Truman and Israel
How It All Began
By Harry Clark
06/03/06 "Counterpunch"
-- -- The Truman Administration's policy on Palestine
challenges at its start the "strategic asset" view of the
US-Israel relationship, and reinforces the "Israel lobby" view,
as argued in the recent article by
John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt
Truman's support
for the creation of a Jewish state was due entirely to the US
Jewish community, without whose influence Zionist achievements
in Palestine would have been for nought. Long before any
strategic argument was made, indeed, while a Jewish state was
considered a strategic liability, long before Israel's
fundamentalist Christian supporters of today were on the map,
the nascent Israel lobby deployed its manifold resources with
consummate skill and ruthlessness.
Rabbi Abba Silver, a Cleveland
Zionist with Republican contacts, and Zionist official Emmanuel
Neumann, initiated "Democratic and Republican competition for
the Jewish vote." In 1944 they "wrung support from the
conventions of both parties for the Taft-Wagner [Senate]
resolution" supporting abrogation of the Palestine immigration
limits in the 1939 British white paper, and the establishment of
Palestine as a Jewish commonwealth. Ensuring the traditional
loyalty of Jewish voters was a paramount concern of Democratic
politicians, up to the president himself, in the New York
mayoral election of 1945, the 1946 congressional elections, and
the 1948 presidential election.
Gentile opinion was also courted
in non-electoral ways, through the American Palestine Committee
of notables, constituted in 1941 by Emmanuel Neumann of the
American Zionist Emergency Committee. By 1946 it included
"sixty-eight senators, two hundred congressmen and several state
governors" with "seventy-five local chapters." It became "'the
preeminent symbol of pro-Zionist sentiment among the non-Jewish
American public.'" It was entirely a Zionist front.
Zionist control was discreet
but tight. The Committee's correspondence was drafted in the
AZEC headquarters and sent to [chairman New York Senator
Robert] Wagner for his signature. Mail addressed to Wagner
as head of the American Palestine Committee, even if it came
from the White House or the State Department, was opened and
kept in Zionist headquarters; Wagner received a copy. The
AZEC placed ads in the press under the committee's name
without bothering to consult or advise it in advance, until
one of its members meekly requested advance notice.
Dewey Stone, a Zionist
businessman, had financed Truman's vice-presidential campaign in
1944, and businessman Abraham Feinberg, with jewelry magnate
Edmund Kauffman, led fundraising for the otherwise penniless
1948 presidential campaign. "If not for my friend Abe, I
couldn't have made the [whistle-stop train] trip and I wouldn't
have been elected," Truman stated. "Feinberg's activities began
a process that made the Jews into 'the most conspicuous
fundraisers and contributors to the Democratic Party.'"
Key White House advisors ensured
the domination of Zionist viewpoints in the highest circles of
the Truman Administration. Jewish aides David Niles,
administrative assistant to Truman, and Max Lowenthal, special
assistant on Palestine to Clark Clifford, himself "Truman's key
advisor on Palestine at the White House," were especially
crucial. Niles was one of two presidential aides retained from
the Roosevelt Administration, the other being Samuel Rosenman.
Niles was Truman's chief political liaison with the Jewish
community. Lowenthal was the Harvard-trained former counsel to
the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee on which Truman had
served, who specialized in drafting Zionist memoranda. In 1952
Truman stated in a letter to Lowenthal, "I don't know who has
done more for Israel than you have." Clifford, an ambitious
Missouri lawyer, like so many non-Jewish Democrats saw the
manifest political advantages of Zionism; Truman's 1948 victory
launched Clifford's career as consummate Washington insider. The
"White House through its busy and assorted 'aides' never wanted
for advice on the Palestine question. All together the quantity
of well-argued advice coming in through various unofficial
channels was enormous and would provide an efficient counter to
that coming from the president's official foreign policy-making
body, the State Department."
This formidable apparatus was
deployed at every twist and turn on the sinous path of events
that culminated in Israel's creation. In 1945 the Zionist lobby
linked concern for the Jewish displaced persons languishing in
European camps to the Palestine question, and pressured Truman
to endorse a Jewish Agency proposal for the British to admit
100,000 Jewish immigrants to Palestine. In April, 1946, a joint
Anglo-American commission, with US Zionist members, duly
endorsed the immigration proposal, among others, and talks about
a comprehensive political settlement continued, resulting in the
Morrison-Grady plan for a federal state with autonomy for Arab
and Jewish provinces. Truman thought this then and later "the
best of all solutions proposed for Palestine." The plan fell
short of Zionist aspirations toward partition, and under intense
pressure, with the fall elections looming, Truman reluctantly
declined to endorse it.
The Jewish Agency Executive, the
governing body of the Zionist settlement in Palestine, proposed
partition in early August. On October 4, 1946, the eve of Yom
Kippur, Truman delivered his famous statement noting the
Morrison-Grady plan, and the Jewish Agency partition proposal,
calling the latter a solution which "would command the support
of public opinion in the United States." Despite Truman's
further observations that "the gap between the proposals" could
be bridged, and that the US government could support such a
compromise, the statement was intepreted as support for
partition and a Jewish state, as Niles predicted to the author,
the Jewish Agency representative in Washington, whose original
draft had been modified by the State Department.
The Yom Kippur statement
marked a watershed in the political and diplomatic struggle
for the Jewish state. The British saw in the statement a
demonstration of Jewish political power and gave up their
quest for an Anglo-American consensus on Palestine. [British
Foreign Secretary] Bevin began issuing threats that the
British would evacuate Palestine, and in February 1947 they
did indeed refer the question with no recommendation to the
United Nations.
The United Nations Special
Commission on Palestine was formed after the British
announcement. Truman, "undoubtedly embarrassed by
accusationsthat he had exploited the Palestine question for
domestic political gain" with his Yom Kippur statement,
thereafter remained silent. Before the UNSCOP decision, Truman
still retained hope for the 1946 Morrison-Grady plan. When on
August 31, 1947, UNSCOP announced its majority decision
recommending partition, the administration came under
overwhelming pressure to endorse it.
The State Department, like the
War Department and most of the government, and elite opinion
generally, viewed good relations with the Arab states and people
as the basis of US interests in the region's oil, in trade and
investment, military basing rights, and excluding the rising
bogey of Soviet influence. But the Zionist machine was at full
throttle, Democratic politicians from Congress to the Cabinet
protested vehemently to Truman about the political consequences,
and a statement endorsing partition was made at the UN on
October 11. Truman did fear that if partition became a US plan,
it would require US military forces to implement. Neither the US
nor the USSR, which endorsed partiton two days after the US,
lobbied for votes among member states, and on Wednesday,
November 26, the General Assembly approved the final draft
partition resolution by one vote less than the required
two-thirds majority. The partition forces postponed the final
vote, and over the Thanksgiving holiday the president, his aides
and US diplomats went to work. That Saturday, November 29,
partition passed by 33 to 13, with ten abstentions. Truman took
personal credit for changing several votes.
The Zionists had been waging war
against the British to drive them out of Palestine, and after
the UN partition vote, civil war broke out with the Palestinian
Arabs, who rejected partition. In February the State Department
prepared plans for a UN trusteeship, with White House knowledge
and approval. On March 18, a UN commission to monitor events in
Palestine, which had predicted further chaos and bloodshed after
the British withdrawal on May 14, reported its failure to
arrange any agreement between Jews and Arabs. The following day
the US ambassador to the UN announced the trusteeship proposal,
which brought a political firestorm down on Truman, and on March
25, at a press conference he explained that trusteeship was only
a means of eventually implementing the UN resolution for
partition. The Arabs rejected it, as did the Zionists.
Yet Truman's political fortunes
continued to plummet; the Democratic Party revolted against his
presidential candidacy. As Zionist forces achieved partition
(and more) in battle, pressure built for recognition of the
Jewish state, expected to be proclaimed on the final day of
British withdrawal, May 14. The State Department was opposed;
Secretary Marshall feared Jewish military successes would be
temporary, that the Zionists would partition Palestine with King
Abdullah of Transjordan without reaching a settlement with the
Palestinian Arabs (which did happen), and that recognition would
prejudice efforts to arrange a truce under UN auspices after May
14. Zionist pressure was ferocious; the White House "aides" were
very busy; Clifford essentially commissioned the request for
recognition from the Jewish Agency representative in Washington,
which was duly delivered to the White House, and at 6:11 PM on
May 14 Truman announced de facto recognition of the State of
Israel, flummoxing the US delegation at the UN, and US allies.
Marshall stated that, during a May 17 discussion, Truman
"treated it somewhat as a joke as I had done but I think we both
thought privately it was a hell of a mess," and felt that the US
"had hit its all-time low before the U.N."
US diplomacy in the ensuing
Arab-Israeli war was conducted along similar lines. For all his
accommodation of Zionism, Truman received only 75% of the Jewish
vote, compared to Roosevelt's typical 90%. Truman lost New York,
Dewey's home state, where there was also a large vote for
Wallace. Truman did narrowly win Ohio, Illinois and California,
helped by Jewish voters. After describing this tour de force
of domestic power politics, Michael Cohen, whose work is mainly
quoted here, argues that Israel's military prowess changed the
views of the British and US diplomatic and military
establishments. "[T]he White House and State Department, if only
ephemerally, came to a consensus on Israel's vital importance to
the West as a 'strategic asset."' The qualification
"ephemerally" acknowledges the Eisenhower presidency, during
which Israel was largely not regarded as a strategic asset.
Cohen attributes Truman's
susceptibility to Zionist influence to a "unique set of
circumstances that converged to determine the fate of
Palestine," including Jewish friends, White House advisors, key
Jewish Democratic Party fundraisers, and Zionist military
prowess, which "should not be expected ever to repeat
themselves." The circumstances were not at all unique, but have
been practically a recipe for quasi-sovereign Jewish influence
on foreign policy in Democratic administrations. By
institutionalization throughout the political culture, this
influence extends to Republican administrations as well;
Eisenhower was an exception. Such influence is not sinister or
conspiratorial, but the overt working of US-style capitalist
democracy, albeit on behalf of racism, war and genocide, and
with a paralyzing effect, in this case, on the liberal circles
which usually oppose such matters.
The chauvinism of US organized
Jewry is a distinctive feature of US society and history,
comparable in importance to classic US singularities like
slavery, and the absence of a socialist left, and their
crippling legacies. Jewish influence in the Democratic Party,
and its impact on foreign policy, notably on the inability of
Democrats to mount a critique of the Iraq war and Middle East
policy, is comparable to the influence of the Dixiecrats, the
segregationist Southern Democrats, on civil rights, labor law
and other issues. The moral antipode to organized Jewish power
is not an orthodoxy which misattributes Jewish influence to
"strategic interest," but anti-Zionism. Left internationalism,
in which Jews were prominent, and classical Reform Judaism, once
the dominant Jewish creed, emphatically rejected Zionism as a
reactionary ideology, rejected modern Jewish nationality, and
affirmed the Jewish place as a minority in liberal or
revolutionary society. Anti-Zionism need not mean, immediately,
a secular democratic state in Palestine, but the moral and
intellectual framework which rejects Zionist claims on Jewish
identity and gentile conscience, and asserts liberal and
revolutionary values against radical nationalism.
Harry Clark
grew up in the Illinois congressional district represented for
twenty-two years by Paul Findley, a centrist Republican.
Findley's support for the Palestinians aroused the ire of the
American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, which eventually drove
him from office. Studying Zionism is an avocation.
A pdf of this article with
footnotes can be found on Clark's
website.
© 2006 by Harry Clark
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