutions that
do most to shape popular opinion.
The Lobby’s perspective prevails in the
mainstream media: the debate among Middle East pundits, the
journalist Eric Alterman writes, is ‘dominated by people who
cannot imagine criticising Israel’. He lists 61 ‘columnists
and commentators who can be counted on to support Israel
reflexively and without qualification’. Conversely, he found
just five pundits who consistently criticise Israeli actions
or endorse Arab positions. Newspapers occasionally publish
guest op-eds challenging Israeli policy, but the balance of
opinion clearly favours the other side. It is hard to
imagine any mainstream media outlet in the United States
publishing a piece like this one.
‘Shamir, Sharon, Bibi – whatever those guys
want is pretty much fine by me,’ Robert Bartley once
remarked. Not surprisingly, his newspaper, the Wall Street
Journal, along with other prominent papers like the Chicago
Sun-Times and the Washington Times, regularly runs
editorials that strongly support Israel. Magazines like
Commentary, the New Republic and the Weekly Standard defend
Israel at every turn.
Editorial bias is also found in papers like
the New York Times, which occasionally criticises Israeli
policies and sometimes concedes that the Palestinians have
legitimate grievances, but is not even-handed. In his
memoirs the paper’s former executive editor Max Frankel
acknowledges the impact his own attitude had on his
editorial decisions: ‘I was much more deeply devoted to
Israel than I dared to assert . . . Fortified by my
knowledge of Israel and my friendships there, I myself wrote
most of our Middle East commentaries. As more Arab than
Jewish readers recognised, I wrote them from a pro-Israel
perspective.’
News reports are more even-handed, in part
because reporters strive to be objective, but also because
it is difficult to cover events in the Occupied Territories
without acknowledging Israel’s actions on the ground. To
discourage unfavourable reporting, the Lobby organises
letter-writing campaigns, demonstrations and boycotts of
news outlets whose content it considers anti-Israel. One CNN
executive has said that he sometimes gets 6000 email
messages in a single day complaining about a story. In May
2003, the pro-Israel Committee for Accurate Middle East
Reporting in America (CAMERA) organised demonstrations
outside National Public Radio stations in 33 cities; it also
tried to persuade contributors to withhold support from NPR
until its Middle East coverage becomes more sympathetic to
Israel. Boston’s NPR station, WBUR, reportedly lost more
than $1 million in contributions as a result of these
efforts. Further pressure on NPR has come from Israel’s
friends in Congress, who have asked for an internal audit of
its Middle East coverage as well as more oversight.
The Israeli side also dominates the think
tanks which play an important role in shaping public debate
as well as actual policy. The Lobby created its own think
tank in 1985, when Martin Indyk helped to found WINEP.
Although WINEP plays down its links to Israel, claiming
instead to provide a ‘balanced and realistic’ perspective on
Middle East issues, it is funded and run by individuals
deeply committed to advancing Israel’s agenda.
The Lobby’s influence extends well beyond
WINEP, however. Over the past 25 years, pro-Israel forces
have established a commanding presence at the American
Enterprise Institute, the Brookings Institution, the Center
for Security Policy, the Foreign Policy Research Institute,
the Heritage Foundation, the Hudson Institute, the Institute
for Foreign Policy Analysis and the Jewish Institute for
National Security Affairs (JINSA). These think tanks employ
few, if any, critics of US support for Israel.
Take the Brookings Institution. For many
years, its senior expert on the Middle East was William
Quandt, a former NSC official with a well-deserved
reputation for even-handedness. Today, Brookings’s coverage
is conducted through the Saban Center for Middle East
Studies, which is financed by Haim Saban, an
Israeli-American businessman and ardent Zionist. The
centre’s director is the ubiquitous Martin Indyk. What was
once a non-partisan policy institute is now part of the
pro-Israel chorus.
Where the Lobby has had the most difficulty
is in stifling debate on university campuses. In the 1990s,
when the Oslo peace process was underway, there was only
mild criticism of Israel, but it grew stronger with Oslo’s
collapse and Sharon’s access to power, becoming quite
vociferous when the IDF reoccupied the West Bank in spring
2002 and employed massive force to subdue the second
intifada.
The Lobby moved immediately to ‘take back the
campuses’. New groups sprang up, like the Caravan for
Democracy, which brought Israeli speakers to US colleges.
Established groups like the Jewish Council for Public
Affairs and Hillel joined in, and a new group, the Israel on
Campus Coalition, was formed to co-ordinate the many bodies
that now sought to put Israel’s case. Finally, AIPAC more
than tripled its spending on programmes to monitor
university activities and to train young advocates, in order
to ‘vastly expand the number of students involved on campus
. . . in the national pro-Israel effort’.
The Lobby also monitors what professors write
and teach. In September 2002, Martin Kramer and Daniel
Pipes, two passionately pro-Israel neo-conservatives,
established a website (Campus Watch) that posted dossiers on
suspect academics and encouraged students to report remarks
or behaviour that might be considered hostile to Israel.
This transparent attempt to blacklist and intimidate
scholars provoked a harsh reaction and Pipes and Kramer
later removed the dossiers, but the website still invites
students to report ‘anti-Israel’ activity.
Groups within the Lobby put pressure on
particular academics and universities. Columbia has been a
frequent target, no doubt because of the presence of the
late Edward Said on its faculty. ‘One can be sure that any
public statement in support of the Palestinian people by the
pre-eminent literary critic Edward Said will elicit hundreds
of emails, letters and journalistic accounts that call on us
to denounce Said and to either sanction or fire him,’
Jonathan Cole, its former provost, reported. When Columbia
recruited the historian Rashid Khalidi from Chicago, the
same thing happened. It was a problem Princeton also faced a
few years later when it considered wooing Khalidi away from
Columbia.
A classic illustration of the effort to
police academia occurred towards the end of 2004, when the
David Project produced a film alleging that faculty members
of Columbia’s Middle East Studies programme were
anti-semitic and were intimidating Jewish students who stood
up for Israel. Columbia was hauled over the coals, but a
faculty committee which was assigned to investigate the
charges found no evidence of anti-semitism and the only
incident possibly worth noting was that one professor had
‘responded heatedly’ to a student’s question. The committee
also discovered that the academics in question had
themselves been the target of an overt campaign of
intimidation.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of all
this is the efforts Jewish groups have made to push Congress
into establishing mechanisms to monitor what professors say.
If they manage to get this passed, universities judged to
have an anti-Israel bias would be denied federal funding.
Their efforts have not yet succeeded, but they are an
indication of the importance placed on controlling debate.
A number of Jewish philanthropists have
recently established Israel Studies programmes (in addition
to the roughly 130 Jewish Studies programmes already in
existence) so as to increase the number of Israel-friendly
scholars on campus. In May 2003, NYU announced the
establishment of the Taub Center for Israel Studies; similar
programmes have been set up at Berkeley, Brandeis and Emory.
Academic administrators emphasise their pedagogical value,
but the truth is that they are intended in large part to
promote Israel’s image. Fred Laffer, the head of the Taub
Foundation, makes it clear that his foundation funded the
NYU centre to help counter the ‘Arabic [sic] point of view’
that he thinks is prevalent in NYU’s Middle East programmes.
No discussion of the Lobby would be complete
without an examination of one of its most powerful weapons:
the charge of anti-semitism. Anyone who criticises Israel’s
actions or argues that pro-Israel groups have significant
influence over US Middle Eastern policy – an influence AIPAC
celebrates – stands a good chance of being labelled an
anti-semite. Indeed, anyone who merely claims that there is
an Israel Lobby runs the risk of being charged with
anti-semitism, even though the Israeli media refer to
America’s ‘Jewish Lobby’. In other words, the Lobby first
boasts of its influence and then attacks anyone who calls
attention to it. It’s a very effective tactic: anti-semitism
is something no one wants to be accused of.
Europeans have been more willing than
Americans to criticise Israeli policy, which some people
attribute to a resurgence of anti-semitism in Europe. We are
‘getting to a point’, the US ambassador to the EU said in
early 2004, ‘where it is as bad as it was in the 1930s’.
Measuring anti-semitism is a complicated matter, but the
weight of evidence points in the opposite direction. In the
spring of 2004, when accusations of European anti-semitism
filled the air in America, separate surveys of European
public opinion conducted by the US-based Anti-Defamation
League and the Pew Research Center for the People and the
Press found that it was in fact declining. In the 1930s, by
contrast, anti-semitism was not only widespread among
Europeans of all classes but considered quite acceptable.
The Lobby and its friends often portray
France as the most anti-semitic country in Europe. But in
2003, the head of the French Jewish community said that
‘France is not more anti-semitic than America.’ According to
a recent article in Ha’aretz, the French police have
reported that anti-semitic incidents declined by almost 50
per cent in 2005; and this even though France has the
largest Muslim population of any European country. Finally,
when a French Jew was murdered in Paris last month by a
Muslim gang, tens of thousands of demonstrators poured into
the streets to condemn anti-semitism. Jacques Chirac and
Dominique de Villepin both attended the victim’s memorial
service to show their solidarity.
No one would deny that there is anti-semitism
among European Muslims, some of it provoked by Israel’s
conduct towards the Palestinians and some of it
straightforwardly racist. But this is a separate matter with
little bearing on whether or not Europe today is like Europe
in the 1930s. Nor would anyone deny that there are still
some virulent autochthonous anti-semites in Europe (as there
are in the United States) but their numbers are small and
their views are rejected by the vast majority of Europeans.
Israel’s advocates, when pressed to go beyond
mere assertion, claim that there is a ‘new anti-semitism’,
which they equate with criticism of Israel. In other words,
criticise Israeli policy and you are by definition an
anti-semite. When the synod of the Church of England
recently voted to divest from Caterpillar Inc on the grounds
that it manufactures the bulldozers used by the Israelis to
demolish Palestinian homes, the Chief Rabbi complained that
this would ‘have the most adverse repercussions on . . .
Jewish-Christian relations in Britain’, while Rabbi Tony
Bayfield, the head of the Reform movement, said: ‘There is a
clear problem of anti-Zionist – verging on anti-semitic –
attitudes emerging in the grass-roots, and even in the
middle ranks of the Church.’ But the Church was guilty
merely of protesting against Israeli government policy.
Critics are also accused of holding Israel to
an unfair standard or questioning its right to exist. But
these are bogus charges too. Western critics of Israel
hardly ever question its right to exist: they question its
behaviour towards the Palestinians, as do Israelis
themselves. Nor is Israel being judged unfairly. Israeli
treatment of the Palestinians elicits criticism because it
is contrary to widely accepted notions of human rights, to
international law and to the principle of national
self-determination. And it is hardly the only state that has
faced sharp criticism on these grounds.
In the autumn of 2001, and especially in the
spring of 2002, the Bush administration tried to reduce
anti-American sentiment in the Arab world and undermine
support for terrorist groups like al-Qaida by halting
Israel’s expansionist policies in the Occupied Territories
and advocating the creation of a Palestinian state. Bush had
very significant means of persuasion at his disposal. He
could have threatened to reduce economic and diplomatic
support for Israel, and the American people would almost
certainly have supported him. A May 2003 poll reported that
more than 60 per cent of Americans were willing to withhold
aid if Israel resisted US pressure to settle the conflict,
and that number rose to 70 per cent among the ‘politically
active’. Indeed, 73 per cent said that the United States
should not favour either side.
Yet the administration failed to change
Israeli policy, and Washington ended up backing it. Over
time, the administration also adopted Israel’s own
justifications of its position, so that US rhetoric began to
mimic Israeli rhetoric. By February 2003, a Washington Post
headline summarised the situation: ‘Bush and Sharon Nearly
Identical on Mideast Policy.’ The main reason for this
switch was the Lobby.
The story begins in late September 2001, when
Bush began urging Sharon to show restraint in the Occupied
Territories. He also pressed him to allow Israel’s foreign
minister, Shimon Peres, to meet with Yasser Arafat, even
though he (Bush) was highly critical of Arafat’s leadership.
Bush even said publicly that he supported the creation of a
Palestinian state. Alarmed, Sharon accused him of trying ‘to
appease the Arabs at our expense’, warning that Israel ‘will
not be Czechoslovakia’.
Bush was reportedly furious at being compared
to Chamberlain, and the White House press secretary called
Sharon’s remarks ‘unacceptable’. Sharon offered a pro forma
apology, but quickly joined forces with the Lobby to
persuade the administration and the American people that the
United States and Israel faced a common threat from
terrorism. Israeli officials and Lobby representatives
insisted that there was no real difference between Arafat
and Osama bin Laden: the United States and Israel, they
said, should isolate the Palestinians’ elected leader and
have nothing to do with him.
The Lobby also went to work in Congress. On
16 November, 89 senators sent Bush a letter praising him for
refusing to meet with Arafat, but also demanding that the US
not restrain Israel from retaliating against the
Palestinians; the administration, they wrote, must state
publicly that it stood behind Israel. According to the New
York Times, the letter ‘stemmed’ from a meeting two weeks
before between ‘leaders of the American Jewish community and
key senators’, adding that AIPAC was ‘particularly active in
providing advice on the letter’.
By late November, relations between Tel Aviv
and Washington had improved considerably. This was thanks in
part to the Lobby’s efforts, but also to America’s initial
victory in Afghanistan, which reduced the perceived need for
Arab support in dealing with al-Qaida. Sharon visited the
White House in early December and had a friendly meeting
with Bush.
In April 2002 trouble erupted again, after
the IDF launched Operation Defensive Shield and resumed
control of virtually all the major Palestinian areas on the
West Bank. Bush knew that Israel’s actions would damage
America’s image in the Islamic world and undermine the war
on terrorism, so he demanded that Sharon ‘halt the
incursions and begin withdrawal’. He underscored this
message two days later, saying he wanted Israel to ‘withdraw
without delay’. On 7 April, Condoleezza Rice, then Bush’s
national security adviser, told reporters: ‘“Without delay”
means without delay. It means now.’ That same day Colin
Powell set out for the Middle East to persuade all sides to
stop fighting and start negotiating.
Israel and the Lobby swung into action.
Pro-Israel officials in the vice-president’s office and the
Pentagon, as well as neo-conservative pundits like Robert
Kagan and William Kristol, put the heat on Powell. They even
accused him of having ‘virtually obliterated the distinction
between terrorists and those fighting terrorists’. Bush
himself was being pressed by Jewish leaders and Christian
evangelicals. Tom DeLay and Dick Armey were especially
outspoken about the need to support Israel, and DeLay and
the Senate minority leader, Trent Lott, visited the White
House and warned Bush to back off.
The first sign that Bush was caving in came
on 11 April – a week after he told Sharon to withdraw his
forces – when the White House press secretary said that the
president believed Sharon was ‘a man of peace’. Bush
repeated this statement publicly on Powell’s return from his
abortive mission, and told reporters that Sharon had
responded satisfactorily to his call for a full and
immediate withdrawal. Sharon had done no such thing, but
Bush was no longer willing to make an issue of it.
Meanwhile, Congress was also moving to back
Sharon. On 2 May, it overrode the administration’s
objections and passed two resolutions reaffirming support
for Israel. (The Senate vote was 94 to 2; the House of
Representatives version passed 352 to 21.) Both resolutions
held that the United States ‘stands in solidarity with
Israel’ and that the two countries were, to quote the House
resolution, ‘now engaged in a common struggle against
terrorism’. The House version also condemned ‘the ongoing
support and co-ordination of terror by Yasser Arafat’, who
was portrayed as a central part of the terrorism problem.
Both resolutions were drawn up with the help of the Lobby. A
few days later, a bipartisan congressional delegation on a
fact-finding mission to Israel stated that Sharon should
resist US pressure to negotiate with Arafat. On 9 May, a
House appropriations subcommittee met to consider giving
Israel an extra $200 million to fight terrorism. Powell
opposed the package, but the Lobby backed it and Powell
lost.
In short, Sharon and the Lobby took on the
president of the United States and triumphed. Hemi Shalev, a
journalist on the Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv, reported that
Sharon’s aides ‘could not hide their satisfaction in view of
Powell’s failure. Sharon saw the whites of President Bush’s
eyes, they bragged, and the president blinked first.’ But it
was Israel’s champions in the United States, not Sharon or
Israel, that played the key role in defeating Bush.
The situation has changed little since then.
The Bush administration refused ever again to have dealings
with Arafat. After his death, it embraced the new
Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, but has done little to
help him. Sharon continued to develop his plan to impose a
unilateral settlement on the Palestinians, based on
‘disengagement’ from Gaza coupled with continued expansion
on the West Bank. By refusing to negotiate with Abbas and
making it impossible for him to deliver tangible benefits to
the Palestinian people, Sharon’s strategy contributed
directly to Hamas’s electoral victory. With Hamas in power,
however, Israel has another excuse not to negotiate. The US
administration has supported Sharon’s actions (and those of
his successor, Ehud Olmert). Bush has even endorsed
unilateral Israeli annexations in the Occupied Territories,
reversing the stated policy of every president since Lyndon
Johnson.
US officials have offered mild criticisms of
a few Israeli actions, but have done little to help create a
viable Palestinian state. Sharon has Bush ‘wrapped around
his little finger’, the former national security adviser
Brent Scowcroft said in October 2004. If Bush tries to
distance the US from Israel, or even criticises Israeli
actions in the Occupied Territories, he is certain to face
the wrath of the Lobby and its supporters in Congress.
Democratic presidential candidates understand that these are
facts of life, which is the reason John Kerry went to great
lengths to display unalloyed support for Israel in 2004, and
why Hillary Clinton is doing the same thing today.
Maintaining US support for Israel’s policies
against the Palestinians is essential as far as the Lobby is
concerned, but its ambitions do not stop there. It also
wants America to help Israel remain the dominant regional
power. The Israeli government and pro-Israel groups in the
United States have worked together to shape the
administration’s policy towards Iraq, Syria and Iran, as
well as its grand scheme for reordering the Middle East.
Pressure from Israel and the Lobby was not
the only factor behind the decision to attack Iraq in March
2003, but it was critical. Some Americans believe that this
was a war for oil, but there is hardly any direct evidence
to support this claim. Instead, the war was motivated in
good part by a desire to make Israel more secure. According
to Philip Zelikow, a former member of the president’s
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, the executive director
of the 9/11 Commission, and now a counsellor to Condoleezza
Rice, the ‘real threat’ from Iraq was not a threat to the
United States. The ‘unstated threat’ was the ‘threat against
Israel’, Zelikow told an audience at the University of
Virginia in September 2002. ‘The American government,’ he
added, ‘doesn’t want to lean too hard on it rhetorically,
because it is not a popular sell.’
On 16 August 2002, 11 days before Dick Cheney
kicked off the campaign for war with a hardline speech to
the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Washington Post reported
that ‘Israel is urging US officials not to delay a military
strike against Iraq’s Saddam Hussein.’ By this point,
according to Sharon, strategic co-ordination between Israel
and the US had reached ‘unprecedented dimensions’, and
Israeli intelligence officials had given Washington a
variety of alarming reports about Iraq’s WMD programmes. As
one retired Israeli general later put it, ‘Israeli
intelligence was a full partner to the picture presented by
American and British intelligence regarding Iraq’s
non-conventional capabilities.’
Israeli leaders were deeply distressed when
Bush decided to seek Security Council authorisation for war,
and even more worried when Saddam agreed to let UN
inspectors back in. ‘The campaign against Saddam Hussein is
a must,’ Shimon Peres told reporters in September 2002.
‘Inspections and inspectors are good for decent people, but
dishonest people can overcome easily inspections and
inspectors.’
At the same time, Ehud Barak wrote a New York
Times op-ed warning that ‘the greatest risk now lies in
inaction.’ His predecessor as prime minister, Binyamin
Netanyahu, published a similar piece in the Wall Street
Journal, entitled: ‘The Case for Toppling Saddam’. ‘Today
nothing less than dismantling his regime will do,’ he
declared. ‘I believe I speak for the overwhelming majority
of Israelis in supporting a pre-emptive strike against
Saddam’s regime.’ Or as Ha’aretz reported in February 2003,
‘the military and political leadership yearns for war in
Iraq.’
As Netanyahu suggested, however, the desire
for war was not confined to Israel’s leaders. Apart from
Kuwait, which Saddam invaded in 1990, Israel was the only
country in the world where both politicians and public
favoured war. As the journalist Gideon Levy observed at the
time, ‘Israel is the only country in the West whose leaders
support the war unreservedly and where no alternative
opinion is voiced.’ In fact, Israelis were so gung-ho that
their allies in America told them to damp down their
rhetoric, or it would look as if the war would be fought on
Israel’s behalf.
Within the US, the main driving force behind
the war was a small band of neo-conservatives, many with
ties to Likud. But leaders of the Lobby’s major
organisations lent their voices to the campaign. ‘As
President Bush attempted to sell the . . . war in Iraq,’ the
Forward reported, ‘America’s most important Jewish
organisations rallied as one to his defence. In statement
after statement community leaders stressed the need to rid
the world of Saddam Hussein and his weapons of mass
destruction.’ The editorial goes on to say that ‘concern for
Israel’s safety rightfully factored into the deliberations
of the main Jewish groups.’
Although neo-conservatives and other Lobby
leaders were eager to invade Iraq, the broader American
Jewish community was not. Just after the war started, Samuel
Freedman reported that ‘a compilation of nationwide opinion
polls by the Pew Research Center shows that Jews are less
supportive of the Iraq war than the population at large, 52
per cent to 62 per cent.’ Clearly, it would be wrong to
blame the war in Iraq on ‘Jewish influence’. Rather, it was
due in large part to the Lobby’s influence, especially that
of the neo-conservatives within it.
The neo-conservatives had been determined to
topple Saddam even before Bush became president. They caused
a stir early in 1998 by publishing two open letters to
Clinton, calling for Saddam’s removal from power. The
signatories, many of whom had close ties to pro-Israel
groups like JINSA or WINEP, and who included Elliot Abrams,
John Bolton, Douglas Feith, William Kristol, Bernard Lewis,
Donald Rumsfeld, Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz, had
little trouble persuading the Clinton administration to
adopt the general goal of ousting Saddam. But they were
unable to sell a war to achieve that objective. They were no
more able to generate enthusiasm for invading Iraq in the
early months of the Bush administration. They needed help to
achieve their aim. That help arrived with 9/11.
Specifically, the events of that day led Bush and Cheney to
reverse course and become strong proponents of a preventive
war.
At a key meeting with Bush at Camp David on
15 September, Wolfowitz advocated attacking Iraq before
Afghanistan, even though there was no evidence that Saddam
was involved in the attacks on the US and bin Laden was
known to be in Afghanistan. Bush rejected his advice and
chose to go after Afghanistan instead, but war with Iraq was
now regarded as a serious possibility and on 21 November the
president charged military planners with developing concrete
plans for an invasion.
Other neo-conservatives were meanwhile at
work in the corridors of power. We don’t have the full story
yet, but scholars like Bernard Lewis of Princeton and Fouad
Ajami of Johns Hopkins reportedly played important roles in
persuading Cheney that war was the best option, though
neo-conservatives on his staff – Eric Edelman, John Hannah
and Scooter Libby, Cheney’s chief of staff and one of the
most powerful individuals in the administration – also
played their part. By early 2002 Cheney had persuaded Bush;
and with Bush and Cheney on board, war was inevitable.
Outside the administration, neo-conservative
pundits lost no time in making the case that invading Iraq
was essential to winning the war on terrorism. Their efforts
were designed partly to keep up the pressure on Bush, and
partly to overcome opposition to the war inside and outside
the government. On 20 September, a group of prominent
neo-conservatives and their allies published another open
letter: ‘Even if evidence does not link Iraq directly to the
attack,’ it read, ‘any strategy aiming at the eradication of
terrorism and its sponsors must include a determined effort
to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq.’ The letter
also reminded Bush that ‘Israel has been and remains
America’s staunchest ally against international terrorism.’
In the 1 October issue of the Weekly Standard, Robert Kagan
and William Kristol called for regime change in Iraq as soon
as the Taliban was defeated. That same day, Charles
Krauthammer argued in the Washington Post that after the US
was done with Afghanistan, Syria should be next, followed by
Iran and Iraq: ‘The war on terrorism will conclude in
Baghdad,’ when we finish off ‘the most dangerous terrorist
regime in the world’.
This was the beginning of an unrelenting
public relations campaign to win support for an invasion of
Iraq, a crucial part of which was the manipulation of
intelligence in such a way as to make it seem as if Saddam
posed an imminent threat. For example, Libby pressured CIA
analysts to find evidence supporting the case for war and
helped prepare Colin Powell’s now discredited briefing to
the UN Security Council. Within the Pentagon, the Policy
Counterterrorism Evaluation Group was charged with finding
links between al-Qaida and Iraq that the intelligence
community had supposedly missed. Its two key members were
David Wurmser, a hard-core neo-conservative, and Michael
Maloof, a Lebanese-American with close ties to Perle.
Another Pentagon group, the so-called Office of Special
Plans, was given the task of uncovering evidence that could
be used to sell the war. It was headed by Abram Shulsky, a
neo-conservative with long-standing ties to Wolfowitz, and
its ranks included recruits from pro-Israel think tanks.
Both these organisations were created after 9/11 and
reported directly to Douglas Feith.
Like virtually all the neo-conservatives,
Feith is deeply committed to Israel; he also has long-term
ties to Likud. He wrote articles in the 1990s supporting the
settlements and arguing that Israel should retain the
Occupied Territories. More important, along with Perle and
Wurmser, he wrote the famous ‘Clean Break’ report in June
1996 for Netanyahu, who had just become prime minister.
Among other things, it recommended that Netanyahu ‘focus on
removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq – an important
Israeli strategic objective in its own right’. It also
called for Israel to take steps to reorder the entire Middle
East. Netanyahu did not follow their advice, but Feith,
Perle and Wurmser were soon urging the Bush administration
to pursue those same goals. The Ha’aretz columnist Akiva
Eldar warned that Feith and Perle ‘are walking a fine line
between their loyalty to American governments . . . and
Israeli interests’.
Wolfowitz is equally committed to Israel. The
Forward once described him as ‘the most hawkishly pro-Israel
voice in the administration’, and selected him in 2002 as
first among 50 notables who ‘have consciously pursued Jewish
activism’. At about the same time, JINSA gave Wolfowitz its
Henry M. Jackson Distinguished Service Award for promoting a
strong partnership between Israel and the United States; and
the Jerusalem Post, describing him as ‘devoutly pro-Israel’,
named him ‘Man of the Year’ in 2003.
Finally, a brief word is in order about the
neo-conservatives’ prewar support of Ahmed Chalabi, the
unscrupulous Iraqi exile who headed the Iraqi National
Congress. They backed Chalabi because he had established
close ties with Jewish-American groups and had pledged to
foster good relations with Israel once he gained power. This
was precisely what pro-Israel proponents of regime change
wanted to hear. Matthew Berger laid out the essence of the
bargain in the Jewish Journal: ‘The INC saw improved
relations as a way to tap Jewish influence in Washington and
Jerusalem and to drum up increased support for its cause.
For their part, the Jewish groups saw an opportunity to pave
the way for better relations between Israel and Iraq, if and
when the INC is involved in replacing Saddam Hussein’s
regime.’
Given the neo-conservatives’ devotion to
Israel, their obsession with Iraq, and their influence in
the Bush administration, it isn’t surprising that many
Americans suspected that the war was designed to further
Israeli interests. Last March, Barry Jacobs of the American
Jewish Committee acknowledged that the belief that Israel
and the neo-conservatives had conspired to get the US into a
war in Iraq was ‘pervasive’ in the intelligence community.
Yet few people would say so publicly, and most of those who
did – including Senator Ernest Hollings and Representative
James Moran – were condemned for raising the issue. Michael
Kinsley wrote in late 2002 that ‘the lack of public
discussion about the role of Israel . . . is the proverbial
elephant in the room.’ The reason for the reluctance to talk
about it, he observed, was fear of being labelled an
anti-semite. There is little doubt that Israel and the Lobby
were key factors in the decision to go to war. It’s a
decision the US would have been far less likely to take
without their efforts. And the war itself was intended to be
only the first step. A front-page headline in the Wall
Street Journal shortly after the war began says it all:
‘President’s Dream: Changing Not Just Regime but a Region: A
Pro-US, Democratic Area Is a Goal that Has Israeli and
Neo-Conservative Roots.’
Pro-Israel forces have long been interested
in getting the US military more directly involved in the
Middle East. But they had limited success during the Cold
War, because America acted as an ‘off-shore balancer’ in the
region. Most forces designated for the Middle East, like the
Rapid Deployment Force, were kept ‘over the horizon’ and out
of harm’s way. The idea was to play local powers off against
each other – which is why the Reagan administration
supported Saddam against revolutionary Iran during the
Iran-Iraq War – in order to maintain a balance favourable to
the US.
This policy changed after the first Gulf War,
when the Clinton administration adopted a strategy of ‘dual
containment’. Substantial US forces would be stationed in
the region in order to contain both Iran and Iraq, instead
of one being used to check the other. The father of dual
containment was none other than Martin Indyk, who first
outlined the strategy in May 1993 at WINEP and then
implemented it as director for Near East and South Asian
Affairs at the National Security Council.
By the mid-1990s there was considerable
dissatisfaction with dual containment, because it made the
United States the mortal enemy of two countries that hated
each other, and forced Washington to bear the burden of
containing both. But it was a strategy the Lobby favoured
and worked actively in Congress to preserve. Pressed by
AIPAC and other pro-Israel forces, Clinton toughened up the
policy in the spring of 1995 by imposing an economic embargo
on Iran. But AIPAC and the others wanted more. The result
was the 1996 Iran and Libya Sanctions Act, which imposed
sanctions on any foreign companies investing more than $40
million to develop petroleum resources in Iran or Libya. As
Ze’ev Schiff, the military correspondent of Ha’aretz, noted
at the time, ‘Israel is but a tiny element in the big
scheme, but one should not conclude that it cannot influence
those within the Beltway.’
By the late 1990s, however, the
neo-conservatives were arguing that dual containment was not
enough and that regime change in Iraq was essential. By
toppling Saddam and turning Iraq into a vibrant democracy,
they argued, the US would trigger a far-reaching process of
change throughout the Middle East. The same line of thinking
was evident in the ‘Clean Break’ study the neo-conservatives
wrote for Netanyahu. By 2002, when an invasion of Iraq was
on the front-burner, regional transformation was an article
of faith in neo-conservative circles.
Charles Krauthammer describes this grand
scheme as the brainchild of Natan Sharansky, but Israelis
across the political spectrum believed that toppling Saddam
would alter the Middle East to Israel’s advantage. Aluf Benn
reported in Ha’aretz (17 February 2003):
Senior IDF officers and those close to Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon, such as National Security Adviser
Ephraim Halevy, paint a rosy picture of the wonderful future
Israel can expect after the war. They envision a domino
effect, with the fall of Saddam Hussein followed by that of
Israel’s other enemies . . . Along with these leaders will
disappear terror and weapons of mass destruction.
Once Baghdad fell in mid-April 2003, Sharon
and his lieutenants began urging Washington to target
Damascus. On 16 April, Sharon, interviewed in Yedioth
Ahronoth, called for the United States to put ‘very heavy’
pressure on Syria, while Shaul Mofaz, his defence minister,
interviewed in Ma’ariv, said: ‘We have a long list of issues
that we are thinking of demanding of the Syrians and it is
appropriate that it should be done through the Americans.’
Ephraim Halevy told a WINEP audience that it was now
important for the US to get rough with Syria, and the
Washington Post reported that Israel was ‘fuelling the
campaign’ against Syria by feeding the US intelligence
reports about the actions of Bashar Assad, the Syrian
president.
Prominent members of the Lobby made the same
arguments. Wolfowitz declared that ‘there has got to be
regime change in Syria,’ and Richard Perle told a journalist
that ‘a short message, a two-worded message’ could be
delivered to other hostile regimes in the Middle East:
‘You’re next.’ In early April, WINEP released a bipartisan
report stating that Syria ‘should not miss the message that
countries that pursue Saddam’s reckless, irresponsible and
defiant behaviour could end up sharing his fate’. On 15
April, Yossi Klein Halevi wrote a piece in the Los Angeles
Times entitled ‘Next, Turn the Screws on Syria’, while the
following day Zev Chafets wrote an article for the New York
Daily News entitled ‘Terror-Friendly Syria Needs a Change,
Too’. Not to be outdone, Lawrence Kaplan wrote in the New
Republic on 21 April that Assad was a serious threat to
America.
Back on Capitol Hill, Congressman Eliot Engel
had reintroduced the Syria Accountability and Lebanese
Sovereignty Restoration Act. It threatened sanctions against
Syria if it did not withdraw from Lebanon, give up its WMD
and stop supporting terrorism, and it also called for Syria
and Lebanon to take concrete steps to make peace with
Israel. This legislation was strongly endorsed by the Lobby
– by AIPAC especially – and ‘framed’, according to the
Jewish Telegraph Agency, ‘by some of Israel’s best friends
in Congress’. The Bush administration had little enthusiasm
for it, but the anti-Syrian act passed overwhelmingly (398
to 4 in the House; 89 to 4 in the Senate), and Bush signed
it into law on 12 December 2003.
The administration itself was still divided
about the wisdom of targeting Syria. Although the
neo-conservatives were eager to pick a fight with Damascus,
the CIA and the State Department were opposed to the idea.
And even after Bush signed the new law, he emphasised that
he would go slowly in implementing it. His ambivalence is
understandable. First, the Syrian government had not only
been providing important intelligence about al-Qaida since
9/11: it had also warned Washington about a planned
terrorist attack in the Gulf and given CIA interrogators
access to Mohammed Zammar, the alleged recruiter of some of
the 9/11 hijackers. Targeting the Assad regime would
jeopardise these valuable connections, and thereby undermine
the larger war on terrorism.
Second, Syria had not been on bad terms with
Washington before the Iraq war (it had even voted for UN
Resolution 1441), and was itself no threat to the United
States. Playing hardball with it would make the US look like
a bully with an insatiable appetite for beating up Arab
states. Third, putting Syria on the hit list would give
Damascus a powerful incentive to cause trouble in Iraq. Even
if one wanted to bring pressure to bear, it made good sense
to finish the job in Iraq first. Yet Congress insisted on
putting the screws on Damascus, largely in response to
pressure from Israeli officials and groups like AIPAC. If
there were no Lobby, there would have been no Syria
Accountability Act, and US policy towards Damascus would
have been more in line with the national interest.
Israelis tend to describe every threat in the
starkest terms, but Iran is widely seen as their most
dangerous enemy because it is the most likely to acquire
nuclear weapons. Virtually all Israelis regard an Islamic
country in the Middle East with nuclear weapons as a threat
to their existence. ‘Iraq is a problem . . . But you should
understand, if you ask me, today Iran is more dangerous than
Iraq,’ the defence minister, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, remarked
a month before the Iraq war.
Sharon began pushing the US to confront Iran
in November 2002, in an interview in the Times. Describing
Iran as the ‘centre of world terror’, and bent on acquiring
nuclear weapons, he declared that the Bush administration
should put the strong arm on Iran ‘the day after’ it
conquered Iraq. In late April 2003, Ha’aretz reported that
the Israeli ambassador in Washington was calling for regime
change in Iran. The overthrow of Saddam, he noted, was ‘not
enough’. In his words, America ‘has to follow through. We
still have great threats of that magnitude coming from
Syria, coming from Iran.’
The neo-conservatives, too, lost no time in
making the case for regime change in Tehran. On 6 May, the
AEI co-sponsored an all-day conference on Iran with the
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the Hudson
Institute, both champions of Israel. The speakers were all
strongly pro-Israel, and many called for the US to replace
the Iranian regime with a democracy. As usual, a bevy of
articles by prominent neo-conservatives made the case for
going after Iran. ‘The liberation of Iraq was the first
great battle for the future of the Middle East . . . But the
next great battle – not, we hope, a military battle – will
be for Iran,’ William Kristol wrote in the Weekly Standard
on 12 May.
The administration has responded to the
Lobby’s pressure by working overtime to shut down Iran’s
nuclear programme. But Washington has had little success,
and Iran seems determined to create a nuclear arsenal. As a
result, the Lobby has intensified its pressure. Op-eds and
other articles now warn of imminent dangers from a nuclear
Iran, caution against any appeasement of a ‘terrorist’
regime, and hint darkly of preventive action should
diplomacy fail. The Lobby is pushing Congress to approve the
Iran Freedom Support Act, which would expand existing
sanctions. Israeli officials also warn they may take
pre-emptive action should Iran continue down the nuclear
road, threats partly intended to keep Washington’s attention
on the issue.
One might argue that Israel and the Lobby
have not had much influence on policy towards Iran, because
the US has its own reasons for keeping Iran from going
nuclear. There is some truth in this, but Iran’s nuclear
ambitions do not pose a direct threat to the US. If
Washington could live with a nuclear Soviet Union, a nuclear
China or even a nuclear North Korea, it can live with a
nuclear Iran. And that is why the Lobby must keep up
constant pressure on politicians to confront Tehran. Iran
and the US would hardly be allies if the Lobby did not
exist, but US policy would be more temperate and preventive
war would not be a serious option.
It is not surprising that Israel and its
American supporters want the US to deal with any and all
threats to Israel’s security. If their efforts to shape US
policy succeed, Israel’s enemies will be weakened or
overthrown, Israel will get a free hand with the
Palestinians, and the US will do most of the fighting,
dying, rebuilding and paying. But even if the US fails to
transform the Middle East and finds itself in conflict with
an increasingly radicalised Arab and Islamic world, Israel
will end up protected by the world’s only superpower. This
is not a perfect outcome from the Lobby’s point of view, but
it is obviously preferable to Washington distancing itself,
or using its leverage to force Israel to make peace with the
Palestinians.
Can the Lobby’s power be curtailed? One would
like to think so, given the Iraq debacle, the obvious need
to rebuild America’s image in the Arab and Islamic world,
and the recent revelations about AIPAC officials passing US
government secrets to Israel. One might also think that
Arafat’s death and the election of the more moderate Mahmoud
Abbas would cause Washington to press vigorously and
even-handedly for a peace agreement. In short, there are
ample grounds for leaders to distance themselves from the
Lobby and adopt a Middle East policy more consistent with
broader US interests. In particular, using American power to
achieve a just peace between Israel and the Palestinians
would help advance the cause of democracy in the region.
But that is not going to happen – not soon
anyway. AIPAC and its allies (including Christian Zionists)
have no serious opponents in the lobbying world. They know
it has become more difficult to make Israel’s case today,
and they are responding by taking on staff and expanding
their activities. Besides, American politicians remain
acutely sensitive to campaign contributions and other forms
of political pressure, and major media outlets are likely to
remain sympathetic to Israel no matter what it does.
The Lobby’s influence causes trouble on
several fronts. It increases the terrorist danger that all
states face – including America’s European allies. It has
made it impossible to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
a situation that gives extremists a powerful recruiting
tool, increases the pool of potential terrorists and
sympathisers, and contributes to Islamic radicalism in
Europe and Asia.
Equally worrying, the Lobby’s campaign for
regime change in Iran and Syria could lead the US to attack
those countries, with potentially disastrous effects. We
don’t need another Iraq. At a minimum, the Lobby’s hostility
towards Syria and Iran makes it almost impossible for
Washington to enlist them in the struggle against al-Qaida
and the Iraqi insurgency, where their help is badly needed.
There is a moral dimension here as well.
Thanks to the Lobby, the United States has become the de
facto enabler of Israeli expansion in the Occupied
Territories, making it complicit in the crimes perpetrated
against the Palestinians. This situation undercuts
Washington’s efforts to promote democracy abroad and makes
it look hypocritical when it presses other states to respect
human rights. US efforts to limit nuclear proliferation
appear equally hypocritical given its willingness to accept
Israel’s nuclear arsenal, which only encourages Iran and
others to seek a similar capability.
Besides, the Lobby’s campaign to quash debate
about Israel is unhealthy for democracy. Silencing sceptics
by organising blacklists and boycotts – or by suggesting
that critics are anti-semites – violates the principle of
open debate on which democracy depends. The inability of
Congress to conduct a genuine debate on these important
issues paralyses the entire process of democratic
deliberation. Israel’s backers should be free to make their
case and to challenge those who disagree with them, but
efforts to stifle debate by intimidation must be roundly
condemned.
Finally, the Lobby’s influence has been bad
for Israel. Its ability to persuade Washington to support an
expansionist agenda has discouraged Israel from seizing
opportunities – including a peace treaty with Syria and a
prompt and full implementation of the Oslo Accords – that
would have saved Israeli lives and shrunk the ranks of
Palestinian extremists. Denying the Palestinians their
legitimate political rights certainly has not made Israel
more secure, and the long campaign to kill or marginalise a
generation of Palestinian leaders has empowered extremist
groups like Hamas, and reduced the number of Palestinian
leaders who would be willing to accept a fair settlement and
able to make it work. Israel itself would probably be better
off if the Lobby were less powerful and US policy more even-handed.
There is a ray of hope, however. Although the
Lobby remains a powerful force, the adverse effects of its
influence are increasingly difficult to hide. Powerful
states can maintain flawed policies for quite some time, but
reality cannot be ignored for ever. What is needed is a
candid discussion of the Lobby’s influence and a more open
debate about US interests in this vital region. Israel’s
well-being is one of those interests, but its continued
occupation of the West Bank and its broader regional agenda
are not. Open debate will expose the limits of the strategic
and moral case for one-sided US support and could move the
US to a position more consistent with its own national
interest, with the interests of the other states in the
region, and with Israel’s long-term interests as well.