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  • Soros adds voice to debate over Israel lobby

    Soros adds voice to debate over Israel lobby

    Sun Apr 15, 2007 11:39 PM ET

    By Bernd Debusmann, Special Correspondent

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The billionaire investor George Soros has added
    his voice to a heated but little-noticed debate over the role of
    Israel's powerful lobby in shaping Washington policy in a way critics
    say hurts U.S. national interests and stifles debate.

    In the current issue of the New York Review of Books, Soros takes issue
    with "the pervasive influence of the American Israel Public Affairs
    Committee (AIPAC)" in Washington and says the Bush administration's
    close ties with Israel are obstacles to a peace settlement between
    Israel and the Palestinians.

    Soros, who is Jewish but not often engaged in Israel affairs, echoed
    arguments that have fueled a passionate debate conducted largely in the
    rarefied world of academia, foreign policy think tanks and parts of the
    U.S. Jewish community.

    "The pro-Israel lobby has been remarkably successful in suppressing
    criticism," wrote Soros. Politicians challenge it at their peril and
    dissenters risk personal vilification, he said.

    AIPAC has consistently declined comment on such charges, but many of its
    supporters have been vocal in dismissing them. Historian Michael Oren,
    speaking at AIPAC's 2007 conference in March, said the group was not
    merely a lobby for Israel. "It is the embodiment of a conviction as old
    as this (American) nation itself that belief in the Jewish state is
    tantamount to belief in these United States," he said in a keynote
    speech.

    The long-simmering debate bubbled to the surface a year ago, when two
    prominent academics, Stephen Walt of Harvard and John Mearsheimer of the
    University of Chicago, published a 12,500-word essay entitled "The
    Israel Lobby" and featuring the fiercest criticism of AIPAC since it was
    founded in 1953.

    AIPAC now has more than 100,000 members and is rated one of the most
    influential special interest groups in the United States, its political
    clout comparable with such lobbies as the National Rifle Association.

    Its annual conference in Washington attracts a Who's Who of American
    politics, both Republicans and Democrats.

    UNWAVERING SUPPORT

    Mearsheimer and Walt said the lobby had persuaded successive
    administrations to align themselves too closely with Israel.

    "The combination of unwavering support for Israel and the related effort
    to spread 'democracy' has inflamed Arab and Islamic opinion and
    jeopardized not only U.S. security but much of the rest of the world,"
    they wrote.

    No other lobby group has managed to divert U.S. foreign policy so far
    from the U.S. national interest, while simultaneously convincing
    Americans that U.S. interests and those of Israel are essentially
    identical, they wrote.

    Once considered an honest broker in the Middle East, the United States
    is now seen in much of the Arab world as an unquestioning backer of
    Israel, according to international opinion polls.

    Peace moves have been at a near-standstill since the failure of
    Israeli-Palestinian talks in 2000 at the end of Bill Clinton's
    presidency. The Bush administration, accused by the Arab world of
    relative neglect, has said it hopes to promote peace in its final two
    years despite the political weakness of Israeli and Palestinian leaders.

    The two academics said that pressure from Israel and its lobby in
    Washington played an important role in President George W. Bush's
    decision to attack Iraq, an arch-enemy of Israel, in 2003.

    Mearsheimer and Walt found no takers for their essay in the U.S.
    publishing world. When it was eventually published in the London Review
    of Books, they noted it would be hard to imagine any mainstream media
    outlet in the United States publishing such a piece.

    It has been drawing criticism that ranged from shoddy scholarship to
    anti-Semitism, chiefly from conservative fellow academics and political
    supporters of the present relationship between Washington and Israel.

    In his contribution to the debate, Soros said: "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."

    That influence is reflected by the fact that Israel is the largest
    recipient of U.S. aid in the world.

    GOING MAINSTREAM

    Mearsheimer and Walt are now working on expanding their article into a
    book -- to be published in September by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. The
    company has not commented on online reports that it paid the two authors
    a $750,000 advance and plans to print one million copies.

    Another mainstream publisher, Simon and Schuster, already discovered
    that it not only is it possible to publish criticism of Israel but it
    can also be good for the bottom line.

    Former President Jimmy Carter's book "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid"
    shot up the bestseller lists after its publication last November, stayed
    there for more than three months and is still selling well.

    It had an initial print run of 300,000 copies and there are now 485,000
    copies in print, said Victoria Meyer, a spokeswoman for Simon and
    Schuster.

    Carter's book and its reference to apartheid provoked angry reactions --
    more in the United States than in Israel, where leftists opposed to the
    occupation of the West Bank have been accusing the government of
    apartheid practices for years and where the word has lost its shock
    value.

    In response to charges of bias and anti-Semitism, Carter said he wanted
    to provoke a discussion of issues debated routinely and freely in Israel
    but rarely in the United States.

    "This reluctance to criticize any policies of the Israeli government is
    because of the extraordinary lobbying efforts of the American Israel
    Political Action Committee and the absence of any significant contrary
    voices," he wrote in the Los Angeles Times during a tour to promote his
    book. "It would be almost politically suicidal for members of Congress
    to espouse a balanced position between Israel and Palestine."

    According to Oren, the pro-AIPAC historian, the Carter book and the
    Mearsheimer-Walt paper had the same "insidious thesis" and suffered from
    the same flaw -- ignoring oil as a driving element in U.S. policies on
    the Middle East.


    (c) Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.
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