Israeli lobby and US interests
By Kurt Jacobsen and Sayeed Hasan Khan
IN the mid-1980s an air-headed action film entitled ‘Delta Force’ popped up on American movie screens. The gaudy Golan-Globus production was a wish-fulfilment fantasy depicting how the bungled 1979 US effort to rescue hostages in Iran somehow might have succeeded. (The braggart advertisement: “They don’t negotiate with terrorists... They blow them away.”) This movie strutted in the same tradition as a popular series of flicks portraying rescues of mythical Yank soldiers held prisoner in Vietnam for no imaginable reason long after the war ended.
Delta Force, boasted Lee Marvin as the cunning US commander and Chuck Norris as his trusty sidekick. Can’t do better than that for a macho cast. But the Yanks needed one more key piece if they were going to redeem themselves. The missing ingredient turned out to be a suave Israeli commando who obligingly showed eager Americans how rescues are really performed, as in the 1976 Entebbe raid.
This silver screen Israeli was so saintly, and so condescending, that we ridiculed him in a review as the candy-coated propaganda figure he plainly was. Here, we observed, was a stock character who many, and probably most, Israelis themselves would scorn as silly.
All too predictably the US newspaper where the review appeared got letters accusing the reviewer of anti-Semitism. To criticise Israel, these letters implied, was to befoul the memory of six million Jews in the Holocaust. The Nazi extermination camps were an unspeakable methodical horror that should not happen to anyone ever again, but what does the Holocaust have to do with movie criticism or Israeli foreign policy?
Would holocaust victims have deemed it a proud legacy to provide a harsh realpolitik government with a licence to abuse Palestinians? One wondered if any adverse comment was too trivial for Israel boosters not to regard as a threat. For the ultras among American Zionists, no criticism, no matter how tiny or tangential, escapes notice and retaliation. One result is that debate about the Middle East is much less inhibited inside Israel than in the US.
So there was nothing startling about the statement by a pair of high-profile American professors who, in the course of a robust, if rehashed, critique of Israeli influence over US policy, remarked: “Anyone who criticises Israel’s actions or argues that pro-Israel groups have significant influence over US Middle Eastern policy... stands a good chance of being labelled an anti-Semite. Indeed, anyone who merely claims that there is an Israel lobby runs the risk of being charged with anti-Semitism, even though the Israeli media refer to America’s ‘Jewish lobby.’
Although nothing John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago and Steve Walt of Harvard University say is new (nor do they claim otherwise), they have indeed made a daring move in order to spark a desperately needed debate.
The London Review of Books, on whose website their article appeared, is not exactly a fixture in the waiting rooms at your local dentists office. Yet this seemingly obscure outlet drew a barrage of counter-attacks amounting to a media firestorm. Mearsheimer and Walt — one of the writers is long acquainted with both gentlemen — are not remotely anti-Semitic, are staunch supporters of Israel’s right to a secure existence, and are scrupulously fair-minded fellows.
They also happen to be eminent realist scholars who followed their painstakingly logical analysis of international politics into some pretty hazardous territory.
For realists, states in an anarchic world have no reliable friends, only interests which change from time to time, and so, therefore, states must always be opportunists. Power is everything. Selfishness is, if not a virtue, an inevitable feature of state behaviour.
So Mearsheimer and Walt simply cannot figure out why the US seems to depart regularly from what they view as the shrewd pursuit of self-interest in order to indulge little Israel in many costly ways — dishing out billions in subsidies to Israel every year, winking at hundreds of Israeli nuclear weapons while threatening to nuke Iran for aspiring to make a few, and enabling ardent Israeli expansionism so as to antagonise the whole Arab world, which is certainly not in Americas long-term interest.
How can one explain this peculiar behaviour? Their answer is — after, astonishingly, dismissing the motive of oil (and America’s related financial need to denominate oil in dollars) — the excessive influence of an Israel lobby, which comprises a loose coalition of all uncritical supporters of Israeli policy. There is no central command post. Has US opinion been ‘captured’ by pro-Israeli groups who suppress critical debate?
Examples abound. Norman Finkelstein is targeted because of his debunking books such as The Holocaust Industry, and more recently Beyond Chutzpah, which demolished Alan Dershowitz’s The Case for Israel on grounds not only of plagiary, but plagiary of false ‘facts’ at that. Holocaust denial has its lesser but significant counterpart in denial of the forced expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Arabs from Israel in 1948 (and in 1967 from the West Bank and the Golan Heights).
Dershowitz, a lawyer who advocates torture of terrorist suspects, waged a furious but failed campaign to dissuade the University of California Press from publishing Finkelstein. So the “lobby” is not all-powerful. Still, in the US intimidating ‘watch lists’ of Israel?s critics are spread by ardent right-wingers Daniel Pipes and also David Horowitz.
Even theatre producers in New York could not sidestep opposition to staging a play about peace activist Rachel Corrie, who was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer in the West Bank. In Britain, too, journalist Robert Fisk of The Independent garners hate mail galore. The British situation is only somewhat better than in the US. The Guardian last year reported a survey finding that a large minority of British citizens believe that Palestinians are occupying Israeli land.
It is probably true that in the US Congress, and much of the media, Israel is virtually immune from criticism. Even so, this annoying fact is not the same thing as proving that pro-Israel interests shape US policy to the point even of causing the invasion of Iraq or threatening Iran and Syria. It is also quite true that neocons in high places in the Bush administration exhibit intimate links to the Israeli right.
Nonetheless, US political and economic elites have ruthless interests of their own in the energy-rich Middle East, and Israel is often only incidental in this big geopolitical picture. Ask yourself why would the US government, boasting a mighty propaganda apparatus of its own, and populated by policymakers who are a match for the most devious leaders anywhere, be gulled to go along with a small state’s wishes?
Yet Mearsheimer and Walt soundly argue that US complicity with Israel (for whatever reasons) militates not only against its own best interests but those of Israel too. Realists pride themselves on seeing through ruses and rhetoric to underlying interest. Yet realism always struck us as oddly innocent in its insistence that state policy must be hatched independently of low commercial motives. Big oil, always influential, seized the White House in 2000. Even Noam Chomsky, while praising the courage of Walt and Mearsheimer, saw their paper as missing the larger underlying process of US elites doing what they please in the dubious name of national interest.
Israel would indeed be better off if the US applied its full leverage to compel a fair settlement with the Palestinians. About half of Israelis already support full disengagement from the West Bank. Many US groups, including a large segment of the American Jewish population, seek a fair and just solution to the Middle East crisis.
The Israel lobby, as Walt and Mearsheimer readily concede, have a perfect right to make their case, like any other organisation, but they have no right to escape scrutiny, skew the truth with impunity, or to bully critics.
The timing is right for a thorough reapraisal. Given growing scepticism about US interventionism, Mearsheimer and Walt stirred up a frenzy because Israel boosters fear losing their grip on public opinion. The flap about a new survey, conducted by pro-Israel interests, depicting about 40 per cent of Swedes as anti-semitic turns out to be nonsense, counting as anti-Semitic anyone critical of Israeli policy.
On close inspection the anti-Semitic component is in the low single digits — exceeded by anti-Muslim feelings, though thankfully also in single digits.
States, like people, don’t always recognise and appreciate who their real friends are. Witness the certifiably crazy and unstable alliance between the Israeli right and the American Christian right on alleged biblical grounds that are beyond parody. By contrast, scorned enemies like Mearsheimer and Walt may well turn out in the long run to be among Israel’s best friends.


