[Republicans,
too, have professed a desire to see a two-state solution,
but they were nonetheless quick to congratulate their political ally Netanyahu on
his victory (GOP hypocrisy is nothing new). That leaves it to the Democrats and
their leader for the next two years, President Barack Obama, to take a stand.
The signs are heartening, even from Congress: 56
members boycotted Netanyahu’s address earlier
this month, and so far a critical mass of Democrats haven’t signed onto
measures designed to kill negotiations with Iran. The administration,
meanwhile, expressed concern over Netanyahu’s
election tactics and vowed to “evaluate [its] position going forward” on the
peace process, such that it is.]
By
Ali
Gharib
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu waves to supporters at party headquarters
in Tel Aviv
on March 18, 2015. (Reuters/Amir Cohen)
|
The American
political class has spent decades convincing itself that the Israeli political
class really does want a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. The last six years have been the hardest—Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu proclaimed a tepid desire for peace, but consistently acted
contrary to it — and yet the image of an Israel that would strike the deal if
only this or that condition was met by the Palestinians persisted. Perhaps the
image even grew stronger: who can forget all the standing ovations Netanyahu
received during his 2009 address to Congress and, despite all the controversy,
again this winter?
The illusion,
however, of an Israeli body politic, perhaps even an Israeli electorate, happy
to make peace was shattered as Netanyahu sailed to another victory—especially in light of the way he did it.
Netanyahu’s last minute bid to strengthen his hand came not from fear-mongering
about Iran, as he’d done for years, but about the Palestinians. His fired
salvos at both Palestinian citizens of Israel (some 20 percent of the
population) and against those Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. In the
former case, Netanyahu warned his baseArabs were “coming out in droves to the polls”;
in the latter, he boldly declared that no Palestinian state
would be birthed were he elected (something Netanyahu had been hinting at throughout the campaign).
The mantra of
American Israel supporters, from grassroots lobby groups right up to 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, has always been that the United States and Israel hold
“shared values”—chief among them the countries’ common democratic characters.
But Netanyahu’s campaign put the lie to the notion. “Remember that Netanyahu’s
version of democracy includes as few Arab voices as possible, simply because
they are not Jewish,”wrote +972 Magazine’s Michael Schaeffer Omer-Man.
“Remember that the peace processes he has overseen for decades were not
genuine, that he never had any intention of ushering in, let alone seeking, a
two-state solution.”
The problem
for American policy-makers, with the illusion of “shared values” shattered, is
that they have spent decades enabling Israel’s pursuit of its worst instincts.
The US subsidizes about a fifth of Israel’s defense budget—the largest American
foreign aid package—to help the country defend itself as it pursues peace, not
for it to hold the Occupied Territories in perpetuity and create, as many Israeli officials have put it, a de
jure Apartheid state where half the people under its control get no vote.
The United States gives Israel diplomatic cover in international fora to
prevent the Jewish state from being unfairly targeted and maligned, not to
avoid criticisms of a state deserving of censure. How can we keep graciously
offering these benefits to Israel if it has so blatantly defied its own claims—and
ours—of being a strong, if flawed, democracy?
The answer is
twofold, though both aspects are connected: one is the inertial strength of the
Israel lobby and the other is its favorite party, the Republicans. The lobby
has faltered in recent years, losing out at key points in the Iran diplomacy fight,
for instance, but lobby groups’ aggressive policing of politics and media will
continue apace, and can still bite those who transgress it as well as lavish
benefit on those who proclaim their fealty. The lobby’s biggest problem is that
those quarters of American politics in lock step with its aims are increasingly
falling squarely in the Republican camp. Think of the Jerusalem platform fight at the 2012
Democratic National Convention or, again, the Iran issue, particularly the continuingpartisan efforts to kill nuclear talks and the GOP invitation
to Netanyahu to address Congress on Iran.
Republicans,
too, have professed a desire to see a two-state solution,
but they were nonetheless quick to congratulate their political ally Netanyahu on
his victory (GOP hypocrisy is nothing new). That leaves it to the Democrats and
their leader for the next two years, President Barack Obama, to take a stand.
The signs are heartening, even from Congress: 56
members boycotted Netanyahu’s address earlier
this month, and so far a critical mass of Democrats haven’t signed onto
measures designed to kill negotiations with Iran. The administration,
meanwhile, expressed concern over Netanyahu’s
election tactics and vowed to “evaluate [its] position going forward” on the
peace process, such that it is.
But the
administration’s criticisms leave room for ambiguity: Will there be any more
concrete consequences for Israel in light of its newly clarified intransigence
on peace? It’s doubtful, but with the free hand of a second term president,
Obama could let a UN resolution condemning Israeli settlements pass instead of
vetoing it or, better yet, give the Palestinian Authority support in its
efforts to join international organizations (so far, the Obama administration
has resisted both these moves). The shibboleth of the so-called special
relationship between Israel and America—the generous military aid to a wealthy
country—should be the first thing to go, but will probably be the last.
So not much
is likely to happen. In a way, it makes perfect sense. Netanyahu’s remarks
during the campaign didn’t totally re-order how any half-witted observer of
Israeli politics views the Prime Minister. He’s been acting this way for years
and has now, belatedly, added word to deed. If America wasn’t willing to face
up to these realities before, why should it now? Israel’s ardent defenders will no doubt dismiss
Netanyahu’s comments and call for keeping up the status quo.
But at this moment another step has been taken for Americans coming to realize
what the status quo is: a belligerent American client state willfully careening
towards apartheid with our help, trying, along the way, to drag us into
disastrous conflicts in the region. It’s a small step, but for the principled
American liberals increasingly fed up with Israel, this march is slow and steady.
Read
Next: Ali Gharib on the worst case for war with Iran you’ll read in a major
newspaper