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Israel is not alone: Thomas Friedman and The Israel Lobby

Rarely, these days, do I bother with the NYT’s Tom Friedman. (While he occupies a lofty perch in the punditocratic universe, he is essentially the master of myopic, self-absorbed ignorance masquerading as sophisticated internationalism. And I say that as someone who occasionally agrees with him.)

But let’s take a look at his column from Saturday, a piece on the current state of Israel:

I’ve never been more worried about Israel’s future. The crumbling of key pillars of Israel’s security — the peace with Egypt, the stability of Syria and the friendship of Turkey and Jordan — coupled with the most diplomatically inept and strategically incompetent government in Israel’s history have put Israel in a very dangerous situation.

This has also left the U.S. government fed up with Israel’s leadership but a hostage to its ineptitude, because the powerful pro-Israel lobby in an election season can force the administration to defend Israel at the U.N., even when it knows Israel is pursuing policies not in its own interest or America’s.

*****

I have great sympathy for Israel’s strategic dilemma and no illusions about its enemies. But Israel today is giving its friends — and President Obama’s one of them — nothing to defend it with. Israel can fight with everyone or it can choose not to surrender but to blunt these trends with a peace overture that fair-minded people would recognize as serious, and thereby reduce its isolation.

Unfortunately, Israel today does not have a leader or a cabinet for such subtle diplomacy. One can only hope that the Israeli people will recognize this before this government plunges Israel into deeper global isolation and drags America along with it.

Well, sure. As Greenwald notes, here’s an influential pro-Israel commentator (if not not on the right), “one of Israel’s most stalwart American supporters,” basically advancing the controversial view, most notably advanced by Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer, that “that there is a very powerful lobby in the U.S.” — The Israel Lobby, to take the title of their book — “which is principally devoted to Israel and causes U.S. political leaders to act to advance the interests of this foreign nation over their own.” While I do not accept this view in its entirety, I find it refreshing that a commentator of Friedman’s stature and reputation is more or less making it his own. Greenwald:

Walt and Mearshiemer merely voiced a truth which has long been known and obvious but was not allowed to be spoken. That’s precisely why the demonization campaign against them was so vicious and concerted: those who voice prohibited truths are always more hated than those who spout obvious lies. That the foreign affairs columnist most admired in Washington circles just expressed the same point demonstrates that recognition of this previously prohibited fact has now become mainstream.

Indeed. And you don’t have to be in any way anti-Israel to accept that truth and, like Friedman, to note how this powerful lobby is polluting American political life and preventing the U.S. from taking a more balanced approach to Israel (an approach Obama has certainly been taking, meeting strong resistance at every turn, including in Congress).

But does any of this mean that Israel is somehow in grave existential danger, as Friedman suggests? I would say not. The Netanyahu government is certainly “inept” and “incompetent,” and its extremism is certainly a major obstacle not just to peace with the Palestinians but to Israeli security generally, and it is extremely difficult for Israel’s more sensible defenders, including Obama (and I’d put myself in there too), to defend it, but when push comes to shove, as they say, Israel’s friends, and particularly the U.S., no matter who occupies the White House, will protect it. And that’s partly because the Israel Lobby is so powerful, and will remain so even with the likes of Friedman criticizing it.

In other words, nothing is about to change anytime soon.

(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)



6 Responses to “Israel is not alone: Thomas Friedman and The Israel Lobby

  1. RON BEASLEY says:

    The thing you fail to take into consideration is the decline of US influence and power thanks in large part to 8 years of neocon rule and wars.

  2. JSpencer says:

    “those who voice prohibited truths are always more hated than those who spout obvious lies”

    Funny how that works. It goes on here too, although in different context of course. So how is all this Arab spring business going to effect the status of Israel politics? Seems like it would make the importance of a two state solution even more obvious.

  3. Allen says:

    What gives this “Israeli lobby” so much power? The Jewish population of the United States is about 3%. Hardly a political threat. How is it that our leaders can be manipulated by this lobby?

    RON
    Stop it! It’s unfair to bring that up. Thats not patriotic. :-)

  4. jdledell says:

    Israel’s existential danger is NOT due to possible military action by surrounding Arab nations. The danger Friedman talks about is internal. Israel is not far from tearing itself apart.

    Here in a nutshell is Israel’s dilemma. The settlements are an invasive cancer to Israel’s long term future. They are spread out over all the west bank. The settlers are armed and dangerous. Israel faces two threats with regard to the settlements:

    1 – If Israel tries to dismantle these settlements, there will be blood running in the streets. Settlers in Kiryat Arba, Bat Ayin, Itamar etc will die before they move. Courtesy of friends in the IDF they are well armed not only with rifles but also RPGs, mortars etc. Jews killing Jews is such an anathema to Israelis that the political pressure to quickly abandon the fight would be overwhelming.
    2 – These settlers will NEVER agree to live under Palestinian sovereignty. They will not accept Palestinian laws or taxes. Any attempt by Palestinian authorities to impose such will again be met with violence by settlers. The thought of Palestinians killing Jews would bring the IDF racing to their defense.

    The hesder yeshivas in the settlements have graduated enough young people so that they are a very significant portion of the IDF. These people will not, under any circumstances, participate in any dismantling of settlements. In fact they will abandon the IDF in droves and move to defend the settlements.

    The settlers and their loyalists in the IDF talk about re-establishing the ancient kingdom of Judea, carved out of West Bank territory and separate from Israel.

    These are the existential threats Israel faces and why Friedman, any I, are worried.

  5. dduck says:

    Thanks for this disturbing but necessary to know information. Perhaps the carrot would work better than the stick? Just asking.

  6. Allen says:

    Punt Guns Duck…!

    Punt Guns used to kill your kind by the hundreds in one shot.

    That’s what we need as our sticks…not for ducks anymore…but for Carrots!

    I hate carrots.

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