A Lobby, Not a Conspiracy
By TONY JUDT, The New York Times
IN its March 23rd issue the London Review of Books, a respected British journal, published an essay titled “The Israel Lobby.” The authors are two distinguished American academics (Stephen Walt of Harvard and John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago) who posted a longer (83-page) version of their text on the Web site of Harvard’s Kennedy School.
As they must have anticipated, the essay has run into a firestorm of vituperation and refutation. Critics have charged that their scholarship is shoddy and that their claims are, in the words of the columnist Christopher Hitchens, “slightly but unmistakably smelly.” The smell in question, of course, is that of anti-Semitism.
This somewhat hysterical response is regrettable. In spite of its provocative title, the essay draws on a wide variety of standard sources and is mostly uncontentious. But it makes two distinct and important claims. The first is that uncritical support for Israel across the decades has not served America’s best interests. This is an assertion that can be debated on its merits. The authors’ second claim is more controversial: American foreign policy choices, they write, have for years been distorted by one domestic pressure group, the “Israel Lobby.”
Some would prefer, when explaining American actions overseas, to point a finger at the domestic “energy lobby.” Others might blame the influence of Wilsonian idealism, or imperial practices left over from the cold war. But that a powerful Israel lobby exists could hardly be denied by anyone who knows how Washington works. Its core is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, its penumbra a variety of national Jewish organizations.
Does the Israel Lobby affect our foreign policy choices? Of course — that is one of its goals. And it has been rather successful: Israel is the largest recipient of American foreign aid and American responses to Israeli behavior have been overwhelmingly uncritical or supportive.
But does pressure to support Israel distort American decisions? That’s a matter of judgment. Prominent Israeli leaders and their American supporters pressed very hard for the invasion of Iraq; but the United States would probably be in Iraq today even if there had been no Israel lobby. Is Israel, in Mearsheimer/Walt’s words, “a liability in the war on terror and the broader effort to deal with rogue states?” I think it is; but that too is an issue for legitimate debate.
The essay and the issues it raises for American foreign policy have been prominently dissected and discussed overseas. In America, however, it’s been another story: virtual silence in the mainstream media. Why? There are several plausible explanations. One is that a relatively obscure academic paper is of little concern to general-interest readers. Another is that claims about disproportionate Jewish public influence are hardly original — and debate over them inevitably attracts interest from the political extremes. And then there is the view that Washington is anyway awash in “lobbies” of this sort, pressuring policymakers and distorting their choices.
Each of these considerations might reasonably account for the mainstream press’s initial indifference to the Mearsheimer-Walt essay. But they don’t convincingly explain the continued silence even after the article aroused stormy debate in the academy, within the Jewish community, among the opinion magazines and Web sites, and in the rest of the world. I think there is another element in play: fear. Fear of being thought to legitimize talk of a “Jewish conspiracy”; fear of being thought anti-Israel; and thus, in the end, fear of licensing the expression of anti-Semitism.
The end result — a failure to consider a major issue in public policy — is a great pity. So what, you may ask, if Europeans debate this subject with such enthusiasm? Isn’t Europe a hotbed of anti-Zionists (read anti-Semites) who will always relish the chance to attack Israel and her American friend? But it was David Aaronovitch, a Times of London columnist who, in the course of criticizing Mearsheimer and Walt, nonetheless conceded that “I sympathize with their desire for redress, since there has been a cock-eyed failure in the U.S. to understand the plight of the Palestinians.”
And it was the German writer Christoph Bertram, a longstanding friend of America in a country where every public figure takes extraordinary care to tread carefully in such matters, who wrote in Die Zeit that “it is rare to find scholars with the desire and the courage to break taboos.”
How are we to explain the fact that it is in Israel itself that the uncomfortable issues raised by Professors Mearsheimer and Walt have been most thoroughly aired? It was an Israeli columnist in the liberal daily Haaretz who described the American foreign policy advisers Richard Perle and Douglas Feith as “walking a fine line between their loyalty to American governments …and Israeli interests.” It was Israel’s impeccably conservative Jerusalem Post that described Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense, as “devoutly pro-Israel.” Are we to accuse Israelis, too, of “anti-Zionism”?
The damage that is done by America’s fear of anti-Semitism when discussing Israel is threefold. It is bad for Jews: anti-Semitism is real enough (I know something about it, growing up Jewish in 1950’s Britain), but for just that reason it should not be confused with political criticisms of Israel or its American supporters. It is bad for Israel: by guaranteeing it unconditional support, Americans encourage Israel to act heedless of consequences. The Israeli journalist Tom Segev described the Mearsheimer-Walt essay as “arrogant” but also acknowledged ruefully: “They are right. Had the United States saved Israel from itself, life today would be better …the Israel Lobby in the United States harms Israel’s true interests.”
BUT above all, self-censorship is bad for the United States itself. Americans are denying themselves participation in a fast-moving international conversation. Daniel Levy (a former Israeli peace negotiator) wrote in Haaretz that the Mearsheimer-Walt essay should be a wake-up call, a reminder of the damage the Israel lobby is doing to both nations. But I would go further. I think this essay, by two “realist” political scientists with no interest whatsoever in the Palestinians, is a straw in the wind.
Looking back, we shall see the Iraq war and its catastrophic consequences as not the beginning of a new democratic age in the Middle East but rather as the end of an era that began in the wake of the 1967 war, a period during which American alignment with Israel was shaped by two imperatives: cold-war strategic calculations and a new-found domestic sensitivity to the memory of the Holocaust and the debt owed to its victims and survivors.
For the terms of strategic debate are shifting. East Asia grows daily in importance. Meanwhile our clumsy failure to re-cast the Middle East — and its enduring implications for our standing there — has come into sharp focus. American influence in that part of the world now rests almost exclusively on our power to make war: which means in the end that it is no influence at all. Above all, perhaps, the Holocaust is passing beyond living memory. In the eyes of a watching world, the fact that an Israeli soldier’s great-grandmother died in Treblinka will not excuse his own misbehavior.
Thus it will not be self-evident to future generations of Americans why the imperial might and international reputation of the United States are so closely aligned with one small, controversial Mediterranean client state. It is already not at all self-evident to Europeans, Latin Americans, Africans or Asians. Why, they ask, has America chosen to lose touch with the rest of the international community on this issue? Americans may not like the implications of this question. But it is pressing. It bears directly on our international standing and influence; and it has nothing to do with anti-Semitism. We cannot ignore it.
Tony Judt is the director of the Remarque Institute at New York University and the author of “Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945.”
A year or two ago, Tony Judt called for the creation of a single, binational state in the pages of The New York Review of Books. His reason: He found that he was personally “embarassed” by conversations about Israel at dinner parties (I kid you not.)
Not every point he makes in the article reprinted here is totally insane, but I don’t think anyone should take him seriously. Notice how he wants to sever any connection between support for Israel and the rise of antisemitism *at the same time* that he attempts to render himself immune from criticism by recalling his own experiences at the hands of anti-semites. This is a very common rhetorical move made by anti-Zionist Jews, and it is beneath contempt.
Comment by LivingInReality
— April 19, 2006 @ 9:04 am
What a disgusting, vile editorial from a disgusting, vile little man. What he is essentially saying is because the arabs are far larger and numerous, threatening and control most of the oil resources,we should abandon tiny, unimportant Israel. We should get with the program and join the rest of the world in basing our Middle East policy on such immoral considerations. Well I’m very proud of the fact that America stands apart from the rest of the putrid world and takes a moral stance in defense of Israel. Just because the rest of the world is willing to throw Israel to the arab wolves and is willing to allow another holocaust doesn’t mean we should. They are not doing what is right, but merely what is in their interests. I can’t think of a more cowardly, immoral position to take than the one Tony Judt is advising, go along to get along. What an evil little man he is, in fact, judt doesn’t deserve to breathe another breath. Most of the world in fact is pure evil. There’s VERY FEW who have any morality. Certainly those in power don’t.
Comment by Laura
— April 19, 2006 @ 1:36 pm
This doesn’t surprise me. We know Israel is despised in elite circles, and unfortunately he and many other prominent Jews are willing to throw their own people overboard in order to be able to travel in those circles. For all his talk, Judt is a coward whos motivation is simply to fit in with the crowd he associates with. Note the way he thinks the U.S. should abandon Israel because the rest of the world is opposed to Israel. That tells us all we need to know about his character.
Comment by Laura
— April 19, 2006 @ 1:45 pm
Well, well. 68% of Americans view Israel favorably; 78% percent view the Pali’s UNfavorably. Americans support Israel over the Palestians by a 4 to 1 ratio. The majority of Americans view Israel as our third staunchest ally (after England and Canada). A majority of Americans view Iran as the greatest enemy. And 46% of Americans view Islam negatively - up 7% since after 9/11.
So now Tony Judt steps in on the Op Ed page of the Times to set the record straight. And how does he do it? Does he deal with the poll numbers, with the views of the majority of the country, and try to see how they impact upon policy? No, it must be “The Lobby”. And even there, he spends most of his time whining about how no mainstream outlet will give the anti-Israel crowd a forum for their views. (I guess the irony is lost on him that the Op Ed page of the Times is about as mainstream as you can get).
Well, here’s my question - when the Muslim world continues exporting terror, and the backlash continues to fall on the Muslims rather than their victims; and as support for Israel continues to climb - as Americans look to Israel to absorb some shocks and act as a powerful “stick” in dealing with barbarians; and as Evangelicals fill up their churches while liberal, Pro-Divestment Protestants, look out on empty pews - will the anti-Israel crowd still whine that they haven’t had their debate? Or is the New York Times mainstream enough for them?
I would like to think they’d have the integrity to admit that their beef is with John Q. Public, and try explaining to the 2/3rds of Americans who support Israel that they’re all a bunch of “dual loyalists” committing a subtle form of treason. But of course they don’t have the courage. They’ll just focus on the Jews.
Oh, and by the way Tony, according to polls, most of Israel’s supporters are white, churchgoing Christians. They’re not thinking about the Holocaust, but rather about general morality and what it says in the Bible. So, what are you going to do about them, Tony? Ban the bible or propose a bill to increase Muslim immigration?
Comment by APS
— April 19, 2006 @ 8:27 pm
I do not see examining the merits of Palestinian grievances as being the same thing as abandoning Israel. I think much of the US support of Israel comes from a largely one-sided representation of the conflict in addition to well-connected persons of power across a wide array of fields (academic, political, business, media) that do have, if not a dual loyalty, a bias towards the Israeli/Jewish view of things.
To be fair, if the percentages of Arabs/Muslims in these fields as opposed to the population in general was along the lines of Jewish representation, I don’t doubt that many policy decision they made that seemed to favor/benefit the Arab/Islamic world would be second-guessed as having a bias. This has been the argument (and certainly has some validity) in regards to when white males were exclusively preeminent.
It is natural amongst almost all peoples that “tribal” allegiances in a myriad of forms be elevated above the rest, but by acknowledging this, we may guard against becoming unreasonably exclusionary. Why should it be fair to label Jews whose positions go against the majority views be catagorized as traitors, turncoats, quislings, and self-hating Jews (and much worse, as most of you are probably aware)?
For someone to express their feeling that fairness requires the Palestinians get a larger slice of the pie is not the same thing as hating Jews. That it should be framed in that way so often works against true understanding and the ultimate peaceful resolution of the conflict.
Maybe the most equitable solution would be the one mothers often employed. One person cuts the pie, the other person chooses.
Comment by LanceThruster
— June 9, 2006 @ 3:08 pm