Is Barack Obama More AIPAC Than J Street?

The U.S. president is showing that he's hardly a leftist ideologue when it comes to Middle East peace -- and Israelis are starting to notice.

BY STEVEN J. ROSEN | FEBRUARY 17, 2010

Anxiety about Barack Obama has afflicted Israelis since his meteoric rise to the White House. Here was an untested president, one whose agenda in the Middle East could only be imagined. Would Obama's America be Israel's lifeline in a dangerous and often hostile world? Or would this American president experiment with mistaken or even unfriendly ideas that could wreak havoc for Israeli security?

Israeli anxiety was particularly visible in the circle around Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who took office two months after Obama in March 2009. The new prime minister and his aides were hearing a stream of worrying reports from Republican friends in the United States, some of whom who painted Obama as a closet Marxist or a confirmed radical with Muslim roots pursuing a Third World leftist agenda. Would Obama waste precious time chasing illusory "openings" for engagement with Iran while the Islamic Republic completed its final sprint to nuclear weapons? Would Obama be open to the dangerous advice of the pressure-on-Israel crowd and try to impose unacceptable terms for a Palestinian state, terms that the Israeli public and national security leadership believe would lead Israel to war and insecurity, not peace? Would he cluelessly undermine the broader strategic balance on which Israeli and regional security depends?

Israel's anxieties deepened in May 2009. Barely eight weeks after Netanyahu took office, Obama turned global attention to the most divisive issue in the U.S.-Israel relationship: Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and special envoy George Mitchell announced loudly that Obama wanted a total freeze on construction of Jewish homes, even in Jerusalem, and that Obama did not consider himself bound by earlier compromises about settlement issues.

Many Israelis, even some who despise the settlements, saw this heavy-handed approach as artless at best, if not downright antagonistic. The episode reinforced the perception that Obama was naïve about the Middle East and easily swayed by the left -- a decision-maker who could be erratic, unpredictable, and dangerous. A theory emerged that placed much of the blame on White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and Senior Advisor David Axelrod, two American Jews from Chicago. Some of Netanyahu's people painted them as devotees of the strain of Middle East diplomacy that views Israel as the obstacle to peace.

Various acolytes of the American Democratic left, occasionally presenting themselves as representing the true Obama worldview only intensified the impression that Obama's team was unsympathetic to Israel. One after another argued that if only Obama acted to coerce Israel into accepting some perfectly reasonable agreements such as replacing Israeli security personnel in the West Bank with international peacekeepers, peace would be possible.

J Street advisor and former Council on Foreign Relations fellow Henry Siegman, for example, wrote that Israel is no longer a true democracy but an "apartheid regime" under "the influence of Israel's settler-security-industrial complex" that wants to "retain Israeli control of Palestine from the river to the sea." America's "special relationship with Israel is sustaining a colonial enterprise." But "President Obama is uniquely positioned to help Israel reclaim Jewish and democratic ideals on which the state was founded." This will, of course, require "forceful outside intervention." M.J. Rosenberg, formerly of the Israel Policy Forum, wrote that, "No matter who heads Israel's ... government, it is President Barack Obama who holds 51 cards in the deck." FP contributor Stephen M. Walt added, "Unless the U.S. president is willing and able to push Israel ... peace will simply not happen."

This chorus of voices from the Democratic left strengthened the impression in Israel that Obama, or at least some of his top officials, must agree. However, over the past 12 months, some counterevidence has begun to suggest that Obama and his top advisors are not in fact believers in the catechism of the ideological left.

Yes, Obama is drawing down in Iraq, as he pledged in his campaign. But this is a policy embraced by many in the center, not just the left. At the same time, he is greatly increasing the deployment of American soldiers in Afghanistan from 38,000 to 100,000.

Another important part of progressives' agenda is to cut what they saw as bloated budgets for national security, redirecting allocations to underfunded domestic programs. But Obama has rejected this advice and instead increased the Bush defense budget from $513 billion in fiscal year 2009 to $537 billion for fiscal year 2010 and $549 for 2011. If defense budgets are one of the best indicators of the direction of policy, Obama's defense budgets mark him as no leftist.

Another key indicator of foreign policy direction is a president's willingness to accept human life costs for national security goals. Obama is putting American soldiers at risk in Afghanistan, and he seems to accept that some level of civilian casualties is a regrettable but unavoidable reality if global security objectives are to be achieved. Obama has greatly increased drone strikes against al Qaeda in Pakistan, undeterred by frequent reports of civilian casualties. In December, the president personally issued the order for U.S. airstrikes in Yemen, killing 35 suspected Al Qaeda agents but also, collaterally, dozens of civilians.

Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize as a form of encouragement by European liberals. But his Dec. 10 Nobel acceptance speech could have been written by a conservative: "Nations -- acting individually or in concert -- will find the use of force not only necessary but morally justified," he said in Oslo.

On issues that touch Israel more directly, Obama's choices actually align him more closely with Israel than with his progressive colleagues. Many on the left continue to believe that the United States has not made a good-faith effort at diplomatic outreach toward Iran. But Obama said on Feb. 9, "We have bent over backward to say to the Islamic Republic of Iran that we are willing to have a constructive conversation.... We gave them an offer.... They rejected it.... They in fact continue to pursue a course that would lead to [nuclear] weapons." The intelligence community is producing a new National Intelligence Estimate reportedly assessing a much greater threat from Iran than the 2007 document.

On Israeli-Palestinian issues, Obama and his team have changed the pitch, if not the words to the song, after his initial stumble on the settlements freeze. He has, to the consternation of the J Street left, accepted Netanyahu's compromise and moved on. Mitchell said on Nov. 25, "We believe the steps [toward a partial settlements freeze] announced by the prime minister are significant and could have substantial impact." In a Jan. 7 interview with Charlie Rose, Mitchell said, "The Israelis are not going to stop settlements in or construction in East Jerusalem. They don't regard that as a settlement because they think it's part of Israel." Mitchell had the unusual task of explaining to European allies on Jan. 12 why it is unrealistic to expect a freeze on construction in Jerusalem -- a freeze that he himself had demanded just months earlier.

Obama is also unyielding in the face of demands that he open relations with Hamas. He says this would undermine the peace process as long as Hamas continues to reject the existence of Israel, and it would undermine Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. And he is striking a more realistic general tone about the prospects for radical change in the region. In an interview with Time on Jan. 21, he said, "If we had anticipated some of [the] political problems [in Israeli-Palestinian negotiations earlier] we might not have raised expectations as high."

In a series of recent statements, Obama has tried repeatedly to define himself as a man of the center, not the left. At a Jan. 29 meeting with House Republicans, he maintained, "I am not an ideologue." In a Feb. 9 interview with Bloomberg News, he said he is pursuing a "fundamentally business-friendly" agenda and is a "fierce advocate" for the free market. "The irony is that on the left we are perceived as being in the pockets of big business; and then on the business side, we are perceived as being anti-business."

The lesson Obama and his key advisers took from the Jan. 19 Republican upset victory in the Massachusetts U.S. Senate race is very different from the one that is popular among progressives. MoveOn and two allied groups commissioned a poll to show that Massachusetts voters actually wanted a stronger health-care bill than the one Obama was supporting. But Emanuel and Axelrod paid more attention to the fact that the independents and swing voters who voted for Obama in 2008 deserted him in droves, including suburban union members who also helped Republicans win formerly Democratic offices in New Jersey and Virginia. The Obama team is worried that independents and Democratic centrists are fleeing to the GOP. It is not the progressives that they want to woo.

Meanwhile, on the unhappy left, many now think that Obama merely postured as a progressive candidate in 2008 to outflank Clinton in the Democratic primaries. The Nation says he was never "a movement Progressive the way Reagan was a movement Conservative." Emanuel is the new whipping boy for many on the left, who say he cares more about the imperiled reelection prospects of "Blue Dog" Democrats in Congress than he does about scoring policy victories for the progressive agenda.

Of course, this could all be tactical, and not the true measure of Obama's ultimate intentions. But, at least for the moment, the anxiety in Israel is subsiding, and people are taking a more positive view of this president than they did a year ago.

NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

 

Steven J. Rosen served for 23 years as foreign-policy director of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and was a defendant in the recently dismissed AIPAC case. He is now director of the Washington Project at the Middle East Forum.

IRMEP

8:02 PM ET

February 16, 2010

Perhaps its time to Cancel the Israel Trade Preferences

If Obama is pursuing a "fundamentally business-friendly" agenda and is a "fierce advocate" for the free market, he will probably want to begin by canceling the US-Israel bilateral trade agreement.

http://irmep.org/ILA/economy/default.asp

Ever since Israeli minister of economics Dan Halpern passed the classified ITC-USTR report to AIPAC (back when you and Martin Indyk were heading up AIPAC trade research), this agreement has seriously undermined US industries and workers. It is not only that AIPAC violated advice and consent rights of the 76 industry and worker organizations by stealing their trade and market secrets, but pharmaceutical and defense industries continue to be plagued by Israeli espionage without any IPR violation protections.

This agreement is the opposite of free trade, it is espionage and theft of government property enhanced debasement of American industry.

 

ANTONIUS76

8:43 PM ET

February 16, 2010

Special relationship?

Just what benefit does the United States derive from this "special relationship"? Can anyone explain to me how America gains from this parasitic alliance with a nation that drains our treasury to the tune of 5 or 6 billion per year, and gives us nothing in return? Anybody?

 

BETTORWORSE

11:54 AM ET

February 17, 2010

The list of contributions

The list of contributions from Arab Americans is long. Perhaps they just don't have the same PR machine as Israel.

Let's be clear, though. Once again, someone is trying to equate Israel with Jews. That's part of the PR - you can't say anything against Israel or you are an anti-Semite.

 

KASSANDRA

12:18 PM ET

February 18, 2010

You forgot the invention of the cherry tomato

Oh please! The Israelis couldn't even win the 1947 war without all those airplanes and pilot training from the Soviet bloc. And don't forget their invention of the cherry tomato, as the NYT just told us.

 

AR

1:00 AM ET

February 22, 2010

Get off your high horse. The

Get off your high horse. The jews are no more special than any other ethnic group.

 

ISRAELDEFENDER

6:22 AM ET

March 11, 2010

to BetterorWorse

Yes, BetterorWorse, Jewish Americans have a great "PR Machine" (why not say what you really mean? You are implying that Jews control the media).

 

BURNINGCHROME

12:33 AM ET

February 17, 2010

problems of perception and unrealistic expectations

Personally I am not surprised by Obama.

From the beginning of his campaign for the Presidency, I think he has been assiduously pragmatic and pesented himself as such.

I take some issue with Mr. Rosen's equating Liberals with 'Progressives' and the Left. This gives credibility to the Right Wing debasement of Liberals. The constant accusations that Liberals are Leftists, closeted Socialists or Communists. Sadly this constant drumbeat of delegitimization, questioning the patriotism of Liberals, the constant harangues over the decades have made Liberal a dirty word in US politics and politicians are generally loathe to be labeled as such. Truly a sad commentary on America and a great disservice to the public that suffers from the lack of a Liberal movement.

There is nothing in the choice of Hamas or Fatah or the public discourse that would remotely appeal to a Liberal. However that is not to say a Liberal would not want or actively work for peace. I believe in fact the opposite to be true.

The problems of the Middle East are not going to be solved through a Western prism of Right to Left because that is not the nature of the conflict. Just because the Left tries to force the narrative and definition of the conflict in that didactic.

Obama and his team clearly made some big mistakes at the outset, primarily demanding concessions publicly. However these were tactical errors not idealogical errors.

My personal belief is that the negotiations must be done in secret as the climb down required by both parties can only be presented as a fait accompli. Public scrutiny with rumours of concessions and an impending agreement will only lead to spoiler parties acting to sabotage the process or agreement as we have witnessed in the past.

 

TOM G

6:23 AM ET

February 17, 2010

Seriously ..........

Ok i'm a little perplexed at why the world's superpower is worried about offending Israel,it is because of the U.S. that Israel is still there, unfortunately this has allowed them to become belligerent towards Palestinians who have decided to no longer take it. Lets be honest the recent goldstone report from the U.N. shows that war crimes were committed on both sides in the Hamas/Israeli war, however that being said at this moment in time Israel is beginning to look more and more like apartheid south africa and the fact that Washington finally got around to seeing this was welcome and rightly had the Israelis worried to the point where now some members of their military can't leave the country for fear of being arrested for war crimes.Now the way I see it double standards on the part of the U.S can no longer be allowed so if you condemn one you condemn all.

 

TOM G

6:24 AM ET

February 17, 2010

Seriously ..........

Ok i'm a little perplexed at why the world's superpower is worried about offending Israel,it is because of the U.S. that Israel is still there, unfortunately this has allowed them to become belligerent towards Palestinians who have decided to no longer take it. Lets be honest the recent goldstone report from the U.N. shows that war crimes were committed on both sides in the Hamas/Israeli war, however that being said at this moment in time Israel is beginning to look more and more like apartheid south africa and the fact that Washington finally got around to seeing this was welcome and rightly had the Israelis worried to the point where now some members of their military can't leave the country for fear of being arrested for war crimes.Now the way I see it double standards on the part of the U.S can no longer be allowed so if you condemn one you condemn all.

 

TOM G

6:32 AM ET

February 17, 2010

Seriously ..........

Ok i'm a little perplexed at why the world's superpower is worried about offending Israel,it is because of the U.S. that Israel is still there, unfortunately this has allowed them to become belligerent towards Palestinians who have decided to no longer take it. Lets be honest the recent goldstone report from the U.N. shows that war crimes were committed on both sides in the Hamas/Israeli war, however that being said at this moment in time Israel is beginning to look more and more like apartheid south africa and the fact that Washington finally got around to seeing this was welcome and rightly had the Israelis worried to the point where now some members of their military can't leave the country for fear of being arrested for war crimes.Now the way I see it double standards on the part of the U.S can no longer be allowed so if you condemn one you condemn all.

 

TOM G

6:32 AM ET

February 17, 2010

Seriously ..........

Ok i'm a little perplexed at why the world's superpower is worried about offending Israel,it is because of the U.S. that Israel is still there, unfortunately this has allowed them to become belligerent towards Palestinians who have decided to no longer take it. Lets be honest the recent goldstone report from the U.N. shows that war crimes were committed on both sides in the Hamas/Israeli war, however that being said at this moment in time Israel is beginning to look more and more like apartheid south africa and the fact that Washington finally got around to seeing this was welcome and rightly had the Israelis worried to the point where now some members of their military can't leave the country for fear of being arrested for war crimes.Now the way I see it double standards on the part of the U.S can no longer be allowed so if you condemn one you condemn all.

 

TOM G

6:32 AM ET

February 17, 2010

Seriously ..........

Ok i'm a little perplexed at why the world's superpower is worried about offending Israel,it is because of the U.S. that Israel is still there, unfortunately this has allowed them to become belligerent towards Palestinians who have decided to no longer take it. Lets be honest the recent goldstone report from the U.N. shows that war crimes were committed on both sides in the Hamas/Israeli war, however that being said at this moment in time Israel is beginning to look more and more like apartheid south africa and the fact that Washington finally got around to seeing this was welcome and rightly had the Israelis worried to the point where now some members of their military can't leave the country for fear of being arrested for war crimes.Now the way I see it double standards on the part of the U.S can no longer be allowed so if you condemn one you condemn all.

 

PFNOVAK

12:48 PM ET

February 17, 2010

Without getting into legal or

Without getting into legal or moral issues, I think it's innacurate to assert that Israel owes its existence entirely to the United States. Though individual donations from private American citizens were important for Israel in the 1948 War, most of the weapons they used were Soviet (purchased through Czechoslovakia). Though US recognition of Israel was important, the US-Israel alliance as it exists today did not really come about until the 1970's. Only after the 67 War was Israel considered a viable ally by Americans, and it was in this context, with the Soviets backing Nasser, that American military aid started in earnest. People forget that Israel's nuclear arsenal was set up by the French, not the Americans. It was only when Israel became a legitimate regional power in its own right that the United States had any real interest. If that ceases to be the case, no American government, Right or Left, will put its relationship with Israel above that of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan or any other influential Middle Eastern state.

 

ISRAELDEFENDER

6:30 AM ET

March 11, 2010

Here's why, Tom G

The U.S. isn't "worried" about Israel, but here's why it cares about Israel:

- Facilitating peace between Arabs and Israelis would instantly immortalize any President/administration. It's a siren call they can't resist.
- Israel provides the U.S. with much actionable intelligence about terrorists. The Mossad is a formidable intelligence agency. Israel is on the front line against the kind of Islamic terrorists who struck on 9/11.
- Israel gets aid. Much of it is in the form of military equipment/vehicles/planes that are produced in America (jobs, jobs, jobs - if you want to cancel all of that commerce in this economy, OK).
- The Muslim dictators demonize Israel to distract their subjects from the misery of their own lives. This has boomeranged/back-fired to a certain extent, because the subjects are very worked up over the issue and want it resolved. Thus the Arab dictators complain and ask the U.S. to solve it. The U.S. has more leverage if it is on good terms with Israel.
- Israel has traditionally been of the U.S.'s biggest allies. If the U.S. abandons Israel, what will that say to the rest of her allies?

 

BETZ55

1:47 PM ET

February 17, 2010

More drivel from Rosen

Hey Rosen ! Go back to AIPAC, oh, and how did that whole spying for Israel in the US thing turn out?

Israeli is becoming a parody of right-wing lunacy: the last refuge of discredited neoconservatives, supply-siders, and other extremists.

U.S. policy remains in the hands of the same set of "experts" whose policies for the past seventeen years (or more) have been a steady recipe for failure.

Israel continues to undermine the very credibility to the Middle East peace process, making a mockery of existing agreements and sabotaging all prospects for a return to genuine negotiations.
The real thing that threatens Israel’s legitimacy is the way it behaves and maintains the occupation. That is the issue.

I personally could care less what Israelis think of President Obama. Israelis don't elect the US President, and he is not accountable to them.

President Obama is responsible to the US electorate, not the people of Israel. In fact, the US pumps billions of dollars of free money, military aid, and foreign aid into Israel every day. So the people of Israel ought to be thanking BO profusely every day.

The real issue here is that Israel will eventually have to become a member of the international community that, like other every other State, is responsible for their own foreign policy. Currently, Israel hides behind the US.

Israel wants to build settlements? Let them. Israel wants to be at continual war with their neighbors without finding a compromise? So be it. Just let Israel do so without US funds and weapons.

US citizens and the Intl community has had enough of Israels moral impunity and special relationship with the US that somehow allows them to a special place in the international community, a place they have claimed since 1947.

Israel is mature enough, strong enough, and smart enough to fight their own wars. Let them do their own work. I do not want Israel's foreign policy and Israel's wars fought with US funds. We fought your war in Iraq and that is enough.

Of course, the central issue is that the Israel Lobby in the US adroitly massages the US Congress such that US funds that go to Israel, to this point, shield Israel from the anger of the international community. All at the expense of the US taxpayer.

It is sad indeed that the first African-American president of the United States defends in Israel exactly the kind of institutionalized bigotry, apartheid oppression, and racism in Israel the civil rights movement defeated in this country, a victory that made his election possible.

 

PFNOVAK

4:49 PM ET

February 18, 2010

"It is sad indeed that the

"It is sad indeed that the first African-American president of the United States defends in Israel exactly the kind of institutionalized bigotry, apartheid oppression, and racism in Israel the civil rights movement defeated in this country, a victory that made his election possible."

Obama opposes settlement growth in the West Bank which is what the apartheid in Israel argument hinges on. Outside of the West Bank and Gaza, Muslims, Armenians, Druze, and any other conceivable ethnic minority have rights including voting and holding elelcted office. I'm not denying there is racism, but the "institutionalization" of it is questionable. Recently the Israeli Supreme Court ruled developments in East Jerusalem and a military roadblock in the West Bank unconstitutional. The military forcibly removed settlers from Gaza in 2005 and is checking the influx of settlers in the West Bank. While you may disagree with Obama's stance on Israel it's a stretch to say he supports social backwardness which you lazily equate with the American Civil Rights movement.

Also, there is no "special relationship." The US has long supported countries and governments that don't abide by UN regulations. Israel is probably the most controversial but in this regard it is not unique.

 

ISRAELDEFENDER

6:21 AM ET

March 11, 2010

Reason for mistrust of Obama?

"Anxiety about Barack Obama has afflicted Israelis since his meteoric rise to the White House. Here was an untested president,..."

Israelis weren't anxious because he was untested. They were anxious because he had sat in the church of an anti-Semite for 20 years, titled a book after a phrase from the anti-Semite's sermon and had the anti-Semite officiate at his wedding!

Also, he had many anti-Israel types around him during his campaign (some of whom he had to get rid of under duress).