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Written by JOHH J. MEARSHEIMER JOHH J. MEARSHEIMER
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Published: 13 January 2008 13 January 2008
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Candidates' unconditional support isn't right for Jewish state
Sunday, January 13, 2008
JOHH J. MEARSHEIMER
The Oregonian
Once again, as the presidential campaign season heats up, the leading
candidates are going to enormous lengths to demonstrate their devotion
to the state of Israel and their steadfast commitment to its "special
relationship" with the United States.
Each of the main contenders emphatically favors giving Israel
extraordinary material and diplomatic support -- continuing the more
than $3 billion in foreign aid each year to a country whose per capita
income is now 29th in the world. They also believe that this aid should
be given unconditionally. None of them criticizes Israel's conduct,
even when its actions threaten U.S. interests, are at odds with
American values or even when they are harmful to Israel itself. In
short, the candidates believe that the U.S. should support Israel no
matter what it does.
Such pandering is hardly surprising, because contenders for high office
routinely court special interest groups, and Israel's staunchest
supporters -- the Israel lobby, as we have termed it -- expect it.
Politicians do not want to offend Jewish Americans or "Christian
Zionists," two groups that are deeply engaged in the political process.
Candidates fear, with some justification, that even well-intentioned
criticism of Israel's policies may lead these groups to back their
opponents instead.
If this happened, trouble would arise on many fronts. Israel's friends
in the media would take aim at the candidate, and campaign
contributions from pro-Israel individuals and political action
committees would go elsewhere. Moreover, most Jewish voters live in
states with many electoral votes, which increases their weight in close
elections (remember Florida in 2000?), and a candidate seen as
insufficiently committed to Israel would lose some of their support.
And no Republican would want to alienate the pro-Israel subset of the
Christian evangelical movement, which is a significant part of the GOP
base.
Indeed, even suggesting that the U.S. adopt a more impartial stance
toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can get a candidate into
serious trouble.
These candidates, however, are no friends of Israel. They are
facilitating its pursuit of self-destructive policies that no true
friend would favor.
The key issue here is the future of Gaza and the West Bank, which
Israel conquered in 1967 and still controls. Israel faces a stark
choice regarding these territories, which are home to roughly 3.8
million Palestinians. It can opt for a two-state solution, turning over
almost all of the West Bank and Gaza to the Palestinians and allowing
them to create a viable state on those lands in return for a
comprehensive peace agreement designed to allow Israel to live securely
within its pre-1967 borders (with some minor modifications). Or it can
retain control of the territories it occupies or surrounds, building
more settlements and bypass roads and confining the Palestinians to a
handful of impoverished enclaves in Gaza and the West Bank. Israel
would control the borders around those enclaves and the air above them,
thus severely restricting the Palestinians' freedom of movement.
But if Israel chooses this second option, it will lead to an apartheid
state. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said as much when he recently
proclaimed that if "the two-state solution collapses," Israel will
"face a South African-style struggle." He went so far as to argue that
"as soon as that happens, the state of Israel is finished." Other
Israelis, as well as Jimmy Carter and Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu,
have warned that continuing the occupation will turn Israel into an
apartheid state. Nevertheless, Israel continues to expand its
settlements on the West Bank while the plight of the Palestinians
worsens.
Given this grim situation, one would expect the presidential
candidates, who claim to care deeply about Israel, to be sounding the
alarm and energetically championing a two-state solution. One would
expect them to have encouraged President Bush to put significant
pressure on both the Israelis and the Palestinians at the recent
Annapolis conference and to keep the pressure on during last week's
visit to the region.
Hillary Clinton could be expected to be leading the charge here. After
all, she wisely and bravely called for establishing a Palestinian state
"that is on the same footing as other states" in 1998, when it was
still politically incorrect to use the words "Palestinian state"
openly. Moreover, her husband not only championed a two-state solution
as president but in December 2000 he laid out the famous "Clinton
parameters," which outline the only realistic deal for ending the
conflict.
But what is Hillary Clinton saying now that she is a candidate? She
said hardly anything about pushing the peace process forward at
Annapolis. More important, both she and GOP aspirant Rudy Giuliani
recently proclaimed that Jerusalem must remain undivided, a position
that is at odds with the Clinton parameters and virtually guarantees
that there will be no Palestinian state.
Sen. Clinton's behavior is hardly unusual among the candidates for
president. Barack Obama, who expressed some sympathy for the
Palestinians before he set his sights on the White House, now has
little to say about their plight, and he, too, said little about what
should have been done at Annapolis to facilitate peace. The other major
contenders are ardent in their declarations of support for Israel.
As Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former U.S. national security adviser and now
a senior adviser to Obama, noted, "The presidential candidates don't
see any payoff in addressing the Israel-Palestinian issue." But they do
see a significant political payoff in backing Israel to the hilt, even
when it is pursuing a policy -- colonizing the West Bank -- that is
morally and strategically bankrupt.
In short, the presidential candidates are no friends of Israel. They
are like most U.S. politicians, who reflexively mouth pro-Israel
platitudes while continuing to endorse and subsidize policies that are
in fact harmful to the Jewish state. A genuine friend would tell Israel
that it was acting foolishly and would do whatever possible to get
Israel to change its misguided behavior. And that will require
challenging the special interest groups whose hard-line views have been
obstacles to peace for many years.
As former Israeli Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami argued in 2006, the
American presidents who have made the greatest contribution to peace --
Carter and George H.W. Bush -- succeeded because they were "ready to
confront Israel head on and overlook the sensibilities of her friends
in America." If the Democratic and Republican contenders were true
friends of Israel, they would be warning it about the danger of
becoming an apartheid state, just as Carter did.
Moreover, they would be calling for an end to the occupation and the
creation of a viable Palestinian state. And they would be calling for
the United States to act as an honest broker between Israel and the
Palestinians so that Washington could pressure both sides to accept a
solution based on the Clinton parameters.
But Israel's false friends cannot say any of these things, or even
discuss the issue honestly. Why? Because they fear that speaking the
truth would incur the wrath of the hard-liners who dominate the main
organizations in the Israel lobby. So Israel will end up controlling
Gaza and the West Bank for the foreseeable future, turning itself into
an apartheid state in the process. And all of this will be done with
the backing of its so-called friends, including the current
presidential candidates.
With friends like them, who needs enemies?
2008, Los Angeles Times
John J. Mearsheimer is a professor of political science at the
University of Chicago. Stephen M. Walt is a professor of international
affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. They are the authors
of "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy," published last year by
Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
©2008 The Oregonian