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Israel/Zionism See other Israel/Zionism Articles Title: Obama’s foreign policy options were continually limited by Netanyahu and the lobby — Ben Rhodes Ben Rhodess memoir of serving as a top foreign policy aide to President Obama, titled The World As It Is, came out in June to highly favorable reviews. I got the book to scratch my itch on Israel/Palestine and was surprised by how candid Rhodes is about the power of the Israel lobby in a Democratic administration down to the fact that chief of staff Rahm Emanuel nicknamed Rhodes Hamas for speaking up for Palestinian human rights. The memoir documents that at almost every turn, Barack Obama was painted into a corner by Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu with the engaged support of the organized Jewish community. In doing so, it echoes a book Rhodes never dares to cite, but surely read, The Israel Lobby, by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, and backs up their most serious charge, that the lobby helped get us into the war in Iraq in 2003. The book is hardly flattering to the former president. Obama emerges as a magnetic/enigmatic personality, but not very strong when it comes to international and intellectual challenges. Hed rather play cards than read a book. And he prefers the company of a cold young cipher/sycophant like the author to a mature thinker. Rhodes shows that Israels American friends had access to the Obama administration at all times. As Obama prepared his famous speech to the Muslim world, delivered in Cairo in 2009, the lobbying was intense, Rhodes says. AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, and other organizations friendly to Netanyahu had established themselves as the adjudicators of what was pro-Israel, and they had zero tolerance for any pressure on the Israeli government. In the days before the speech, I was asked to sit down with Lee Rosenberg the Chicago recording executive who had cultivated Obama for years and was freshly minted as AIPACs president. Rosenberg wanted to make sure we werent breaking new ground in our support for the Palestinians, or worse, suggesting that Israel/Palestine was a root cause of all problems in the Middle East. Rosenberg also urged Obama to call on the Muslim world to recognize Israel as a Jewish state. The author has misgivings about how much he had to listen to Rosenberg. The Israelis were by far the stronger party in the conflict, but we were acting as if it was the reverse. Some pressure came from within. When Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel got tired of hearing Rhodes argue for empathy to the Palestinians, he started calling me Hamas. Hamas over here, hed say, is going to make it impossible for my kid to have his fucking bar mitzvah in Israel. Later Rhodes himself relayed the pressure to the president while going over edits in the speech. Theres a lot of discomfort with using the word occupation, he said. Obama pushed back. What else are we supposed to call it?
If we cant criticize settlements, then we might as well go home. That speech early on in the administration contained Obamas sharpest criticism of Israel. The president slammed the humiliations of the occupation, hit the settlements in no uncertain terms (The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements
It is time for these settlements to stop), and didnt refer to the Jewish state as such. (And Rahm Emanuel did celebrate a sons bar mitzvah and a daughters bat mitzvah in Israel.) But Obama spent years climbing down. In February 2011, Obama did Netanyahu and the lobby a giant favor by vetoing the UN Security Council resolution against settlements. Soon after that, the president gave a speech calling for peace negotiations based on the 1967 lines, bringing about the signature moment of his relationship with Netanyahu, when the prime minister lectured the president in the Oval Office the next day on why Israel could not accept such lines. Obama was humiliated, but the organized Jewish community took Netanyahus side. The lecture, Rhodes says, was the perfect way to mobilize opposition to Obama among the leadership of the American Jewish community, which had internalized the vision of Israel constantly under attack. That community used financial pressure on Obama: donors to his reelection campaign. Netanyahus smack at Obama came just as the 2012 presidential campaign cycle was cranking up, and it succeeded in igniting a firestorm of criticism, Rhodes relates. A number of congressional Democrats distanced themselves from the speech. I was given a list of leading Jewish donors to call to reassure them of Obamas pro-Israel bona fides. It was far too painful to wade into these waters with no prospect of success. Netanyahu had mastered a kind of leverage: using political pressure within the United States to demoralize any meaningful push for peace just as he used settlements as a means of demoralizing the Palestinians
A leading White House policy aide is calling Jewish donors, and surely telling them that he has a Jewish mother, grew up with Israel as a secular religion, and was once a member of AIPAC. But he feels he has no prospect of success up against the Israeli PM. Obama then had to speak to AIPAC, and rebut Netanyahu by demonstrating his support for Israel. This is as annoyed as Ive been as president, Obama vents to Rhodes. Dealing with Bibi is like dealing with the Republicans. And the president cited his own bona fides as an Israel supporter. I came out of the Jewish community in Chicago
Im basically a liberal Jew. (Obama once joked that his early liberal Zionist backers in Chicago made up the cabal that enabled him to become president.) At AIPAC, Obama warned about coming threats: Israels growing diplomatic isolation, and the growing tension between having a Jewish state and having a democracy if the occupation endured. That was in 2011. And nothing changed for five years. This is where wed find ourselves throughout the administration: unable to nudge Israel in the direction of peace, and left holding up a mirror that showed the necessity of doing so. The biggest foreign policy story of the administration was the late, lamented Iran deal of 2015. As Rhodes comments mordantly, the Obama administration was involved in multiple wars in which thousands were killed, and yet nothing in our foreign policy was as fiercely contested as the nuclear deal with Iran. Again, the lobby played a large part, as Israels agent in the US capital. In Washington, where support for Israel is an imperative for members of Congress, there was a natural deference to the views of the Israeli government on issues related to Iran, and Netanyahu was unfailingly confrontational, casting himself as an Israeli Churchill
. AIPAC and other organizations exist to make sure that the views of the Israeli government are effectively disseminated and opposing views discredited in Washington, and this dynamic was a permanent part of the landscape of the Obama presidency. Rhodes says pressure to attack Iran came from experts who had been wrong on Iraq, but were still influential. You have to bomb something, one unnamed expert tells him. What? Rhodes ask. It doesnt matter. You have to use military force somewhere to show that you will bomb something. Again, money plays a part: Rhodes describes a well financed and relentless effort to undermine the deal. AIPAC and other opposition groups committed up to $40 million. They sent out long anti-Iran deal documents that would shape the arguments wed hear made back at us from deal opponents on the Hill or in the media. The critics used Netanyahus talking points Irans non-nuclear behaviorits support for terrorism, its belligerence in the Middle East just as Trump has done in tearing that deal up. And the organized Jewish community was key to that pressure. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
A Leopard cannot change his spots. I hope this scion of Irgun terrorists dies a miserable death. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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