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Israel Not As Powerful As You May Think
Too many peace-and-justice activists are too quick -- even eager, it sometimes seems -- to feel powerless. Did you hear all the wailing and gnashing of teeth the other day from liberals, when the Obama administration hinted that it might give up the public option for health care? You'd have thought they pronounced it dead and buried it. A lot of crusaders for health care reform were so depressed that they were ready to thrown in the towel.
But professional politicians like Howard Dean recognized it as merely a trial balloon, a way to test the strength of opinion for and against the idea, and an invitation to public-option supporters to fight all the harder.
The same misunderstanding is a problem for peace activists addressing the Israel-Palestine conflict. Through the long, dark years of neoconservative ascendancy under Bush and Cheney, it was common on the left to pronounce U.S. foreign policy under the thumb of the Israelis. Now the neocons are suffering a well-deserved obscurity. But the view that Israel is all-powerful, immune to pressures from anyone including the U.S. government, persists on the left.
The proof, we're told, is that the Israelis insist they will go on expanding their settlements, despite a strong demand from the President of the United States himself that they stop. At least Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu keeps saying that Israel will do whatever it damn pleases (all in the name of "security," of course), regardless of what POTUS or anyone else says. That endless flow of defiance from Jerusalem angers lots of peace activists here. They seem convinced that Israel has all the power in this ongoing conflict and richly deserves to be condemned for the way it abuses that power.
The Israeli policymakers certainly deserve condemnation for plenty of things -- but not because they are omnipotent. The signs of their weakness are easy enough to see, for anyone who is looking carefully.
When Netanyahu recently laid out Israel's minimum requirements for a peace settlement, in a public statement, he included "the genuine recognition of the state of Israel" -- but he omitted any demand for recognizing Israel as "a Jewish state" or "the homeland of the Jewish people." That was no accident, according to the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz: "Foreign diplomats have reported that people in the prime minister's bureau had phoned some of their colleagues to draw their attention to the striking absence from the statement."
For those who say it's actions, not words, that count (though in fact both are equally important) there is this news: Israel has quietly stopped approving new building projects in the West Bank settlements. Although Housing Minister Ariel Atias took public responsibility for the decision, Israeli officials say that it was made jointly at the highest level, by Netanyahu, Atias, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak. Projects under construction are continuing, and privately-funded projects are being initiated. But the fact that Israel is not authorizing public money for new settlement construction marks a major concession to the U.S.
Israeli political scientist Jonathan Rynhold explained it this way: Netanyahu "does not want to lose his credibility with the Americans. He says that you don't have to do everything they say, but that you do have to be reasonable. Otherwise you will lose all your backing when there are more important issues on the agenda, like Iran."
But on Iran, too, Israel has been timid. A senior Israeli official has said that Israel isn't asking for U.S. permission to attack Iran because the Netanyahu government doesn't want to risk being told "no." And in early August, Barak revealed that Israel restrained its attack on Lebanon in 2006 because "a message from the United States indicated we must spare Lebanon's infrastructure." At about the same time, Barak told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that the United States would present a regional peace plan "in the coming weeks," he added that "Israel must take the lead in accepting the plan."
Barak did not need to say what everyone knows: If Jerusalem refuses to jump when Washington issues a serious order, it risks losing an unknown amount of the enormous aid package the U.S. sends Israel every year. A government that wants to be reasonable doesn't bite the hand that feeds it.That may very well be one reason the Israelis have stopped building the wall that was supposed to separate them from Palestine. "Much of the unfinished work involves ‘fingers' of the barrier around Jewish settlements deep in the West Bank," the Washington Post said, and that's "potentially controversial in a climate in which the Obama administration is trying to curb Israeli activity in the West Bank as a prelude to restarting peace talks."
It's controversial from the U.S. side because completing the wall might mean that Israel is defining permanent borders. It's controversial from the Israeli side because the public there largely supports the wall project. To give it up is a political risk. Yet it's one that the Netanyahu government is willing to take.
It's easy enough to understand why Netanyahu and his cabinet ministers keep saying publicly that they'll never give in to U.S. pressure. They want to minimize their political risk, and (as a recent Washington Post headline put it) "Netanyahu's Defiance of U.S. Resonates at Home; Polls Show Resistance to Settlement Freeze." But the words that count most are the ones exchanged among the diplomats behind the scenes -- where, according to all indications, some progress is being made toward compromise by Israelis as well as Arabs.
It's harder to understand why these reports of progress, and all the other encouraging signs of Israel concessions, are so widely overlooked by peace and justice activists. Perhaps the belief in Israeli intransigence heightens the sense of Israeli evil. And let's face it. The more evil the enemy in a moral battle, the more pleasure we may get in waging that battle. Perhaps some are even tempted by the lure of absolutism: If you are fighting an enemy that's absolutely evil, then you must be absolutely good.
But whatever the appeal of seeing Israel as immune to all pressure, it's a political mistake. Peace activists are most effective when they have an accurate assessment of the political realities they are dealing with. In this case, the reality is that the most crucial decisions will be made in the White House, not in Jerusalem or anywhere else.
They certainly won't be made in the offices of AIPAC. Yes, the right-wing "pro-Israel" lobby does carry weight in Washington, though more on Capitol Hill than at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. But at both ends its clout is weakening -- not because AIPAC pushes any less, but because the peace movement, especially the Jewish-American peace movement, is pushing more. Groups like J Street, Brit Tzedek, and Americans for Peace Now are real players in the political game for the first time, and the rules of the game itself are changing accordingly.
The most important new rule is that the team that pushes hardest can win. On the Middle East as on health care reform, the White House has its finger up, checking the political breezes. What Howard Dean knows about health care is equally true for the Israel-Palestine conflict: We should not let public words fool us into think that the battle is over, when in fact it is really just beginning. The public words are invitations to all of us to work harder than ever to push the administration in the direction of peace and justice.



25 Comments so far
Show AllAll I can do is watch and wait.
How can you say they're "not powerful" when they hold the supposedly "most powerful nation on Earth" (militarily at least) as a colony, bodyguard and gigantic ATM machine?
At least ATMs only let you take out money that already belongs to you. We are more like a mint for Israel.
As far as the US being "gigantic ATM machine" - just remember, every tax dollar you put into the system you donate to israel's account. Just opt out. That basically leaves you with two choices - quit paying taxes or quit having "taxable income". That's what I've done.
"Israel has quietly stopped approving new building projects in the West Bank settlements." ... although has not stopped stealing land
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=220006
Jonny English, a good link you furnish, showing Israeli taking of Palestinian lands near Jenin for "military" purposes. On the same line, only 2 days ago on this site was published an article from Guardian/UK of the "slice at a time" appropriation of Palestinian homes in the West Bank as Israel qoes "quietly" about this business. http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/08/18-0 If Mr. Chernus had read this article, or anything else to show that this creating of "facts on the ground" of settlement intrusions before they are "authorized," he would know that a lot more is done and said and "understood" without being said where the decades-long process of ethnic cleansing has occurred in Israel. In the face of those continuing "facts," forgive me Mr. Chernus, for not believing that Israel is not as "bad" as I thought it was.
"Barak did not need to say what everyone knows: If Jerusalem refuses to jump when Washington issues a serious order, it risks losing an unknown amount of the enormous aid package the U.S. sends Israel every year. A government that wants to be reasonable doesn't bite the hand that feeds it."
Are they a government that wants to be reasonable? Is there really any chance at all that they could lose any of the enormous aid package?
I expect to comment at more length later on this newest version of Chernus Obama-apologia. Meantime my immediate thought goes to: "pay no attention to that man behind the curtain" listen to what the Wizard tells you. Pay no attention as Israel continues to expropriate Palestinian property in the West Bank "a slice at a time," listen to what Barack and Barak tell you.
I would think that the "natural course" would be the only remedy.
Going 'against' nature has proved disastrous in any area that one wishes to debate, health, life, love and especially the 'evolution' of nations.
That the modern 'state' of Israel is an 'unnatural' creation by the UN and especially the USA, and is required to be supported in unnatural continuous financial support.
If the USA were to cease its unnatural support of Israel to the tune of 20 billion* + annually, nature would take its course.
Either the modern state of Israel would cease to exist, or the Israelis would be forced to live in peace with their neighbors, support an independent Palestine, and join the world in a lawful and peaceful existence; instead of the exact reverse: which is what they have had since 1948.
When this 'program works well' with Israel. The USA would have a working model to use in order to 'rehabilitate itself into a 'lawful and peaceful state'----and in the future become the shinning example they falsely claim to be presently.
Just a thought. And since neither the USA nor Israel have ever tried to be 'lawful and peaceful' nations; the change might be 'refreshing'. That would be the "natural course". Of course!
* Here is a thought for all of those "Judean/Christian believers". The 20 billion in aid to Israel could support a universal health care in the USA that would be a world model.
And since it does not appear that 'Jesus is coming back' any time soon, to ' heal all of the sick here in the USA', the money would be better applied to problems here in the USA.
After all are we not talking about Israel? The "nation of chosen ones"---I would think that those who "really really really had faith": would just let GOD take care of 'his chosen ones'; and let America keep its money.
I would think that "GOD" being the 'being that he is' would want the 'Christian
Nation' the USA (the "chosen ones by proxy")---to have a 'Universal Health Care'---Israel does.
Good Luck America, you really need it.
Iraq was (wrongly) accused of disobeying UN Security Council resolutions, and that was Congressional justification for invading and destroying the country.
Israel has disobeyed UN resolutions since 1967, and the US gives them $7 million/day (avg.)
Continuing US hypocrisy is not 'change we can believe in'.
And while this charade about US healthcare reform goes on, let's admire the Israeli universal health care system.
After all, the US taxpayer is paying for it.
It's off-topic of Israel, but Chernus mentions as an example of people taking too seriously an idea like the omnipotence of the Israel lobby the case of Howard Dean's statement challenging Obama's dropping of the public option for health care reform that he was doing it merely as a "trial balloon" not to be taken so seriously. On the contrary, I heard his statement as deadly serious, as likely the first scream toward a resurrected run for the presidency, as he mentioned even in the link furnished by Chernus that those who oppose the public option (including I should think the President) should expect to face a "primary challenge." As one who thought he saw through the faux-progressivism of Dean in 04 as a precursor to the faux-progressivism of Obama in 08, this was an unsettling thought, but nonetheless the one that came to mind--that if his statement was a "trial balloon" it was one to test his own candidacy for President.
I agree on all points, Jerry.
· Yr Obd't Servant
An example of pushing back:
http://www.rabble.ca/podcasts/shows/redeye/2009/08/united-church-debates-israel-boycott-resolution
"I know not with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones." - Albert Einstein
Israel never approved new settlements every day, or week. So long as it is conducting the process, it is still expanding development. Remember, all these settlements are blatantly illegal.
Note Israel has not stopped killing or hinted it will do so, although things are temporarily quiet.
The Zionist lobby is a lot stronger than AIPAC, and J street and other organizations merely lobby for a chimeric vision of peace that accepts all the past killing, land robbery, kidnapping, etc.
this is some kind of twisted logic going on here..
so israel is not as powerful as we think. obviously ira hasn't been talking to very many palestinians lately. i bet that israel seems pretty potent to them.
Chernus with his Zionism lite telling us, like last week, that Israel is doing what the US wants; mikep with his Zionism heavy telling us all we are anti-semites. Nothing unusual here - move along please!
Except I will make two comments:
1. Last January the US Senate voted unanimously to support genocide
by poor little defenseless Israel against the Gazan Goliath. How is Obama going to counter that kind of support? Of course the Israeli's will pretend that Obama is in charge until they have a reason to require him to jump - then he'll jump.
2. Avraham Burg (former leader of the Knesset) said this a few years ago: " We live in a thunderously failed reality. ... A state lacking justice cannot survive. ... Even if the Arabs lower their heads and swallow their shame and anger for ever, it won't work. A structure built on human callousness will inevitably collapse in on itself. Note this moment well: Zionism's superstructure is already collapsing like a cheap Jerusalem wedding hall."
The cheap Jerusalem wedding hall has not yet fallen down but the cracks are becoming wider. When the US dollar is so low that the billions it pours into Israel are worthless the edifice will indeed crumble. Though Israel has already realised that being paid in US dollars is not a great idea (what a loyal ally the US has in Israel):
"In the spirit of Yom Kippur, the United States will not hold Israel to any agreements obligating them to accept Dollars as payment for their foreign aid. We will translate our obligations into Euros or whatever currency that best fits Israel's needs" Condoleeza Rice Secretary of State, September 2007.
Let's just say that I believe it when I see it. Till then, I reserve the right to be skeptic and press on with boycott, divestment and sanctions!
Truly, solananthera, you are the wisest of ALL the begonias!
· Yr Obd't Servant
Well, izrael may be less powerful than many think but they still control the U.S.of A. significantly and there in lies their hidden power, emanating from and through america, after all, who 'gave' izrael their atomic weapons.
If zio wants a few more slaps, that can be arranged.
Or something harder than slaps.
Get the message, zio: it's over.
I don't trust the U.S. government, certainly including the Obama administration, which may be trying to only provide itself with some public favour in getting the public to believe the Admin. is really intending good for Palestinians. The Oslo Accord(s) during the Clinton administration were supposed to fool us into believing real good was done for Palestinians, but it was a rotten accord, even if not as bad as israel outright warring on Palestine.
Ira Chernus speaks about PM Netanyahu's government no longer approving new construction projects, but to what extent is this really important without additional corrections, the stopping of other construction projects and, especially, outlawing construction through private funding, instead of government funding? It's something that strikes me, and this is while I'm only stating a layman's, non-expert's, p.o.v., as rather only [theoretical]. Will Israel still provide IDF soldiers to protect construction that's underway and settlements that have already been constructed? Will Israel still have or allow its soldiers oppress, murder, ... Palestinians? This will be an important indicator.
As for not approving new construction projects, WOW. I mean, like, there's barely anything left that's still Palestine anyway; after MOST of it has been already stolen away from the Palestinians since 1947.
I don't expect much real good for the Palestinians. There may be some improvement for them, but I don't expect much, for much good simply isn't in the character of the leaders of the U.S. government.
As for AIPAC losing clout, I'm not surprised, because the clout it did have was mostly cosmetic, anyway. It was strategically useful for stage performance(s), providing public distractions; helping to keep Americans distracted from how the U.S. government is really ruled or run.
U.S. politicians, many of them, especially among the more powerful ones, employ whatever tactics that seem strategically useful to them at any given time. If it seems strategically useful to act nice, good, then they play or act this game of pretense, and they change acts as they see fit. If they believed they'd gain strong popular support by siding with Israel, then they'd do this and they did it. If they perceive the tide of support changing directions, then they'll "go with the flow".
Etcetera.
Bottom line? They have an agenda or agendas consisting of prioritised objectives and the top ones are where the real focus is placed and kept. All lesser goals can be shelved, temporarily, or for apparently long stretches of time, and then taken back off of the shelves when conditions make this a non-risky thing to do.
This could probably be better worded, but like a philosopher of LONG ago accurately observed about politics said, "Politics is full of hypocrisy". It was then and has been ever since. Of course the "full" word shouldn't be treated in absolutist manner; it, instead, should be only used in a general, loose sort of way. After all, not all politicians are really hypocrites, but most are either hypocrites or incompetent, or neglect doing their "homework"; few being really worthy of being elected. Hypocrisy, however, is strongly present and we can see that it is strongly present today; in the US, Ca, UK, etcetera.
Anyway, Ira Chernus seems, to me, to be writing mostly in theoretical terms for the time being. I hope that good things will be done for the Palestinians, but am not expecting much and will take a "wait and see" position. I won't be an idealistic or blind believer in what he says in this article.
The latter viewpoint is not because I believe or ever believed that Israel and the Israeli lobby(ies) controlled the U.S. government, for I never have believed this and often enough made this clear in discussion forums. I believe the U.S. is the one that controls or very much controls the Israeli government; not totally, but still much. And it is the U.S. that funds Israel, not the other way around. Israel robs U.S. taxpayers because of the treasonous character or nature of the U.S. government's leadership, which wants the Israeli military power that the US, and some allies, built up for strategic or geo-strategic purposes. They'll surely always have the upper hand with Israel, but have to allow it some of its perverted pleasures to keep its leadership in line, "friendly", that is, cooperative, malleable, .... The U.S. has no other "battleship" (as Ray McGovern referred to Israel in terms of its purpose to the US, initially, just that it's become much more than a "battleship" with the US and others heavily militarising Israel over the past several decades); well, the U.S. has no other "battleship" nearing Israel's capabilities, unless we wish to compare the whole U.S. military to that of Israel, in which case, sure, the U.S. is much more militarily powerful. Otoh, Israel has many nukes, so if its leadership became suicidally vengeful, then it could use these weapons to launch major attacks. It's not likely that they'd be that crazy or mad though.
The U.S. is the dominant of the two powers, but the US does NOT do good for humanity. The US "elites" regularly pretend to do good and to want to do good, but it's pretense, stage acting; meant to (try to) deceive the public and to (try to) keep the public distracted from what's most really going on, the real agendas, objectives of the ruling "elites". And the trying, the efforts to try to deceive and distract work all too often because of gullible members of the public.
The world is a stage upon which there are many actors; and among them are many who enter politics (and corporations, and various institutions, organisations, ...) to work for ... NOT good, but for satisfying greed and perverted desires for power.
Do a search on what the survivors of the USS Liberty have to say about that battleship. It certainly is not run by the US. I agree with the treasonous nature of the US leadership, both civilian and (I add) military. The US has done nothing but mouth a few meaningless words to Israel. It has much less influence on Israeli policy (outside of enabling it) than the other way around. Any student of imperial history knows it is the subject state that pays tribute to the imperial masters, not the other way around.
I won't believe it until I see it. What Israel wants it gets from the US. Last Nov and Dec it wanted to use US planes , tanks and horrible incindary bombs to unleash on helpless and defenseless Palistian woman and children and our "noble" congress gave them permission. Yes our supposedly democratic and peace loving country gave the state of Israel the right to do whatever they felt necessary to keep these "prisoners " contained and sequested. Results 1400 Palistians dead 6 Israel dead. Boy that seems like a fair fight !
our country is controlled by the 1000's of jewish lawyers that run thru the halls of congress presidential office, State department. Joe Lieberman is just one of hundreds of very influential legislators that will do everything in their power to give Israel as much power that it wants. Joe Lieberman constantly tells the press that he loves his country and will do anything and everything to keep it strong , what he fails to mention is that his country is Israel and that the US is just a pon in his scheme to carry out his mission.
Obama went to Connecticut support Joe Lieberman when he was running against the Democratic rival ! Obama is controlled by Lieberman and his fellow Israeli supporters I bet Palistians will loose big time when all the dust settles over there !
It is funny that the author cites Barak as saying that Israel restrained its attack on Lebanon in 2006 when over 1200 civilians were killed and roads, power stations ...etc were targeted for no strategic purpose.
Ira is an apologist for Israel and if he is trynig, in in his blogs, to convince us that he is sometimes described as anti semitic, he is anti semitic only in the eyes of the extreme rightwing jews.