Myths About Being ‘Pro-Israel’
By Jeremy Ben-Ami Sunday, May 11, 2008; B03 washingtonpost.com
Six decades ago, my father fought
alongside Menachem Begin for Israel’s independence. If you’d have told him back
then that politicians in the world’s last superpower would be jockeying today to
see who can be more “pro-Israel,” he would have laughed at you.
Grateful as I am for decades of
U.S. friendship to Israel, I have to wonder, as the state my father helped
found turns 60, just who is defining what it means to be pro-Israel in the
United States these days.
Some purported keepers of that
flame claim that supporting Israel means reflexively supporting every Israeli
action and implacably opposing every Israeli foe — adopting the talking
points of neoconservatives and the most right-wing elements of the American
Jewish and Christian Zionist communities. Criticize or question Israeli
behavior and you’re labeled “anti-Israel,” or worse. But unquestioning
encouragement for short-sighted Israeli policies such as expanding Jewish
settlements in the West Bank isn’t real friendship. (Would a true friend not
only let you drive home drunk but offer you their Porsche and a shot of tequila
for the road?) Israel needs real friends, not enablers. And forging a healthy
friendship with Israel requires bursting some myths about what it means to be
pro-Israel.
1. American Jews choose to
back candidates largely on the basis of their stance on Israel.
This urban legend has somehow
become a tenet of American Politics 101, which is why politicians work so hard
to earn the pro-Israel label in the first place. But it’s a self-serving fable,
cultivated by a tiny minority of politically conservative American Jews who
actually are single-issue voters. Most Jewish voters make their political
choices the way other Americans do: based on their views on the full spectrum
of domestic and foreign policy issues.
Moreover, the American Jewish
community still has a markedly progressive bent. Exit polls suggest that nearly
80 percent of Jewish Americans voted for John F. Kerry over George W. Bush in
2004; some 70 percent of them were opposed to the Iraq war in 2005, according
to the American Jewish Committee; and polls show that most American Jews say
they favor a more balanced U.S. Middle East policy that’s aimed at achieving peace.
2. To be strong on Israel, you
have to be harsh to the Palestinians.
Wrong, and counterproductive to
boot. One popular way for members of Congress to earn their pro-Israel stripes
is to come down as hard as possible on the Palestinians, by using economic and
diplomatic pressure or giving the Israelis a freer hand for military strikes.
That may satisfy some primal urge
to lash out at Israel’s foes, but it does Israel more harm than good.
As Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert has argued, Israel’s survival depends on offering the Palestinians a
more hopeful future built on political sovereignty and economic development. As
long as Palestinians despair of a decent and dignified life, Israel will be at
war. And as long as the only channel for the Palestinians’ ingenuity is
building better rockets, not even the Great Wall of China will protect Israel’s
cities from their wrath. Helping the Palestinians achieve a viable, prosperous
state is one of the most pro-Israel things an American politician can do.
3. The Rev. John Hagee and his
fellow Christian Zionists are good for the Jews.
Hardly. Are Israel and American
Jewry really so desperate that we must cozy up to people whose messianic dreams
entail having us all killed or converted to Christianity? Hagee, the founder of
Christians United for Israel, and his ilk believe that Israel dare not cede any
territory in the quest for peace, claiming that the Bible promised all of the
holy land to the Jews. In other words, Christian Zionists look at the
trade-offs that Israel must make to achieve peace — and hope to thwart
them. Then again, peace is not what these folks have in mind; they hope that
Israel will seek to permanently expand its borders, thereby goading the Arabs
into a war that will become the catalyst for Armageddon and the second coming
of Christ. Do your ambitions for Israel extend beyond turning it into the fuel
for the fire of the “End of Days”? Then Hagee and company are not —
repeat, not — your friends.
4. Talking peace with your
enemies demonstrates weakness.
You don’t need an advanced degree
in international relations to recognize that pursuing peace only with people
you like is pointless.
Most Israelis know this; a recent
poll in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz found that two-thirds of Israelis favor
cease-fire negotiations between their government and Hamas, the Palestinian
Islamist movement that controls the Gaza Strip, exactly because Hamas is such a
bitter foe. But in Washington, we self-righteously refuse to engage —
even indirectly — with Hamas, Iran or Syria.
Hamas won the most recent
Palestinian national elections in a landslide. Do we seriously think that it
can be erased from the political landscape simply by assassinations and
sanctions? Precisely because Hamas and Iran represent the most worrisome
strategic challenges to Israel, responsible friends of Israel who’d like to see
it live in security for its next 60 years should be engaging with them to
search for alternatives to war.
5. George W. Bush is the best
friend Israel has ever had.
Not even close. The president has
acted as Israel’s exclusive corner man when he should have been refereeing the
fight. That choice weakened Israel’s long-term security.
Israel needs U.S. help to
maintain its military edge over its foes, but it also needs the United States
to contain Arab-Israeli crises and broker peace. Israel’s existing peace pacts
owe much to Washington’s ability to bridge the mistrust among parties in the
Middle East. So when the United States abandons the role of effective broker and
acts only as Israel’s amen choir, as it has throughout Bush’s tenure, the
United States dims Israel’s prospects of winning security through diplomacy.
The best gift that Israel’s friends here could give this gallant, embattled
democracy on its milestone birthday would be returning the United States to its
leading role in active diplomacy to end the conflicts in the Middle East
— and help a secure, thriving Israel find a permanent, accepted home
among the community of nations.
jeremyb@jstreet.org
Jeremy Ben-Ami is executive
director of J Street, a lobby and political action committee that promotes
peace and security in the Middle East.