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  • Outing The 'Israel Lobby'

    OUTING THE 'ISRAEL LOBBY'
    by Khody Akhavi

    Antiwar.com, CA
    http://www.antiwar.com/ips/akhavi.php?articleid=1 1567
    Sept 7 2007

    When John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt published their
    controversial essay "The Israel Lobby" in the London Review of Books
    in March 2006, their work elicited the kind of response of which most
    academics only dream.

    But it was also attacked and condemned by critics for its provocative
    and pointed argument that a wide-ranging coalition that includes
    neoconservatives, Christian Zionists, academics, columnists and
    Washington lobby groups such as the American Israel Public Affairs
    Committee (AIPAC) is responsible for shaping US foreign policy in
    the Middle East and suppressing the public debate in Washington.

    Columnist Christopher Hitchens, himself no stranger to controversy,
    called the work "slightly but unmistakably fishy." The Anti-Defamation
    League called it "a classical conspiratorial anti-Semitic analysis
    invoking the canards of Jewish power and Jewish control." Harvard Law
    professor Alan Dershowitz said it was riddled with distortions, and
    questioned the motivations of Walt, who served at the time as academic
    dean of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and Mearsheimer,
    who teaches at University of Chicago, to produce a paper that
    "contributes so little to the existing scholarship while being so
    susceptible to misuse."

    To be sure, the article would not have engendered such visceral
    reactions if not for the robust credentials of its authors.

    Overnight, two pillars of the academic establishment achieved notoriety
    for pushing into the open a subject that had long remained a taboo.

    And the object of their critique, the "lobby" - general parlance to
    describe those actors who actively promote a "pro-Israel" policy -
    launched an aggressive campaign to discredit their work and injure
    their reputations. More than one year later, they are still standing,
    proving that, according to Michael Massing, "the wide attention their
    argument has received shows that, in this case, those efforts have
    not entirely succeeded."

    Now, Mearsheimer and Walt have expanded their article into a 355-page
    book called The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy, published by
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux. In it, they argue much the same, that
    there exists neither a strategic nor a moral reason for the US
    to diplomatically, military and unequivocally support Israel in the
    Middle East. As such, the US should treat Israel as it does its other
    allies and conduct foreign policy that benefits US interests.

    And they accuse the "Israel lobby" as molding the political
    debate in a way that ultimately undermines the long-term security
    of the US "While other interest groups - including ethnic lobbies
    representing Cuban-Americans, Irish-Americans, Armenian-Americans, and
    Indian-Americans - have managed to skew US foreign policy in directions
    that they favored, no ethnic lobby has diverted that policy as far
    from what the American national interest would otherwise suggest,"
    they write.

    To what extent is the lobby an agent of the Israeli government, as
    opposed to a network or "political coalition" of people who have their
    own ideas about what is best for Israel? Mearsheimer and Walt write
    that, "It is the specific political agenda that defines the lobby,
    not the religious or ethnic identity of those pushing it."

    They also argue that the lobby acts on its own, and sometimes even
    against the express interests and policy of the Israeli government.

    That may be due, in large part, to the fact that the institutional
    leadership of the lobby is comprised of individuals and organizations
    whose views are more closely associated with those of the right-wing
    Likud party in Israel.

    On this point, Mearsheimer and Walt's broadbrush term "the Israel
    lobby" is a bit misleading, as they themselves admit, because it does
    not account for the multiplicity of views within the "pro-Israel"
    political community. It should more accurately be called the
    "pro-Likud" lobby. Nonetheless, the two authors include moderate
    pro-Israel groups, of whom they clearly approve, such as Americans
    for Peace Now and Israel Policy Forum, under their overly general
    rubric of the "Israel lobby," and muddy the waters further.

    Indeed, the borders of the lobby - as defined by the authors - are
    fuzzy, but Mearsheimer and Walt identify the group of academics,
    think-tanks, political action committees, neoconservatives and
    Christian Zionists who they believe form the core, and that tends
    to bolster their argument that the common denominator of all these
    groups is their ideological connection.

    They include, in no particular order: AIPAC, John Hagee's Christians
    United for Israel, ADL, the Conference of Presidents of Major American
    Jewish Organization, Zionist Organization of America, Jewish Institute
    for National Security Affairs, Bernard Lewis, Charles Krauthammer,
    Daniel Pipes and the Middle East Forum, the Israel Project, Elliot
    Abrams, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Center for Security Policy,
    William Kristol, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
    Congresspersons such as Eliot Engel of New York, and others.

    Mearsheimer and Walt also detail the extent to which the lobby
    and its supporters have employed, in the words of Michael Massing,
    "bullying tactics" to silence Israel critics. Massing wrote the most
    substantive critique of the initial article in the New York Review of
    Books, writing that "despite its many flaws," the Walt-Mearsheimer
    essay had "performed a very useful service in forcing into the open
    a subject that has for too long remained taboo."

    After publishing their article, the two authors themselves were
    accused of being anti-Semites, a charge they go to great lengths in
    their book to rebut. And they cite the response to former President
    Jimmy Carter's recent book, Palestine: Peace not Apartheid as an
    example of the phenomenon.

    "Not only was Carter publicly accused of being an anti-Semite and a
    'Jew hater,' he was even charged with being sympathetic to Nazis,"
    they write. "Since the lobby seeks to keep the present relationship
    intact, and because in fact its strategic and moral arguments are
    so weak, it has little choice but to try to stifle or marginalize
    serious discussion."

    One of the most extreme examples of this public intimidation was
    crafted - in McCarthyist fashion - by Pipes, who, in the aftermath
    of the Sep. 11, 2001 attacks, invited university students around the
    country to post comments and behavior of their professors that were
    deemed hostile to Israel and the US on his website, Campus Watch.

    Yet for all the attention paid to how the aggregate influence of the
    "lobby" contributes negatively to US policy, Mearsheimer and Walt
    do not focus extensively on the nuts and bolts of how the lobby
    actually works to translate its wishes into US policy, and this
    would have strengthened their argument. Missing is a list of campaign
    contributions by lobby-affiliated individuals to certain candidates,
    or more firsthand investigation and interviews with key figures.

    Thus, even though the book is richly sourced, much of the information
    comes from secondhand sources such as newspapers and public statements,
    and so, feels secondhand

    The last, and best, part of the book focuses on how the lobby has
    helped to shape the public and Congressional debate on the Iraq, Syria,
    Iran, and last summer's Israel-Hezbollah war. While it is questionable
    the extent to which the lobby actively pushed the US-led invasion
    of Iraq, Mearsheimer and Walt successfully demonstrate that it has
    exerted significant influence on Congress, promoting and advocating
    economic sanctions bills that target Syria and Iran.

    The political coalition of right-leaning groups that form Mearsheimer
    and Walt's "Israel lobby" do not pull the strings of Washington
    politicians as a puppeteer would a puppet. The lobby is not a
    monolithic entity, created out of some shadowy conspiracy, and the
    authors of this book, suffice it to say, are not anti-Semites. They
    are international relations specialists, part of the "realist"
    school of thought that emphasizes national interest and security in
    determining policy.

    The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy adds some substance to an
    argument that has already been made. If readers were not convinced of
    the authors' views the first time around, it is doubtful they will
    find much to change their minds in this book. But Mearsheimer and
    Walt's argument has cracked the door to long overdue debate.
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