Major donors to Netanyahu campaign also supported Romney campaign Fri Nov 2, 2012 1:22PM Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Left, and Mitt Romney.
More than half the people who donated money to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus reelection campaign are Americans who also donated to the Romney campaign and/or the Republican Party.
According to records published by Israels State Comptroller office, reports McClatchy, Netanyahu has received donations from 47 individuals. Only one of them was Israeli, and 42 were American. Twenty-eight of the American donors also gave to Romney and/or the Republican Party.
Romney and Netanyahu have known each other for years, done business with each other, and their acquaintance has been a campaign issue in the past, with some accusing Netanyahu of displaying an improper preference for Romney over Obama.
But the real question is what would motivate so many wealthy American Romney supporters to send money to Netanyahus campaign. U.S. policy towards Israel hardly changes between Democratic and Republican administrations.
One of the major donors, the Falic family of Miami, not only donated to the Netanyahu and Romney campaigns but also to pro-settlement groups of Israeli Jews settling in the occupied West Bank.
The revelation reveals how bizarrely close the politics of Israel and the United States are, and how bold the Republicans are about bolstering right-wing elements in Israel (two of Netanyahus donors also gave to the Democrats).
But it also reveals the joint commitment many in the U.S. and Israeli political class have to denying Palestinians rights. The defunct direct-talk process has never been so broken, and that is primarily because Netanyahu has no interest in a two-state solution. His Likud Party Charter declares Jewish settlement in the West Bank and Gaza as the realization of Zionist values and describes the whole of the West Bank and Jerusalem [al-Quds] as belonging to Israel.
The quirky ideology of the extreme right-wing in Israel could have some further compatibility with Romneys religious Mormonism, which has traditionally taught, according to Wikipedia, that its adherents are either direct descendants of the House of Israel, or are adopted into it.
The Netanyahu campaign refused to comment on the findings, but one of his aids spoke to McClatchy on condition of anonymity and said the prime minister considered America a natural place to fundraise.
They have always welcomed Netanyahu with open arms in the United States. The people, the donors there, could not give to him enough, the former aide said. And he and Romney also share a lot of natural friends. Antiwar
FACTS & FIGURES
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney leads President Barack Obama by a whopping 35 percentage points among Israeli Jews when it comes to who they think will best look out for Israels interests, according to a new poll from Tel Aviv University/Israel Democracy Institute.
This preference well reflects the Jewish publics prevalent right-wing tendency in the foreign and defense sphere, according to an analysis accompanying the poll.
Among those on the right, 70 percent choose Romney and only 13 percent opt for Obama. Even among the center, Romney leads 54 percent to 25 percent. Obama leads among the left 51 to 30 percent. Newsmax
Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney has accused President Obama of anti-Israel positions, saying he threw Israel under the bus by criticizing their settlement expansion. Antiwar.com
Both President Obama and his challenger Mitt Romney pledged commitment to the Israeli regimes interests at the last U.S. presidential debate on October 22. Obama said his administration would stand with Israel if they are attacked. Romney said he would show Israel that the U.S. has its back militarily.
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) lobbyists guarantee billions of dollars in military aid for Israel each year, according to AlterNet.
AHT/HJ