On Israel, America and AIPAC
By George Soros
The Bush administration is once again
in the process of committing a major policy blunder in
the Middle East, one that is liable to have disastrous
consequences and is not receiving the attention it
should. This time it concerns the
IsraeliPalestinian relationship. The Bush
administration is actively supporting the Israeli
government in its refusal to recognize a Palestinian
unity government that includes Hamas, which the US State
Department considers a terrorist organization. This
precludes any progress toward a peace settlement at a
time when progress on the Palestinian problem could help
avert a conflagration in the greater Middle East.
The United States and Israel seek to
deal only with the president of the Palestinian
Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, in the hope that new elections
would deny Hamas the majority it now has in the
Palestinian Legislative Council. This is a hopeless
strategy because Hamas has said it would boycott early
elections, and even if their outcome would result in
Hamas's exclusion from the government, no peace agreement
would hold without Hamas's support.
In the meantime Saudi Arabia is
pursuing a different path. In a February summit in Mecca
between Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal,
the Saudi government worked out an agreement between
Hamas and Fatah, which have been clashing violently, to
form a national unity government. According to the Mecca
accord, Hamas has agreed "to respect international
resolutions and the agreements [with Israel] signed by
the Palestinian Liberation Organization," including
the Oslo Accords. According to press reports on March 15,
the new government, like the present one, will be headed
by Ismail Haniya, the Hamas prime minister, but Hamas
will get nine of the government's twenty-four ministries,
as well as an additional minister without portfolio;
President Abbas and his Fatah party will control six
ministries, and independent representativessome
said to be under the control of Hamas or Fatahand
other political factions will fill the nine remaining
ministries.
The Saudi government views this accord
as the prelude to the offer of a peace settlement with
Israel, along the lines of the 2002 Arab Peace
Initiative, a settlement to be guaranteed by Saudi Arabia
and other Arab countries, based on the 1967 borders and
full recognition of Israel. The offer was meant to be
elaborated by Saudi King Abdullah at the Arab League
meeting to be hosted by Saudi Arabia at the end of March.
But no progress is possible as long as the Bush
administration and the Ehud Olmert government persist in
their current position of refusing to recognize a unity
government that includes Hamas. The recent meeting
between Condoleezza Rice, Abbas, and Olmert turned into
an empty formality.
Many of the causes of the current
impasse go back to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
decision to withdraw from the Gaza Strip unilaterally,
without negotiating with the then-Fatah-controlled
Palestinian Authority. This strengthened the position of
Hamas. In the run-up to the January 2006 Palestinian
legislative elections, Sharon refused to lift a finger to
help Fatah's prospects. At the behest of the
Quartetthe European Union, the United States,
Russia, and the United NationsJames Wolfensohn
worked out a six-point plan to assist the inhabitants of
the Gaza Strip; among other things, it called for
facilitating traffic between the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip and opening a port and an airport in the Gaza
Strip. But not one of the six points was implemented. The
Bush administration's official in charge, Elliot Abrams,
sabotaged the six-point plan from its inception. Partly
as a consequence, Hamas won the elections in an upset
victory.
Then came the blunder I
am talking about. Israel, with the strong backing of the
United States, refused to recognize the democratically
elected Hamas government and withheld payment of the
millions in taxes collected by the Israelis on its
behalf. This caused great economic hardship and
undermined the ability of the government to function. But
it did not reduce popular support for Hamas among
Palestinians, and it reinforced the position of Islamic
and other extremists who oppose negotiations with Israel.
The situation deteriorated to the point where Palestine
no longer had an authority with whom it would have been
possible for Israel to negotiate.
This was a blunder because Hamas is not
monolithic. Its inner structure is little known to
outsiders but according to some reports it has a military
wing, largely directed from Damascus, which is beholden
to its Syrian and Iranian sponsors and a political wing
which is more responsive to the needs of the Palestinian
population that elected it to power. If Israel had
accepted the results of the election, that might have
strengthened the more moderate political wing.
Unfortunately the ideology of the "war on
terror" does not permit such subtle distinctions.
Nevertheless, subsequent events provide some ground for
believing that Hamas has been divided between different
tendencies. It was not willing to go so far as to
recognize the existence of Israel but it was prepared to
enter into a government of national unity which would
have abided by the existing agreements with Israel. No
sooner was agreement reached than the military wing
engineered the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier, Corporal
Gilad Shalit, which had the effect of preventing such a
government from being formed by provoking a heavy-handed
military response from Israel. Hezbollah then used the
opportunity to stage an incursion from Lebanon across the
internationally recognized border, kidnapping several
more Israeli soldiers. Despite a disproportionate
response by Israel, Hezbollah was able to stand its
ground, thereby gaining the admiration of the Arab
masses, whether Sunni or Shia.
It was this dangerous state of affairs
including the breakdown of government in Palestine
and fighting between Fatah and Hamasthat prompted
the Saudi initiative, which holds out the prospect of a
peace settlement. Such a settlement would be very much in
the interests of Israel and the United States.
Defenders of the current policy would
argue that Israel cannot afford to negotiate from a
position of weakness. But Israel's position is unlikelyto
improve as long as it pursues its present course of
military escalation. Fortunately Saudi Arabia, whose
position is also precarious, has a genuine interest in
promoting a settlement based on two states. It would be
tragic to miss out on that prospect, which would mean
both withdrawal from large parts of the West Bank by the
Israelis, so that a workable Palestinian state can take
power, and acceptance of Israel's existence by Hamas. The
outlines of such a settlement are quite well defined. The
underlying concepts are not materially different from
what they were during President Clinton's time.
The most potent threat comes from Iran.
Movement toward a settlement in Palestine would be
helpful in confronting that threat. But both Israel and
the United States seem to be frozen in their
unwillingness to negotiate with a Palestinian Authority
that includes Hamas. The sticking point is Hamas's
unwillingness to recognize the existence of Israel; but
that could be made a condition for an eventual settlement
rather than a precondition for negotiations.[1]
The current policy is
not even questioned in the United States. While other
problem areas of the Middle East are freely discussed,
criticism of our policies toward Israel is very muted
indeed. The debate in Israel about Israeli policy is much
more open and vigorous than in the United States. This is
all the more remarkable because Palestine is the issue
that more than any other currently divides the United
States from Europe. Some European governments, according
to reports, would like to end the economic boycott of
Hamas once a unity government is successfully
established. But the US has said it would not.
One explanation is to be found in the
pervasive influence of the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC), which strongly affects both the
Democratic and the Republican parties.[2] AIPAC's mission is to ensure American support
for Israel but in recent years it has overreached itself.
It became closely allied with the neocons and was an
enthusiastic supporter of the invasion of Iraq. It
actively lobbied for the confirmation of John Bolton as
US ambassador to the United Nations. It continues to
oppose any dialogue with a Palestinian government that
includes Hamas. More recently, it was among the pressure
groups that prevailed upon the Democratic House
leadership to drop the requirement that the President
obtain congressional approval before taking military
action against Iran. AIPAC under its current leadership
has clearly exceeded its mission, and far from
guaranteeing Israel's existence, has endangered it.
The Palestine problem does not have a
purely military solution. Military superiority is
necessary for Israel's national security, but it is not
sufficient. The solution has to be political, as
President Clinton recognized. He exerted enormous energy
to bring about a peace settlement and his efforts were so
successful that it took the murder of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin in 1995 by an Israeli extremist to prevent
an Israeli peace initiative with Arafat from being
implemented. Even after Ariel Sharon's walk on the Temple
Mount in September 2000 set off new violence, Clinton
offered a peace deal several months later that was
rejected by Arafat but probably suggests the shape of a
future settlement.
President Bush has never tried. He has
adopted the misleading metaphor of the war on terror and
allowed Ariel Sharon to have his way. Sharon did not want
a negotiated settlement. He came to realize that the
military occupation could not be maintained forever and
withdrew from Gaza, in part, it has been argued, to
strengthen the Israeli position on the West Bank. But
unilateral withdrawal led to the current chain of events.
The Bush administration did not just passively acquiesce
in the Sharon/ Olmert government's policies; it actively
encouraged them. AIPAC must bear its share of
responsibility for aiding and abetting policies such as
Israel's heavy-handed response to Hezbollah last summer
and its insistence on treating Hamas only as a terrorist
organization.
The current policy of not seeking a
political solution but pursuing military
escalationnot just an eye for an eye but roughly
speaking ten Palestinian lives for every Israeli
onehas reached a particularly dangerous point.
After the Israel Defense Forces' retaliation against
Lebanon's road system, airport, and other infrastructure
one must wonder what could be the next step for the
Israeli forces. Iran poses a more potent danger to Israel
than either Hamas or Hezbollah, which are Iran's clients.
There is the growing danger of a regional conflagration
in which Israel and the US could well be on the losing
side. With the ability of Hezbollah to withstand the
Israeli onslaught and the rise of Iran as a prospective
nuclear power, Israel's existence is more endangered than
at any time since its birth.
Supporters of Israel have good reason
to question AIPAC's advocacy and they have begun to do
so. But instead of engaging in critical self-examination,
AIPAC remains intransigent. Recently, the pro-Israel
lobby has gone on the offensive, accusing the so-called
progressive critics of Israel's policies of fomenting
anti-Semitism and endangering the very existence of the
Jewish state.
The case against those
who disagree with Israel's current policy is spelled out
in detail by Alvin H. Rosenfeld in a pamphlet published
by the American Jewish Committee.[3] After reviewing the rise of new anti-Semitic
currents, particularly in the Muslim world and Europe,
Rosenfeld equates anti-Semitism with anti-Zionism and
asserts that Jewish critics of Israeli policies reinforce
both. He acknowledges that criticism by itself is not
anti-Semitic; indeed, he writes, "the biblical
prophets stood on the side of justice and were never
hesitant to denounce their people's behavior when they
saw it deviating from the standards of justice."
But, he contends, "to condemn Israeli actions and,
at the same time, to forego any realistic historical and
political frameworks that might account for such
actions" is not acceptable. The use of
"exaggerated and defamatory terms," he writes,
renders Israel indistinguishable from the "despised
country regularly denounced by the most impassioned
anti-Semites."
To call Israel a Nazi state...or to
accuse it of South Africanstyle apartheid rule
or engaging in ethnic cleansing or wholesale genocide
goes well beyond legitimate criticism.
To talk about victims turning into
aggressors falls in his view in the same category.
To buttress his case, Rosenfeld
examines the writings of a number of critics. In
particular, he focuses on a collection of essays whose
authors, in his own judgment, make Noam Chomsky appear as
an "almost conservative thinker," but the list
also includes Tony Judt, a distinguished historian, whose
crime consists of suggesting a possible binational
solution for Israel, and Richard Cohen, a Washington
Post columnist, who wrote, among other things, that
the "sanest choice for Israel is to pull back to
defensiblebut hardly injuriousborders"
and to get out "of most of the West
Bank"a policy often advocated in Israel
itself. Rosenfeld resorts, without any personal knowledge
of the people he attacks, to primitive accusations of
self-hatred, lumping all these critics together as people
who are "proud to be ashamed to be Jews." He
concludes that "the cumulative effect of these
hostile ideas, which have been moving steadily from the
margins to the mainstream of 'progressive' opinion, has
been to reenergize ugly ideas and aggressive passions
long considered dormant, if not dead," i.e.,
anti-Semitism.
Rosenfeld's argument suffers from at
least three elementary errors in reasoning. The first is
guilt by association. The fact that constructive critics
of Israel say things that, when taken out of context or
paraphrased in provocative ways, can be made to sound
similar to the comments of anti-Semites does not make
them anti-Semitic or supporters of anti-Semitism in any
way. Second, there is a lack of factual evidence. Are the
expressions used by the critics really "exaggerated
and defamatory"? That depends on the facts. What is
the more appropriate term, "Israel's still
incomplete security fence" or "an Apartheid
Wall?" That can be determined only by considering
the actual impact the wall is having on the lives of the
Palestinians, a subject ignored by Rosenfeld and AIPAC.
Third, the professed respect for
criticism is a sham when it is not permitted "to
condemn Israeli actions and, at the same time, to forego
any realistic historical and political frameworks that
might account for such actions." As presented by
Rosenfeld, this formula implies that Israel's actions
have to be justified, right or wrong. The appeal to a
"realistic framework" aims to rationalize the
Israeli position. Criticism ought to be considered on its
merits and not by any other yardstick. Suppressing
criticism when it is deemed to be unpatriotic has been
immensely harmful both in the case of Israel and the
United States. It has allowed the Bush administration and
the Sharon/ Olmert government to pursue disastrous
policies.
The pro-Israel lobby
has been remarkably successful in suppressing criticism.[4] Politicians challenge it at their peril because
of the lobby's ability to influence political
contributions. When Howard Dean called for an evenhanded
policy toward Israel in 2004, his chances of getting the
nomination were badly damaged (although it was his
attempt, after his defeat in Iowa, to shout above the
crowd that sealed his fate). Academics had their
advancement blocked and think-tank experts their funding
withdrawn when they stepped too far out of line.
Following his criticism of repressive Israeli policy on
the West Bank, former president Jimmy Carter has suffered
the loss of some of the financial backers of his center.
Anybody who dares to dissent may be
subjected to a campaign of personal vilification. I speak
from personal experience. Ever since I participated in a
meeting discussing the need for voicing alternative
views, a torrent of slanders has been released including
the false accusation in The New Republic that I
was a "young cog in the Hitlerite wheel" at the
age of thirteen when my father arranged a false identity
to save my life and I accompanied an official of the
Ministry of Agriculture, posing as his godson, when he
was taking the inventory of a Jewish estate.[5]
AIPAC is protected not only by the fear
of personal retaliation but also by a genuine concern for
the security and survival of Israel. Both considerations
have a solid foundation in reality. The same two factors
were at play in the United States after September 11 when
President Bush declared war on terror. For eighteen
months thereafter it was considered unpatriotic to
criticize his policies. That is what allowed him to
commit one of the greatest blunders in American history,
the invasion of Iraq. But at that time the threat to our
national security was greatly exaggerated by the Bush
administration. Condoleezza Rice and Vice President Dick
Cheney went so far as to warn that the threat would
manifest itself in the form of a mushroom cloud. In the
case of Israel today the threat to national security,
even national survival, is much more real. Israel needs
the support of the United States more than ever. Is this
the right time to expose AIPAC's heavy influence in
American politics? I believe this consideration holds
back many people who are critical of the way AIPAC
conducts its business. While the other architects of the
Bush administration's failed policies have been
relentlessly exposed, AIPAC continues to be surrounded by
a wall of silence.
I am not insensitive to
this argument. It has held me back from criticizing
Israeli policies in the past. I am not a Zionist, nor am
I am a practicing Jew, but I have a great deal of
sympathy for my fellow Jews and a deep concern for the
survival of Israel. I did not want to provide fodder to
the enemies of Israel. I rationalized my position by
saying that if I wanted to voice critical views, I ought
to move to Israel. But since there were many Israelis who
held such views my voice was not needed, and I had many
other battles to fight.
But now I have to ask the question: How
did Israel become so endangered? I cannot exempt AIPAC
from its share of the responsibility. I am a fervent
advocate of critical thinking. I have supported
dissidents in many countries. I took a stand against
President Bush when he said that those who don't support
his policies are supporting the terrorists. I cannot
remain silent now when the pro-Israel lobby is one of the
last unexposed redoubts of this dogmatic way of thinking.
I speak out with some trepidation because I am exposing
myself to further attacks that are likely to render me
less effective in pursuing many other causes in which I
am engaged; but dissidents I have supported have taken
far greater risks.
I am not sufficiently engaged in Jewish
affairs to be involved in the reform of AIPAC; but I must
speak out in favor of the critical process that is at the
heart of our open society. I believe that a much-needed
self-examination of American policy in the Middle East
has started in this country; but it can't make much
headway as long as AIPAC retains powerful influence in
both the Democratic and Republican parties. Some leaders
of the Democratic Party have promised to bring about a
change of direction but they cannot deliver on that
promise until they are able to resist the dictates of
AIPAC. Palestine is a place of critical importance where
positive change is still possible. Iraq is largely beyond
our control; but if we succeeded in settling the
Palestinian problem we would be in a much better position
to engage in negotiations with Iran and extricate
ourselves from Iraq. The need for a peace settlement in
Palestine is greater than ever. Both for the sake of
Israel and the United States, it is highly desirable that
the Saudi peace initiative should succeed; but AIPAC
stands in the way. It continues to oppose dealing with a
Palestinian government that includes Hamas.
Whether the Democratic Party can
liberate itself from AIPAC's influence is highly
doubtful. Any politician who dares to expose AIPAC's
influence would incur its wrath; so very few can be
expected to do so. It is up to the American Jewish
community itself to rein in the organization that claims
to represent it. But this is not possible without first
disposing of the most insidious argument put forward by
the defenders of the current policies: that the critics
of Israel's policies of occupation, control, and
repression on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem and
Gaza engender anti-Semitism.
The opposite is the case. One of the
myths propagated by the enemies of Israel is that there
is an all-powerful Zionist conspiracy. That is a false
accusation. Nevertheless, that AIPAC has been so
successful in suppressing criticism has lent some
credence to such false beliefs. Demolishing the wall of
silence that has protected AIPAC would help lay them to
rest. A debate within the Jewish community, instead of
fomenting anti-Semitism, would only help diminish it.
Anticipating attacks, I should like to
emphasize that I do not subscribe to the myths propagated
by enemies of Israel and I am not blaming Jews for
anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism predates the birth of
Israel. Neither Israel's policies nor the critics of
those policies should be held responsible for
anti-Semitism. At the same time, I do believe that
attitudes toward Israel are influenced by Israel's
policies, and attitudes toward the Jewish community are
influenced by the pro-Israel lobby's success in
suppressing divergent views.
March 15, 2007
Notes
[1] As the highly respected Israeli writer David
Grossman, whose son was killed fighting in Lebanon,
commented on March 11, "In the present situation any
sort of dialogue between Israel and Palestinians is
positive and has the potential to change the state of
mind of both societies."
[2] It is not the only one. In a letter to the
Jewish citizens in America, Jimmy Carter wrote that
"the overwhelming bias for Israel comes from
Christians like me who have been taught to honor and
protect God's chosen people from among whom came our own
savior, Jesus Christ."
[3] Alvin H. Rosenfeld, "'Progressive' Jewish
Thought and the New Anti-Semitism" (American Jewish
Committee, 2006).
[4] See Michael Massing, "The Storm Over the
Israel Lobby," The New York Review, June 8,
2006.
[5] See the article by Martin Peretz,
"Tyran-a-Soros," The New Republic,
February 12, 2007.
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