Money talks as Trump does u-turn on Israel

The grubby underside of US electoral politics is on show once again as the Democratic and Republican candidates prepare to fight it out for the presidency. And it doesn’t get seamier than the battle to prove how loyal each candidate is to Israel.

New depths are likely to be plumbed this week at the Republican convention in Cleveland, as Donald Trump is crowned the party’s nominee. His platform breaks with decades of United States policy to effectively deny the Palestinians any hope of statehood.

The question now is whether the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, who positions herself as Israel’s greatest ally, will try to outbid Trump in cravenly submitting to the Israeli right.

It all started so differently. Through much of the primary season, Benjamin Netanyahu’s government had reason to be worried about Israel’s “special relationship” with the next occupant of the White House.

Early on, Trump promised to be “neutral” and expressed doubts about whether it made sense to hand Israel billions of dollars annually in military aid. He backed a two-state solution and refused to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

On the Democrat side, Clinton was challenged by outsider Bernie Sanders, who urged “even-handedness” towards Israel and the Palestinians. He too objected to the huge sums of aid the US bestows on Israel.

Sanders exploited his massive support among Democrats to force Clinton to include well-known supporters of Palestinian rights on the committee that drafts the party’s platform.

But any hopes of an imminent change in US policy in the Middle East have been dashed.

Last week, as the draft Republican platform was leaked, Trump proudly tweeted that it was the “most pro-Israel of all time!” Avoiding any mention of a two-state solution, it states: “Support for Israel is an expression of Americanism. … We reject the false notion that Israel is an occupier.”

The capitulation was so complete that even the Anti-Defamation League, a New York-based apologist group for Israel, called the platform “disappointing” and urged the Republican convention to “reconsider”. After all, even Netanyahu pays lip service to the need for a Palestinian state.

But Trump is not signaling caution. His new advisers on Israel, David Friedman and Jason Greenblatt, are fervent supporters of the settlements and annexation of Palestinian territory.

Trump’s running mate, announced at the weekend, is Indiana governor Mike Pence, an evangelical Christian and a stalwart of pro-Israel causes.

So why the dramatic turnaround?

Candidates for high office in the US need money – lots of it. Until now Trump has been chiefly relying on his own wealth. He has raised less than $70 million, a fifth of Clinton’s war-chest.

The Republican party’s most significant donor is Sheldon Adelson, a casino magnate and close friend of Netanyahu. He has hinted that he will contribute more than $100 million to the Trump campaign if he likes what he sees.

Should Netanyahu offer implicit endorsement, as he did for Mitt Romney in the 2012 race, Christian Zionist preachers such as John Hagee will rally ten of millions of followers to Trump’s side too – and fill his coffers.

Similar indications that money is influencing policy are evident in the Democratic party.

Sanders funded his campaign through small donations, giving him the freedom to follow his conscience. Clinton, by contrast, has relied on mega-donors, including some, such as Haim Saban, who regard Israel as a key election issue.

That may explain why, despite the many concessions made to Sanders on the Democratic platform, Clinton’s team refused to budge on Israel issues. As a result, the draft platform fails to call for an end to the occupation or even mention the settlements.

According to The New York Times, Clinton’s advisers are vetting James Stavridis as a potential running mate. A former Nato commander, he is close to the Israeli defense establishment and known for his hawkish pro-Israel positions.

Clinton, meanwhile, has promised to use all her might to fight the growing boycott movement, which seeks to isolate Israel over its decades-long occupation of Palestinian territory.

The two candidates’ fierce commitment to Israel appears to fly in the face of wider public sentiment, especially among Democrats.

A recent Pew poll found 57 per cent of young, more liberal Democrats sympathized with the Palestinians rather than Israel. Support for hawkish Israeli positions is weakening among American Jews too, a key Democratic constituency. About 61 per cent believe Israel can live peacefully next to an independent Palestinian state.

The toxic influence of money in the US presidential elections can be felt in many areas of policy, both domestic and foreign.

But the divorce between the candidates’ fervor on Israel and the growing doubts of many of their supporters is particularly stark.

It should be dawning on US politicians that a real debate about the nation’s relationship with Israel cannot be deferred much longer.

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As ever there are silver linings out there. The farce of the US supporting the 2SS with Palestinians having a Swiss cheese territory with zero sovereignty , zero contiguity and East Jerusalem as its capital (as if) will finally be blown out of the water and US citizens will be clearly exposed to the reality of their government be it Republican or Democratic openly supporting and financing a single state where millions of the native population are denied citizenship and the basic rights cherished in the Land of the Free.

Bring it on !

As I recall, Trump’s “neutrality” on I-P lasted all of about five seconds.

Trump: ” … I’m very pro-Israel. In fact, I was the head of the Israeli Day Parade a number of years ago, I did a commercial for Netanyahu when he was getting elected … People are born with hatred, they’re taught hatred. And I have to say, it’s mostly on the one side, not on the other side. But they’re taught hatred. … ”

More Trump: “I am a great friend of Israel. I was the Grand Marshal of the Israeli Day Parade… I have so many friends. In fact one of them, one of my great friends — where is Jared, my son-in-law? Where is he? My son-in-law is Jewish, and he’s fantastic … So, there is nobody closer — and Bibi Netanyahu asked me to do a commercial for him, for his campaign. I did a commercial for him.”

His “turn-around” is more of a “stay the course…and full speed ahead!”

84 evangelical Christian leaders signed this statement on the Israel/Palestine situation, calling for “the Israelis and Palestinians to negotiate a fair, two-state solution”. http://www.cfr.org/israel/evangelical-statement-israelpalestine/p15810

All the money I the world can’t buy enough votes of the American electorate doesn’t like the candidate. So many commenters” mw were crowing about the loss of kantor to an upstart.

It is pretty wondrous how zionist-israel- haters can’t imagine that American voters not only have no problem with a pro israel platform but in fact like a pro israel platform. That all the huffing and puffing about aipac this and aipac that is meaningless to most. That there is nothing more to aipac then there is to any other advocacy lobby is lost on jew-haters, Israel-hates and the like. You can scream chicken little about aipac till the cows come home but how many years of barking up the wrong tree will it take to understand that even ‘dumb’ american voters understand what bds is, what ror means, what hamas stands for, what Hezbollah is and isn’t (not a resistance organization but is an Iranian paramilitary proxy and de facto enemy of the usa ) but yeah, it’s Zionist who are the crazy evil ones.

P’s. Saying trump did a u-turn is so completely off the wall. As if trump has any solid policy plans about anything. He has no concept of u-turns. He has only one big concept of everything including his hair, and it’s Donald Trump. Period.

“It should be dawning on US politicians that a real debate about the nation’s relationship with Israel cannot be deferred much longer.”

Not when 23 of your 24 largest personal donors are Zionist Jews, a la Hillary Ramrod Clinton.
As Upton Sinclair said, “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”