“You see this napkin? In twenty-four hours, we could have the signatures of seventy senators on this napkin.” Those were the words of American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) official, Stephen Rosen, describing the power of the pro-Israel lobby to journalist Jeffrey Goldberg.
Four years earlier, while boasting about his bad faith implementation of the Oslo Accords to a group of Israeli settlers, Benjamin Netanyahu said, “America is a thing you can move very easily.”
These sort of stories have long haunted efforts in the U.S. to advocate for a more balanced American policy toward Israel/Palestine. They represent a general public perception that Israeli leaders like Netanyahu and lobbying groups like AIPAC are all-powerful forces in the halls of congress, a perception that vote counts on the lobby’s legislative initiatives often bear out. They’ve symbolized the idea that pro-Israel organizations’ money, political connections, and successful intimidation of opposition groups have effectively made their cause impervious to counter-lobbying efforts.
But at a moment when an unprecedented number of members of Congress are up in arms over Netanyahu’s efforts to sabotage the Obama administration’s policy towards Iran, there are other signs that the pro-Israel lobby may not be invincible in Washington. Here are seven pieces of news from the last year that proponents of a less lopsided policy towards Israel/Palestine should find heartening.
- Grassroots activists helped defeat one of Netanyahu’s top legislative priorities.
- Student groups passed at least eight resolutionsin 2014 and there’s already a wave of divestment proposals being considered in 2015.
- All eight of the candidates supported by Sheldon Adelson lost their elections.
- Representative Eric Cantor lost his primary.
- Representative Justin Amash won his election.
- Senator Boxer was forced to acknowledge and challenge Israel’s discriminatory policies.
- Even some evangelical’s are beginning to withdraw unconditional support for Israel’s policies.
Before you write this off as Pollyannaish bordering on delusional, let me explain.
One of the clearest examples of increasing success by grassroots activists was the challenge mounted against the United States-Israel Strategic Partnership Act of 2014. Unlike the 70 Senate signatures promised by Mr. Rosen on a napkin, it took more than a year to get 63 co-sponsors for the United States Israel Strategic Partnership Act and it took twenty months and a significant watering down of the legislation for it to pass. The bill also faced an enormous public outcry and ignited a fierce debate across the country about Israel’s discriminatory policies against U.S. citizens, at one point leading to a stunning exchange between George Bisharat and Senator Barbara Boxer in the Los Angeles Times.
Even some of AIPAC’s hand-picked candidates initially refused to co-sponsor the egregious legislation. As many may remember, in 1983 Dick Durbin was promoted by pro-Israel groups as a replacement for Paul Findley, the latter of whom was targeted because he was seen as being insufficiently supportive of Israel. In the case of AIPAC’s most recent priority legislation, Senator Durbin recognized the detrimental impact it would have on the civil rights of U.S. citizens, particularly Americans of Arab and Muslim heritage, and he refused to support the bill until the language was changed.
Because of widespread opposition, Senator Boxer was forced to reintroduce the legislation with an amendment that essentially bars Israel from entering the Visa Wavier Program until it ceases its discriminatory policies against U.S. citizens. Although the bill ultimately passed after twenty months, a group of organizations with a tiny fraction of the opposition’s budget successfully challenged Israel’s entry into the Visa Waiver Program, which Haaretz described as “a top priority for Prime Minister Netanyahu and the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC.”
In addition to facing a more emboldened and successful opposition, pro-Israel groups are increasingly coming to terms with the fact that their strategic depth comes from a deeply problematic and notoriously unreliable source, namely evangelical groups like Christians United for Israel (CUFI). Pastor John Hagee, the head of CUFI, has a long history of making anti-Semitic remarks and offering deeply disturbing interpretations of the Holocaust. Thus far, pro-Israel Jewish organization have maintained their myopic alliance with CUFI, but the current détente is far from durable. Compounding the problem for pro-Israel groups is that in recent years significant numbers of young evangelicals have begun to question and challenge their church leaders’ unconditional support for Israel.
Within the Jewish community itself, organizations like Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) are achieving incredible growth in their numbers and success in their work. From divestment campaigns to lobbying on Capitol Hill, organizations like JVP are challenging the status quo in unprecedented ways.
A number of other examples haven’t exactly been clear victories for social justice or human rights, but they should dispel any idea that money and unconditional support for Israel are the sole determining factors in elections. This past summer Representative Eric Cantor, the former Republican House Majority Leader who was beloved by AIPAC and in line to be Speaker of the House, was defeated by a primary opponent with less than $300,000. A well organized group of activists from both ends of the political spectrum managed to handily win an election against Cantor, who outspent his opponent David Brat by 40 to 1. Shortly after Cantor lost his primary, Representative Justin Amash, a tea party leaning Palestinian-American from Michigan, won his primary within weeks of voting against more funding for Israel’s Iron Dome missile system.
The Potemkin village of invincibility that pro-Israel groups have built over decades is beginning to crumble. As Netanyahu and Republicans increasingly use Israel as a wedge issue, Democratic support will continue to erode as lawmakers adopt positions more in line with the opinions of their constituencies. We’ve already seen large swaths of the Democratic base begin to break. As recently as 2014, delegates at the Democratic National Convention resoundingly rejected an attempt to reinstate language recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital only to have their decision repeatedly ignored by party leadership.
In all likelihood, many Republicans will also eventually withdraw support as well to bring the party’s position more in line with the opinions of their own core constituencies. National security hawks like General Petraeus think unconditional support for Israel is a strategic liability, libertarians like Rand Paul want to end military aid to everyone, and as mentioned earlier support from evangelicals is also beginning to evaporate. It’s also worth recalling that both Reagan and George H.W. Bush sanctioned Israel.
If the past year has taught me anything, it’s that AIPAC and Netanyahu are paper tigers; money doesn’t necessarily buy elections, grassroots organizing works, and the movement for Palestinian rights has far more latent political power than it realizes.
As the political rift between the US and Israeli government appears to grow, it’s incumbent upon us to utilize this moment to address more than just a breach in diplomatic protocol. Mounting antipathy by Democrats towards Netanyahu presents a real opening to strengthen campaigns aimed at addressing the real issue, Israel’s decades of brutal military occupation and its systemic discrimination against Palestinians. As Netanyahu self-destructs under the weight of his own hubris, we should view Israel’s new status as a wedge issue as an opportunity to permanently change lawmakers’ political calculus on Israel/Palestine.
3000 or so dead Palestinians would disagree about the make up of that tiger
On the other hand, a bipartisan group of 75 Senators just sent a letter to Kerry urging the administration to aggressively oppose the Palestinian ICC bid. That’s 70 with five spares. The only positive thing to note is that neither Warren nor Sanders signed. Rand Paul didn’t sign either, but I assume that is because the letter’s mere threat to stop PA funding is too weak for Paul.
Defining one’s enemy.
I agree that the aura of invincibility is vulnerable to being shattered, that resistance is multi-form and growing, and that now is perhaps the best time in memory to precipitate a major change, a shattering of that power.
But how to define the targeted tumor to be excised? I’d like to suggest an analytical approach.
The Netanyahu-led Likud-Neocon movement is in the conflation business in which all its opposition is indistinguishable from the worst Anti-Semitic, Anti-Israel Jihadist-Shariah Law supporters, who all, in Likud’s unalterable view, constitute existential threats to Israel who must be opposed at all cost and by every means. This website attracts many opposition voices, some who oppose Zionism per se, some who oppose some of its tactics, some who would speak for the oppressed, and the “War of Ideas in the Middle East” frequently breaks down into endless parsing of variations on any number of historical movements and lines of reasoning.
This pits a well-organized, dedicated, simplistic combatant against a loose-affiliation of non-dedicated, very complicated mob of quibblers, very few of whom want to risk being smeared as equivalent to the worst of Israel’s enemies.
To me, the best tactic here, is to narrowly define the target to be unseated from power, to identify specific goals to be achieved, as a result, and then to resist with tenacity efforts to over-reach, as well as efforts that would conflate the movement with its worst allies.
And, for me, that involves unseating Netanyahu and thoroughly discrediting Likud-Neoconservatism for the failed and exceedingly dangerous and corrupt political philosophy it is, with eradication of its small but well-placed minions from the halls and editorial rooms and board rooms of power, while insisting that the occupation end, Palestinian oppression end, and that peace be achieved, war crimes addressed, reparations made, differing interests in the land settled, and peoples reconciled. Within a relatively short time frame that is run by a disinterested international authority, with security guarantied by that same authority, perhaps with a default solution that will be imposed, in the absence of agreement to something different by the principals.
The strength to achieve such a result will come by focusing narrowly on the tumor to be eradicated, and specific goals, and steadfast resistance to allowing the many threats to unity and focus that will arise from within the movement and from within the Likud-Neocon movement.
Absent surgical resection, the prognosis gets progressively worse.
“We don’t kill people. Mostly we accidentally cull ’em…” – BB Netanyahoo.
“That’s why I…, we, us… want the UN Gaza war probe shelved [as chief quits], coz I, we, us ain’t done nuttig wrong!
My take is that opposition to Israel,s policies and actions is far more out in the open than ever before.
5 years ago very few groups would have dared to openly condemn Israel.Notables were Professor Finkelstein, Chomsky, Walt and Mearsheimer , Jimmy Carter,Mandela,Bishop Tutu and others blazed a very dangerous trail and set the tone for today,s ever more open opinions and actions.This has to be progress and it is exponential in it,s increase.The dam is breached and there is nothing the zionists and their supporters can do to stop it from bursting.They may periodically slow the process but that is all.Netanyahu contributes to this change by his continuous dictates to build more illegal squats and his propensity for insulting the very people who through their generous gifts of aid and diplomatic support keeps his oxygen flowing.
It can only get worse for Israel.The only question is when.