Does
the Israeli Tail Wag the American Dog?
If the United States is unable to distinguish the world’s or its
own real needs from those of another state and that state’s
lobby, then it simply cannot say that it always acts in its own
best interests. By
Kathleen and Bill Christison
03/01/07 "ICH
" -- - A quarter century ago, the executive director of AIPAC —the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee—established an
analytical unit inside the organization to write in-depth
advocacy papers for policymakers. The year was 1981, the
president was Ronald Reagan, and AIPAC had just lost a
hard-fought battle in Congress over the sale of AWACS
surveillance aircraft to Saudi Arabia. The AIPAC leader was an
energetic former congressional aide named Thomas Dine, who used
the setback to build AIPAC into a formidable political force.
Over the next few years, Dine quadrupled AIPAC’s grassroots
membership as well as its budget and aggressively expanded
contacts with Congress and policymakers. He set out to supply
politicians with analyses geared toward advancing Israeli
interests, in the stated belief that anyone who wrote papers
read by policymakers would effectively “own” the policymakers.
This was a seminal moment in the decades-long growth of the
lobby’s influence on US Middle East policy, often to the
detriment of US national interests. Many have characterized the
relationship between what the United States does in the Middle
East and what the lobby wants it to do as a case of the Israeli
tail wagging the US dog. Israel and its US supporters, although
constituting the junior partner in the relationship, are seen as
virtually dictating policy to whatever administration and
Congress are in power. There are myriad examples of this
dynamic, most notably Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in 1982,
which dragged the US into a disastrous intervention, and
Israel’s invasion of the West Bank in 2002, during which Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon openly and repeatedly defied President
George Bush’s demand for a withdrawal. Others maintain that the
tail-wagging is the other way around: that the United States, as
the superpower, patron of Israel, and its major aid donor, is
unmistakably the senior partner and the dog that wags the tail.
The question, therefore, is which is the accurate assessment, or
is the cynical view of Israeli commentator Michel Warschawski
correct, that “there is neither a dog nor a tail, but one global
war of re-colonization, and one aggressive monster with two ugly
heads”?
Silence Broken
Despite the growing power of the Israel lobby, and the
growing convergence of US and Israeli efforts toward global and
regional Middle East domination, public debate over the size and
substance of the lobby’s role in US policymaking was almost
non-existent until two political scientists, John Mearsheimer of
the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt of Harvard
University, issued an 81-page report in March 2006 analyzing
lobby strength. Mearsheimer, the R. Wendell Harrison
Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science, and Walt,
Belfer Professor of International Affairs, are leading
proponents of the realist school of foreign policy, which argues
that states act to further military and economic power rather
than pursue idealism and ethics. Their report sparked
widespread interest when it was published in abbreviated form in
the London Review of Books. Defining the lobby broadly as “the
loose coalition of individuals and organizations who actively
work to shape US foreign policy in a pro-Israel direction,”
Mearsheimer and Walt conclude that the thrust of US policy in
the Middle East is overwhelmingly the result of the lobby’s
activities. They observe that, while other lobbies and interest
groups have also demonstrated an ability to skew policy, “no
lobby has managed to divert US foreign policy as far from what
the American national interest would otherwise suggest, while
simultaneously convincing Americans that US and Israeli
interests are essentially identical.”
The report aroused instantaneous and vocal opposition from
the very individuals whom the authors identify as members of the
lobby. Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, a vociferous
advocate of Israel, called the authors “liars” engaging in
“crass bigotry” and likened their arguments to neo-Nazi
propaganda, filled with “thinly veiled charges of Jewish control
of American thought” reminiscent of The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion. Abraham Foxman and his Anti-Defamation League (ADL)
charged that the report’s main thesis “is the embodiment of
classic, anti-Jewish conspiracy theory.”
Most criticism from Israel’s strongest advocates fails,
however, to address the principal points of the Mearsheimer-Walt
study: that influential elements in the United States—non-Jews
as well as Jews—who have as a primary objective the advancement
of Israeli interests have gained undue influence over US Middle
East policy and use this influence to tilt policy toward Israel
in ways that are contrary to US national interests. Instead,
critics argue off the point, raising straw men that distract
from the report’s main thesis.
The accusation that Mearsheimer and Walt are “anti-Semitic”
is the charge most commonly heard from supporters of Israel
across the political spectrum. Not coincidentally, it is also a
line of attack long used by the lobby to silence and indeed
attack anyone who dares question Israeli policies or the United
States’ close ties to Israel. The question of anti-Semitism was
addressed during a major debate in New York in September that
pitted Mearsheimer and two allies against a former Israeli
official and two policymakers from the Clinton administration,
Dennis Ross and Martin Indyk. These three opponents of
Mearsheimer, although clearly supporters of Israel, are
generally regarded as centrists, neither particularly hard-core
like Dershowitz nor rightwing, but all three echoed Dershowitz
in charging that the report “lowers itself to the level of
anti-Semitism” or “has connotations of anti-Semitism,” simply
because it discusses the role of some Jews in positions of power
and influence.
This debate around anti-Semitism is a diversion from the main
issue and is undoubtedly intended as such. The New York panel
spent fully one-third of its allotted time examining whether
Mearsheimer and Walt are anti-Semitic before getting to any
substantive analysis of the report’s conclusions and evidence.
Criticism of former President Jimmy Carter’s book Palestine:
Peace Not Apartheid follows the same pattern. Critics charge
poor scholarship or hint at anti-Semitism because Carter uses
the term “apartheid” to describe Israel’s policies in the
occupied Palestinian territories. Many, including the
Democratic Party leadership, have criticized the book, but few
have provided evidence to support their charges or seriously
examined the evidence behind Carter’s thesis.
A member of the New York panel who spoke in support of the
Mearsheimer-Walt report, New York University professor Tony
Judt, has written about the crippling effect that Americans’
induced fear of being labeled anti-Semitic has had on public
discourse about anything relating to Israel and ultimately on
policy. During the panel discussion, he highlighted the
phenomenon by observing that, although there are “hundreds of
distorting lobbies” in the US, the Israel lobby is the only one
that not only acts energetically in pursuit of its cause, “but
acts constantly and very effectively to silence criticism of its
cause.” In a similar vein, Mearsheimer observed in an interview
with Mother Jones that the main reason the strong affinity
between the US and Israel continues is the absence of open and
candid discussion about the relationship. There would be far
less sympathy for Israel, he said, if Americans knew what
Israelis are doing in the occupied territories. “In essence,
America’s present relationship with Israel could not withstand
public scrutiny.”
Jimmy Carter’s book makes a major effort to provide more
scrutiny, but its success is so far uncertain. Scott Ritter,
who worked closely with Israel as a military intelligence
officer and as a UN weapons inspector in Iraq, reiterates both
Judt’s and Mearsheimer’s observations in his new book Target
Iran. While many nations maintain active lobbies in the US, he
writes, none has “the scope and clout” of the Israel lobby and
none operates in its “brazen manner.” Ritter foresees a
potentially catastrophic US-Israeli confrontation with Iran and
believes the only way to avoid this will be by bringing the
nature of the US-Israeli relationship into the national
discourse, fundamentally re-examining why the US operates in
“continued national impotence as another nation, Israel,
dictates national security policy for all America.”
In a 2003 critique of Israel and the U.S.-Israeli
relationship in the New York Review of Books, Judt touched on
what Mearsheimer and Walt later laid out as their principal
thesis. Judt wrote that Israel continued “to mock its American
patron” by building illegal settlements even as the US was
pushing the “Roadmap” peace plan calling for a freeze on
settlement construction. Israel had reduced the powerful
president of the United States, he said, to a “ventriloquist’s
dummy, pitifully reciting the Israeli cabinet line.” Its
behavior “has been a disaster for American foreign policy.” The
United States’ unconditional support for Israel “is the main
reason why most of the rest of the world no longer credits our
good faith.”
James Abourezk knows the lobby well. A US senator from South
Dakota from 1972-1978, Abourezk says, from his experience in
Congress, that “the support Israel has in that body is based
completely on political fear”—fear that “anyone who does not do
what Israel wants done” will be defeated by the lobby. Abourezk
reinforces the point about the lobby’s efforts to silence.
“Even one voice is attacked,” he writes, “on grounds that if
Congress is completely silent on the issue, the press will have
no one to quote, which effectively silences the press as well.
Any journalists or editors who step out of line are quickly
brought under control by well organized economic pressure
against the newspaper caught sinning.” Jimmy Carter has
described a similar phenomenon in recent commentaries, noting
that AIPAC’s “extraordinary lobbying efforts” have silenced all
debate in policymaking councils, in Congress, and in the media
about Israeli policies.
Abourezk describes pressure tactics that were already in full
swing before AIPAC set out to “own” policymakers, and Carter has
made it clear that the lobby’s stranglehold on discourse and on
decisionmaking has tightened. The pro-Israeli tilt that has, to
one degree or another, been characteristic of most
administrations and most Congresses since Israel’s creation was
clearly not Dine’s invention or a phenomenon that emerged only
in the 1980s. But Dine institutionalized the process,
strengthening it significantly.
In 1984, in addition to the internal analytical unit, AIPAC
spun off another body, the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy (WINEP), that remains a pre-eminent think tank—one that
has placed its analysts in policymaking jobs in several
administrations. Dennis Ross, who was the senior Middle East
policymaker in the administrations of George H.W. Bush and Bill
Clinton, came from WINEP and returned there after leaving
government service. Martin Indyk, an original member of AIPAC’s
analytical unit and WINEP’s first director, entered a senior
policymaking position in the Clinton administration from there.
Mearsheimer and Walt correctly describe both men as situated “at
the core of the lobby.”
This assertion addresses a critical aspect of the lobby
question by emphasizing the reality that the lobby has in recent
decades actually become a part of various administrations. The
lobby is also not confined to the formal Jewish-American
organizations such as AIPAC and the ADL and think tanks like
WINEP and JINSA, the Jewish Institute for National Security
Affairs, but also includes numerous individuals who work on
Israel’s behalf and encompasses the very large fundamentalist
Christian right. The Christian right strongly supports Israel’s
continued control over the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem
as the essential prerequisite to the so-called Millennium, when
they believe Jesus Christ will reappear. During the last
several years in particular, the Christian right has used its
vast numbers to lobby both the administration and Congress in
support of Israel’s policies and in opposition to any proposal
that would require Israeli concessions.
The kind of blunt pressure on decisionmakers that Abourezk
describes is only one way in which the organized lobby
operates. The bond between Israel and the US has always had its
grounding as much in soft emotions as in the hard realities of
geopolitical strategy. Over the years since Israel’s creation,
there has been a pervasive atmosphere in which Israel is simply
assumed to be so close to the US, its interests so closely
intertwined with American interests, that it is accepted almost
as a part of the US.
The lobby reinforces this sentiment, channeling it into
institutional ways of involving ordinary Americans in supporting
Israel. Jeffrey Blankfort, a northern California radio host and
long-time commentator on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and
other Middle East issues, points out, for instance, that 1,700
unions in the US own more than $5 billion of Israel bonds. This
effectively obliges the unions to support Israel, Blankfort
believes, making the American labor movement a part of the
lobby. It is one reason that the organized left in the United
States has opposed making the Palestine issue part of the
anti-war movement. Many states and universities also invest in
Israel bonds, as well as in Israeli companies, giving these
local governments and institutions an interest in supporting
Israel’s policies in order to keep the Israeli economy going.
The pervasiveness of the lobby’s influence makes Tony Judt’s
reference to the US president as a “ventriloquist’s dummy”
particularly apt. As Walt pointed out in a Mother Jones
interview, no matter what Israel does, the United States
continues to support it. “They continue to build settlements
even though every president since Lyndon Johnson has thought
that was a bad idea. They spy on us routinely. They’ve given
or sold American military technology to other countries.
Also…they have conducted a wide variety of human rights
violations, and yet none of those activities ever slows down
American support.” For the last several decades, AIPAC has
frequently involved itself directly in the legislative process,
writing legislation relating to the Middle East and pushing a
series of anti-Arab, pro-Israeli resolutions that state the
stance of the Senate and the House on various issues, such as
Israel’s construction of the separation wall and Israel’s summer
2006 attack on Lebanon. AIPAC often boasts that it vets and
exerts influence over presidential candidates. During the 2004
presidential campaign when Howard Dean issued a mild and
seemingly non-controversial call for an “even-handed” US policy
toward the Arab-Israeli conflict, he was roundly condemned by
the lobby and by fellow Democrats, and he quickly dropped the
call. Long-serving congressmen who deviate are targeted for
electoral defeat. In the 1980s, Representative Paul Findley and
Senator Charles Percy, who had each served multiple terms in
Illinois, were defeated through the efforts of AIPAC after both
spoke out in favor of negotiating with the PLO. More recently,
Georgia’s Cynthia McKinney has twice been the target of AIPAC’s
electoral interference.
The list goes on. Israel and its lobby have been the policy
initiators, the US the follower, in Israel’s 1967 war, its 1982
invasion of Lebanon, its 2002 invasion of the West Bank, its
40-year settlement-construction enterprise in the occupied
Palestinian territories, its disproportionate attacks on
Palestinians, its assault on Lebanon. The scope of the lobby’s
infiltration of government policymaking councils has been
unprecedented during the current Bush administration, and there
is strong evidence that neo-conservatives inside the
administration—whose ties to Israel’s right wing are
undeniable—were the architects of the invasion of Iraq and of
the administration’s push to “transform” the Middle East and
spread “democracy” throughout the region. Mearsheimer and Walt
assert that the Iraq war was “at least partly intended to
improve Israel’s strategic position”—a reality that would seem
to be confirmed by the fact that some of these same neo-cons
authored a strategy paper, entitled “A Clean Break,” in the
mid-1990s for then Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
laying out a plan for attacking Iraq that was later pushed when
the neo-cons entered the Bush administration. The strategy was
designed explicitly to assure Israel’s regional dominance, to
undermine the Oslo peace process, and to relieve Israel of
pressure to make concessions to the Palestinians.
One of the authors, David Wurmser, remains in government as
Vice President Richard Cheney’s Middle East adviser; the others,
Richard Perle and Douglas Feith, were closely involved in Iraq
war planning as, respectively, an adviser to the Pentagon and an
undersecretary of defense. Almost all the other neo-cons, both
Jews and non-Jews, have also compiled long records of advocacy
on behalf of Israel. These include Paul Wolfowitz, Elliott
Abrams, John Bolton, and their cheerleaders on the sidelines
such as William Kristol, Robert Kagan, Norman Podhoretz, the
late Jeane Kirkpatrick, and numerous rightwing, pro-Israeli
think tanks in Washington.
In response to the lobby’s pressure on legislators and
policymakers, the US has given Israel massive amounts of
military and economic aid over the years. Mearsheimer and Walt
cite statistics from the US Agency for International Development
indicating that between 1976 and 2003, the US gave Israel a
total of $140 billion in aid, in constant 2003 dollars. One
economist, Thomas Stauffer, who has long tracked aid to Israel,
put the figure much higher in 2002, estimating a total of $240
billion in the preceding 30 years, adjusted to current dollars.
Israel now receives an automatic $2-3 billion annually in grant
aid, mostly military, in addition to large increments of
additional aid to compensate for the cost to Israel of such
actions as the Lebanon war and the Gaza withdrawal.
Defining the National Interest
The truly important part of the debate over the lobby’s power
swirls around the issue of national interests—what constitutes
national interests, who determines them, and whether real
national interests are harmed by the lobby. A group of
commentators and analysts on the left who are highly critical of
Israel’s policies have nonetheless been dismissive of the notion
that the lobby has particular influence over policy. Their
arguments center on the issue of what actually constitutes the
US national interest. Noam Chomsky has frequently indicated
that Middle East policy is determined largely by what he calls
the “tight state-corporate linkage” where domestic power is
concentrated—in other words, the military-industrial complex
working in cooperation with the government, whose special
interests, Chomsky believes, ultimately define US national
interests. The Israel lobby has some impact on determining
policy in Chomsky’s estimation, but to a far lesser extent and
generally only insofar as the lobby’s interests conform to
corporate-government interests.
Chomsky and the other left critics of the lobby study
essentially believe that US policy has always been directed at
the advancement of US imperial and corporate interests, and that
Israel, far from leading the US into harmful policies and
foreign adventures, has always done the US bidding. The US
would pursue its imperial objectives even without Israel, and it
has pursued these in areas outside the Middle East, such as
Chile, Indonesia, Central America, and elsewhere, without
benefit of any lobby. The Israel lobby, in this view, functions
as merely a handy adjunct to US policy, not an agent with any
control or particular influence.
One thing this argument ignores, however, is that the lobby
and its close ties to US arms makers strengthen the ability of
the military-industrial complex to control what are defined as
US national interests. The Israel lobby holds unquestionable
sway over many individual congressmen and executive branch
officials, including in the White House, making it difficult for
anyone to influence the alleged national interests of the US in
ways that the lobby might feel weakened Israel’s uniquely
special relationship with the US. Any debate involving this
taboo subject, even indirectly, would almost certainly be
quashed before it started, buried under paeans for Israel from
both Republicans and Democrats.
Afif Safieh, the head of the Palestine Liberation
Organization Mission in Washington, makes another point. He
calls the approach of Chomsky and others on the left a
“mechanistic” view that does not allow for the fact that each
situation has its own specificity, the specificity in this case
being that the junior partner can often “hijack” and
“monopolize” decisionmaking on Middle East issues. The left’s
argument comes from a kind of determinism that assumes US policy
has rarely if ever deviated from a clearly laid-out imperial
strategy designed to promote corporate interests.
But simply because the US overthrew a government deemed
inimical to American business interests in Chile or supported a
dictator in Indonesia where the oil industry had interests does
not prove that whenever Israel has attacked Arab countries, as
with Egypt in 1967 and Lebanon in 1982, it was acting to serve
the United States or was, as Chomsky has alleged, performing a
“huge service to the US-Saudis-Energy corporations by smashing
secular Arab nationalism.” Israel in no way serves to ensure US
access to or control over the Middle East’s oil resources, nor
does it work in conjunction with the oil industry.
There is no denying the intricate interweaving of the US
military-industrial-financial complex with Israel’s military,
industrial, and financial interests, as Chomsky and others on
the left contend, but rather than a relationship in which Israel
does the bidding of the US corporate-government conglomeration,
in reality the entanglement is much more one between two
independent players. And the lobby essentially functions to
sustain and manipulate the entanglement. Blankfort maintains
that the influence of the lobby “is actually underestimated.
Not only does it keep Congress in thrall to its demands on
issues pertaining to Israel and the Middle East in general, it
also serves, less conspicuously, as a powerful lobbying force
for maintaining America’s high levels of military spending and
for integrating the Israeli arms industry with that of the US.”
This integration, Blankfort says, “goes a long way to explain
why there has been no significant opposition to the annual
military budget from any sector of Congress.”
Israel and its lobby work hand in glove with the US arms
industry to advance their combined, usually compatible
interests. The relatively few powerful, wealthy families that
dominate the Israeli arms industry are just as interested in
pressing for aggressively militaristic US and Israeli foreign
policies as are the CEOs of US arms corporations. As
globalization has progressed, so have the ties of joint
ownership and close financial and technological cooperation
among the arms corporations of the two nations grown ever
closer. The relationship is symbiotic, and the lobby cooperates
intimately to keep it alive; lobbyists can go to many in
Congress and tell them credibly that if aid to Israel is cut
off, thousands of arms-industry jobs in their districts will be
lost. The lobby does not simply passively support the desires
of the military-industrial complex. It actively twists arms in
Congress and the administration to perpetuate acceptance of
certain “national interests” that many Americans believe is
wrong.
A Two-Headed Monster
As Tony Judt noted, much of the rest of the world now “no
longer credits our good faith.” Strong US support for Israel
has long roiled Arab public opinion, but since the collapse of
the peace process and the start of the Palestinian intifada and
Israel’s harsh crackdown in September 2000, opinion polls in
Arab and Muslim countries have repeatedly shown strong and
growing distrust of the United States, linked principally to US
support for Israel’s oppression of the Palestinians and more
recently to the Iraq war. Hostile attitudes reach into the
70-80 percent range in many Arab countries. Similar, although
not as strong or pervasive, distrust of the US emerges in polls
in Europe. The growing anti-US sentiment resulting from the
close US relationship with Israel is a principal emphasis in the
Mearsheimer-Walt report. The authors point out at the opening
of their report that Bush administration policies, heavily
influenced by the Israel lobby, have helped produce a “resilient
insurgency in Iraq, a sharp rise in world oil prices, and
terrorist bombings in Madrid, London, and Amman.” The United
States’ “unwavering” support for Israel, they write, has
“inflamed Arab and Islamic opinion and jeopardized US
security.” They believe the US has actually set aside its own
security to advance the interests of another state.
The obvious result has been more terrorism against the US and
its allies. Osama bin Laden’s videos and taped statements from
the 1990s talk about the Palestinians and his anger with the US
because of its alliance with Israel. His anger and that of
other radical Islamists is on behalf of Muslims who have been
killed and exploited by the US, Israel, and the West for
decades, and Palestinians are perhaps the most prominent among
these. His anger is shared by millions of the oppressed, and he
can attract the radicals among them to his struggle on the basis
of his stance as a defender of Palestinians and all oppressed
Muslims. This is a danger to the United States, arising
directly from the strong US-Israel tie and the lobby’s strenuous
efforts to sustain it, that cannot be underestimated.
The tragedy of the present situation is that it has become
impossible to separate Israeli from alleged US interests—that
is, not what should be real US national interests, but the
selfish and self-defined “national interests” of the
political-corporate-military complex that, in conjunction with
the lobby, dominates the Bush administration, Congress, and both
major political parties. The specific groups that now dominate
the government are the globalized arms, energy, and financial
industries, and the entire military establishments, of the US
and of Israel—groups that have quite literally hijacked the
government and stripped it of most vestiges of democracy. The
“aggressive monster with two ugly heads” that Michel Warschawski
speaks of is a reality.
This convergence of manipulated “interests” has a profound
effect on US policy choices in the Middle East. If the United
States is unable to distinguish the world’s or its own real
needs from those of another state and that state’s lobby, then
it simply cannot say that it always acts in its own best
interests. In the face of the massive human rights violations
being committed against Palestinians today, the failure to
recognize this reality is where those who belittle the lobby’s
power and accept US Middle East policy as simply an unchangeable
part of a longstanding strategy are particularly dangerous.
Bill Christison is a former senior official of the CIA.
He served as a National Intelligence Officer and as Director of
the CIA’s Office of Regional and Political Analysis. Kathleen
Christison is a former CIA political analyst and has worked on
Middle East issues for 30 years. She is the author of
Perceptions of Palestine
and The Wound of Dispossession.
(This article was first published by - Journal of the
Mental Environment - March/April 2007)