Israel Lobby Watch
By PHILIP WEISS
09/03/06 "The
Nation" --- September 18, 2006 issue -- -For
progressives who are even mildly critical of Israel, a
never-ending concern is the response of the Jewish community.
Generally, Jews are among the biggest backers of liberal causes.
But a common refrain from liberal Jews is that Hamas and
Hezbollah represent threats to Israel's very existence, and so
conversations about policy take on an emotional and religious
character. "There's a deep schizophrenia in some of the Jewish
community, and people who are at the forefront of every single
rights issue, from racial justice in the United States to the
ethnic cleansing in Darfur--on Israel, it crumbles, and there is
all this hand-wringing," says Sarahleah Whitson of Human Rights
Watch. "And everyone [who is critical] is successfully
marginalized."
The struggle for Jewish hearts and minds explains the latest
battle in the ideological war over the Middle East: the
firestorm over Human Rights Watch's reports from the Lebanon
war. The New York City-based monitor issued a couple-dozen
reports during the conflict, some sharply critical of Israel for
killing civilians, and has had to fight a rear-guard action to
maintain its standing among American Jews.
The leading human rights organization in the world, HRW has a
dry and thorough manner that reflects its executive director,
lawyer Kenneth Roth, who is given to tweezerlike fact-finding
and incisive conclusions, with a moral backbeat. The restrained
tone has allowed HRW to grow by half in the past five years and
stay firmly in the mainstream. When I asked him if he had a
special connection to the New York Times, which frequently cites
its reports, Roth quipped, "There's a phone in the drawer."
HRW has often been critical of Israel while showing respect for
its security concerns. For instance, it has condemned suicide
bombing as a war crime and also assailed Israel's actions in the
occupied West Bank. On July 12 the Lebanon war began, and soon
escalated into a wholesale air attack by Israel on Lebanon (and,
yes, a rain of Hezbollah rockets on civilian targets in Israel).
HRW's first critics were the left, which felt HRW was twiddling
its thumbs as hundreds died, when it alluded delicately to
"potential violations of international humanitarian law" in a
letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. HRW did not issue
more forceful statements in the first two weeks of the war, Roth
says, because its two researchers couldn't get into southern
Lebanon. Once they got there and spent two days visiting
villages, HRW issued a fifty-page report August 3, accusing
Israel of war crimes in its "indiscriminate" bombings. The
researchers had documented more than a third of the reported
civilian deaths at that time and could show that in none of 153
killings were Hezbollah forces or weapons "in or near the area
that the IDF targeted during or just prior to the attack." HRW
alleged a war crime after it visited Qana, the scene of
twenty-eight civilian deaths on July 30. There Israeli missiles
had hit a three-story house in which people were sheltering.
Israeli officials later stated that rocket fire had originated
from the village three days before the attack.
HRW's statements got international news coverage (if only two
paragraphs in the Times) but put the group in the cross hairs of
the Israel lobby, notably in the New York Sun. The Sun linked
Ken Roth with Mel Gibson as an enemy of the Jewish people and
said his moral compass was "haywire." It is tempting to dismiss
the four-year-old Sun--whose most memorable contribution to
American letters has been its statement that Iraq War protesters
were guilty of "treason"--as a right-wing rag. Its backers
include Manhattan Institute former chair Roger Hertog and Bruce
Kovner, chair of the American Enterprise Institute. But Kovner
is also chair of Juilliard, and the Sun is a sophisticated
newspaper, with extensive arts and sports coverage. As managing
editor Ira Stoll says, the Sun has influence; it represents the
views of organized Jewish leaders. Among the Sun's readers, says
Stoll, are some of HRW's biggest financial backers. Indeed, in
an editorial the Sun said that Robert Bernstein, HRW's former
chair, was having "private agonies" over the group's reports and
quoted Morton Zuckerman, listed as a donor of between $25,000
and $99,000 in HRW's 2005 report, as saying the reports on
Israel were an "outrage.... Human Rights Watch has lost all
moral credibility."
Roth responded to every attack the Sun printed. In one letter he
spoke of Israeli "slaughter" and wrote, "An eye for an eye--or,
more accurately in this case, twenty eyes for an eye--may have
been the morality of some more primitive moment." The comment
was echoed in smears. The Sun printed a piece by Abraham Foxman
of the Anti-Defamation League saying that criticisms of the
Bible are a classic anti-Semitic stereotype, a diagnosis of
Roth's motivation that Stoll says he shares. "In my view
unfortunately and dangerously, it's increasingly respectable in
mainstream circles to engage in old style anti-Jewish
stereotypes," says Stoll. (It seems Roth's personal history--he
went into human rights law in part because as a boy he had
listened to his father's stories of escaping Nazi Germany--is
sinister camouflage.)
The Jerusalem Post and New York Daily News soon piled on. Never
one to miss the limelight, so did Harvard law professor Alan
Dershowitz, who wrote on the Huffington Post that HRW had
invented facts. Dershowitz then invoked Jewish solidarity:
"Within the last month, virtually every component of the
organized Jewish community, from secular to religious, liberal
to conservative, has condemned Human Rights Watch for its bias."
Roth says that HRW was isolated in its role as Israel critic in
part because the prospect of the sort of vitriol he faced has
scared other groups away from even looking at the Middle East.
HRW emergency director Peter Bouckaert explains, "We always get
attacked for our findings by the government involved. What makes
this case different is, it's not the government, it's the
external lobby. We have a difficult but positive dialogue with
the Israeli government and the IDF. They don't dismiss us as
morally repugnant or irrelevant. They take our findings
seriously. The attacks are not about the facts, they're about
insulating Israel from any type of criticism."
Bouckaert says the attacks represent a real threat to HRW. "All
we have is our reputation for credibility and impartiality. We
have a lot of Jewish donors and funders, and I think Ken wants
to be sure they don't think of us as not impartial."
At the height of the criticism, HRW organized a conference call
with Bouckaert and two other researchers who were on the ground
in the Middle East and members of the HRW board, to explain
their methods. "They made it clear that they understood the
political sensitivities and were bending over backward to be
impartial," says Michael Gellert, an HRW board member. So much
bending over backward can give a fact-finder a backache.
Bouckaert says that Israel is "an emotionally upsetting place to
work" because while he sometimes feels outrage at Israeli
actions, he is compelled to report publicly in the most careful
and balanced terms. That pressure grinds researchers down. They
leave or avoid the subject, which is the aim of the critics.
"We're one of the last ones standing in the mainstream," says
Whitson.
Remaining in the mainstream is vital to HRW. While Roth stuck to
his guns on Israel's "indiscriminate" bombings, and the
organization repeatedly condemned Israel's use of cluster bombs
in civilian areas, it also seemed to go out of its way toward
the end of the war to blast both sides. The chariness alienated
the international left. Roel Bramer, a Dutch-Canadian, resigned
from the board of the Toronto chapter of HRW in August, saying
its criticism of Israel was too tepid. In a resignation letter,
Bramer wrote, "Ken [Roth] is quoted as stating that we abide by
a 'fact/research-based application of international human rights
and humanitarian law'" and criticize governments on human rights
grounds, not political ones. "I feel that HRW should protest
boldly and loudly against this borderline genocide and the
calamitous rubble and grief Israel has left behind."
Roth does not appear to be too worried about his credibility on
the left. He is much more concerned about the right, even if
that means fielding arguments about whether the Bible is
primitive. One board member, Shibley Telhami, an Arab-American
who is sometimes enraged by Israel's actions, says engaging the
pro-Israel community is vital to the organization's mission, and
his own. "The New York Sun is framing HRW in a context that
resonates with a community that's much broader.... What you have
here is Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives,
within the American political mainstream, not just the Jewish
groups, saying that this is about Israel's right to defend
itself and let them finish the job. But you've got to connect,
so you think, What is the best mix of effectiveness, credibility
and principle? I struggle with that every day."
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.