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“The
Israel Lobby” in Perspective
Mitchell
Plitnick and Chris Toensing
Mitchell
Plitnick is director of education and policy at Jewish Voice
for Peace. Chris Toensing is editor of Middle East Report.

Vice
President Dick Cheney addresses the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee's 2007 Policy Conference in Washington.
(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) |
John
Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt’s 82-page paper “The Israel Lobby
and US Foreign Policy” has entered the canon of contemporary
political culture in the United States. So much, positive and
negative, has been written about the March 2006 essay that the
phrase “the Mearsheimer-Walt argument” is now shorthand for the
idea that pro-Israel advocates exert a heavy—and malign—influence
upon the formulation of US Middle East policy. To veteran students
of Middle East affairs, this idea is hardly new, of course. But
the fact that two top international relations scholars affiliated
with the University of Chicago and Harvard University’s Kennedy
School of Government, respectively, have espoused this analysis
has lent it unprecedented currency. Farrar, Straus and Giroux
will publish a book-length version of the professors’ argument
in late 2007. Along with President Jimmy Carter’s volume Palestine:
Peace Not Apartheid, “The Israel Lobby” (as the paper is
commonly known) has opened up a debate that many members of the
lobby have long sought to suppress.
Like
Carter, Mearsheimer and Walt have faced ugly and unsubstantiated
allegations of racism for drawing attention to the imbalance
in US Middle East policy and the lobby’s clout. Walt’s Harvard
colleague Alan Dershowitz labeled them “bigots” and “liars,”
and the Anti-Defamation League accused them of promulgating “a
classical conspiratorial anti-Semitic analysis invoking the canards
of Jewish power and Jewish control.” Reams of angry newsprint
later, these kneejerk cries of anti-Semitism have not registered,
and for good reason. Plainly, a lobby that is universally recognized
by Washington insiders—and even promotes itself—as one of the
few most powerful in the country is influential.[1] Saying so cannot be inherently anti-Semitic.
The
related allegation of sloppy research is also silly. In December
2006, Mearsheimer and Walt released a point-by-point rebuttal,
perhaps not coincidentally also 82 pages long, of the charges
of poor scholarship leveled by Benny Morris, Martin Kramer and
others. Almost every charge was a misreading of the original
paper. Nor is “The Israel Lobby” “piss-poor, monocausal social
science,” as political scientist and blogger Daniel Drezner would
have it. On the contrary, the text is full of caveats and qualifiers.
The
essential flaw in the Mearsheimer-Walt argument is not, as many
critics have said, the authors’ exaggeration of the pro-Israel
lobby’s power, for although the authors do this in some instances,
the thrust of their argument remains sound. It is not even their
inattention to the other factors that have historically defined
the US interest in the Middle East for the bipartisan foreign
policy establishment. Rather, the most serious fault lies in
the professors’ conclusion—soothing in this day and age—that
US Middle East policy would become “more temperate” were the
influence of the Israel lobby to be curtailed. This conclusion
is undercut by the remarkable continuities in US Middle East
policy since the Truman administration, including in times when
the pro-Israel lobby was weak. And other factors—chiefly the
drive for hegemony in the Persian Gulf—have also embroiled the
US in plenty of trouble.
The
Cold War Prism
Mearsheimer
and Walt issue a broad indictment of their subject. “No lobby,”
they write, “has managed to divert US foreign policy as far from
what the American national interest would otherwise suggest,
while simultaneously convincing Americans that US and Israeli
interests are essentially identical.” Has the lobby’s influence
always explained US support for Israel? This question is crucial
because it helps to define the extent to which that influence
explains US policy toward Israel today.
From
the day in 1948 that President Harry Truman announced his support
for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine, Israel has held
a special place in the hearts and minds of many Americans, Jewish
and otherwise. The fledgling state was more European than Middle
Eastern in orientation, providing common cultural ground. The
mythos surrounding the creation of Israel and the sympathy generated
by the horrifying tragedy of the Holocaust played major roles
in shaping popular American sympathy in the 1960s and 1970s,
when the “special relationship” between Israel and the US was
cemented.[2] Christians,
including many African-Americans, responded warmly to the narrative
wherein a plucky people, fleeing horrific persecution and age-old
prejudice, made the desert bloom in the Holy Land and stoutly
defended their new polity against all comers.[3]
On
the official level, Israel found its early sources of support
elsewhere, while working tirelessly to build support in the United
States.[4] After
Israel’s decisive victory over neighboring Arab states in 1967,
the US committed itself more and more to what might be called
“the Israel track.” The reason, however, was neither a domestic
lobby nor a sentimental soft spot among policymakers for the
Jewish state. The reason was that policymakers saw the Middle
East through the prism of the Cold War.[5]
Concern
about Soviet backing for Egypt had led Lyndon Johnson, while
a Congressman, to oppose President Dwight Eisenhower’s determination
to force Israel to pull out of the Sinai and away from the Suez
Canal in 1956, without some move toward changing the status quo.[6] The
outcome of the 1967 war, entailing the humiliation of Soviet-allied
Egypt and Syria, strengthened President Johnson’s conviction
that Israel was a useful Cold War asset. After the war, an anonymous
State Department official told the press: “Israel has probably
done more for the United States in the Middle East in relation
to money and effort than any of our so-called allies elsewhere
around the globe since the end of the Second World War. In the
Far East we can get almost no one to help us in Vietnam. Here
the Israelis won the war singlehandedly, have taken us off the
hook and have served our interests as well as theirs.”[7] Aspiring chief executive Richard
Nixon—also not known for philo-Semitism—supported Israel vigorously
on the 1968 campaign trail, pursuant to a visit to Israel the
previous June, when he met wounded Egyptian soldiers in an Israeli
hospital. There he wrote down an Egyptian tank commander’s complaint:
“Russia is to blame. They furnished the arms. We did the dying.”[8]
Under
the quintessential Cold Warrior Nixon and his foreign policy
doyen Henry Kissinger, US material aid to Israel rose precipitously,
and diplomatic support was vastly strengthened. By the Nixon
Doctrine of 1969, developed in reaction to the Vietnam quagmire,
the US would project its power abroad through regional proxies
rather than American troops. Israel, Saudi Arabia and the Shah’s
Iran were chosen in the Middle East. Israel promptly proved its
worth by helping King Hussein of Jordan in brutally stamping
out a Palestinian rebellion in 1970, stabilizing a key Western
ally in the region at the expense of the PLO, seen in Washington
as a Soviet proxy. In 1973, Nixon and Kissinger agreed to a major
airlift of munitions to Israel toward the tail end of that year’s
Arab-Israeli war. Though the US paid dearly for that decision
with the Arab oil embargo, the next year, aid to Israel topped
$2 billion. As in subsequent years, much of this aid was pumped
back into the US economy in the form of arms purchases, giving
the American arms industry a strong interest in the US-Israeli
strategic alliance. Nixon’s was a path born of Cold War strategy
and opposition to Arab nationalism—perceived as a threat to oil-rich
Saudi Arabia—not the efforts of a lobby.[9]
Mearsheimer
and Walt acknowledge that Israel “may have been a strategic asset
during the Cold War,” but they insist on counting the costs,
like the expense of the aid and the economic damage wrought by
the 1973 embargo. These costs are viewed as penalties of supporting
Israel rather than the expected price to pay in the Cold War
calculus of Nixon and Kissinger. Israel attained its place in
US Cold War strategy by its 1967 victory and its ability to stand
against Soviet Arab proxies in a way Arab countries could not
have done. However questionable the strategy might have been,
the support of Israel did not come about due to the actions of
a lobby.
The
Rise of the Israel Lobby
The
major institutions of the Israel lobby arose during the Reagan
years to defend the US-Israeli strategic alliance forged in the
wake of the 1967 war. The most prominent such institution is
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). According
to its website, AIPAC boasts a $47 million annual budget and
“100,000 members in all 50 states.” In 2001, Fortune ranked
AIPAC fourth most powerful among all lobbying groups. It is routinely
in the top five, and is usually the only foreign policy lobby
on the entire list. Although AIPAC itself does not directly engage
in campaign contributions, it sets the agenda for the many pro-Israel
PACs that do, and it has further mounted well-documented campaigns
against members of Congress it judges insufficiently supportive
of Israel. The Reagan administration was also intimately connected
to the Christian Coalition, and many figures from that administration,
both Christian and Jewish, have resurfaced in the administration
of George W. Bush. From the 1980s on, there can be no doubt that
these two major players in lobbying on behalf of hardline Israeli
policies have been highly influential, especially in Congress.[10]
Arguably,
as Mearsheimer and Walt contend, the likes of AIPAC and the Christian
right have been necessary for keeping the special relationship
intact, for the end of the Cold War threw Israel’s usefulness
into a different light. There was no Soviet Union to compete
with, and pan-Arab nationalism was largely a lost cause. But
concern remained that nationalist or Islamist forces might win
control of oil-producing Arab states. The role Israel played
in smashing Arab nationalists was and is still valued in Washington.
Israeli military and intelligence assistance has been well-documented
in Latin America and other parts of the world.[11] In the Middle East, where US
intelligence weaknesses are glaring, Israel plays a virtually
irreplaceable role, with its population of native speakers of
Arabic. Additionally, support for Israel, while somewhat diminished
by the invasion of Lebanon in 1982, the 1987–1993 Palestinian intifada and
the 2006 Lebanon war, remains quite strong among Americans to
this day. Americans generally do not support blind backing of
whatever Israel does, but the positive disposition toward Israel
is a factor in the minds of decision-makers.[12] While it is perhaps impossible to separate
that positive disposition from the activities of the Israel lobby,
the fact that Mearsheimer and Walt themselves speak of their
concern for Israel demonstrates that there is much more to it
than mere promotion and advocacy.
It
is also important that resolving the issues of Israeli occupation
and Palestinian statelessness has never been an end in itself
for Washington, but simply a means toward other policy goals.
Peace initiatives are thus much more vulnerable to derailment
by domestic forces.
Finally,
one should note that US responses to Israeli demands are not
always absolutely positive. From Reagan’s sale of AWACS planes
to Saudi Arabia to the first Bush administration’s threat to
withhold loan guarantees from Israel, there are scattered examples
of Israel and the pro-Israel lobby proving unable to veto executive
branch decisions. Ongoing disputes over Israeli arms sales to
China (and previously to India), the current Bush administration’s
quiet non-response to Israeli requests for financial compensation
for its Gaza “withdrawal” and its message to the Olmert government
that it should not ask for funding for its “convergence plan”
are additional examples. Pro-Israel lobbyists bitterly opposed
many of these US moves, as they do any hint of US “pressure”
on Israel to resolve its conflict with the Palestinians.
Palestine
in Global Strategy
To
what extent does the Israel lobby shape US Middle East policy
today? Mearsheimer and Walt’s argument is strongest when it comes
to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. During the Cold War, when
Nixon and Reagan were implacably hostile to the PLO as overly
friendly to the Soviets, support for Israel against the Palestinians
fit into a broader US strategy. Since the Soviet Union’s demise,
however, Washington has derived scant benefit from its pro-Israel
leanings to balance the undoubted cost, especially in anger at
the US among Arabs and Muslims. For this reason, the administrations
of Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton exerted considerable
diplomatic energy to broker an Israeli-Palestinian settlement.
To the extent that the failure of this diplomacy was caused by
systemic favoritism shown to Israeli negotiating positions, the
Israel lobby and US officials linked to the pro-Israel Washington
Institute for Near East Policy must bear a great deal of the
blame. The lobby was also an important factor weakening—or eviscerating—US
opposition to Israeli “facts on the ground” that prejudiced the
outcome of a future final status settlement in Israel’s favor.
George
W. Bush’s foreign policy team assumed office with a different
mindset than its predecessors’. The passions aroused by occupation
and Palestinian suffering in the Arab and Muslim world were not
a strategic factor in the Bush team’s worldview, for they had
exacted no pound of flesh from the US since the 1973 embargo,
an experiment the Bush team rightly calculated the oil-producing
Arab states were loath to repeat. The Bush White House’s default
position was to ignore the simmering intifada, leaving
Israel a free hand in its harsh military measures, just as pro-Israel
Republicans on the Christian right demanded.
Mearsheimer
and Walt actually give the Bush administration too much credit,
when they write: “It is now largely forgotten, but in the fall
of 2001, and especially in the spring of 2002, the Bush administration
tried to reduce anti-American sentiment in the Arab world and
undermine support for al‑Qaeda, by halting Israel’s expansionist
policies in the Occupied Territories and advocating the creation
of a Palestinian state.” What they are describing was a short-lived
revival of Clinton-era thinking, as personified by Secretary
of State Colin Powell, after the September 11, 2001 attacks
required the US to seek greater Arab cooperation in the “war
on terror.” Prior to September 11, the Bush administration had
scarcely budged from Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s position
that any resumption of substantive Israeli-Palestinian talks
would have to wait until there was utter “calm”—as defined by
Israel—in Israel-Palestine. Afterward, to rally Arab support,
Powell began stating forgotten US commitments to achieve a “settlement
freeze,” and even mentioned the term “peace plan.” The US never
followed through, however. Mearsheimer and Walt argue that this
is because the Israel lobby had “swung into action” to re-equate
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat with Osama bin Laden. Another,
more plausible explanation, given the Bush administration’s predilections,
is that Arab states freely cooperated in rounding up radical
Islamists even without the semblance of a “peace process” in
Israel-Palestine. There was no cost to untying Sharon’s hands
once more that would outweigh the benefit of pleasing Bush’s
pro-Israel supporters.
There
is universal agreement that the policy debate initially held
between Powell, on the one hand, and Vice President Dick Cheney
and former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, on the other, ended
in victory for the Cheney-Rumsfeld camp. And all the evidence
suggests that Cheney and Rumsfeld are motivated by their own
ideology, not by the lobby’s pressure.
At
any rate, by 2002 the White House’s commitment to renewing Israeli-Palestinian
talks was long gone. Bush waited several days after the beginning
of Operation Defensive Shield, the massive Israeli tank invasion
of the West Bank in March-April 2002 that targeted numerous Palestinian
Authority installations, before dispatching Powell to the region.
Mearsheimer and Walt cite the Powell mission as evidence of a
commitment to evenhandedness, but they do not mention that Powell
took “the slow boat to Tel Aviv,” stopping first in Rabat and
Cairo. With encouragement from other US officials, Israel interpreted
the delay in Powell’s arrival as carte blanche to escalate its
offensive.[13] These events, as well as subsequent Bush administration
neglect of the Israeli-Palestinian portfolio, bespeak a White
House that does not need lobbying to let Israel drive events,
so long as this does not complicate other, more pressing US interests.
The
Attack-Iraq Caucus
The
Bush administration’s real interest in 2001 was the Persian Gulf,
specifically Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. In their most explosive argument,
Mearsheimer and Walt state that “the war [in Iraq] was due in
large part to the Lobby’s influence, especially the neo-conservatives
within it.” They then follow the trail of statements from neo-conservatives
advocating the forcible removal of Saddam Hussein’s regime, and
tie this advocacy to devotion to Israel.
Here
they run into problems of direct evidence. It is easy to show
the neo-conservatives’ affinity for Israel—actually, the Israeli
right—but the professors have not made the case that this affinity
was a “necessary, if not sufficient cause” of the 2003 invasion.
Nor is it even clear that love for Israel motivated the pro-war
impulses of the neo-conservatives themselves. For instance, the
professors adduce the so-called “Clean Break Paper” of 1996,
which was put together by a “study group” featuring key Bush
administration hawks David Wurmser and Douglas Feith, and saw
removing Saddam Hussein as a key Israeli goal, to bolster their
theory. The central theme of this paper, however, is promoting
Israel as a regional hegemon independent of the US. Far from
encouraging US action in the service of Israeli interests, this
paper was entirely rooted in the idea that Israel must quickly
wean itself off US support and exert its proven ability to dominate
the region militarily on its own.[14]
Mearsheimer
and Walt are not the first to point to the activities of the
Project for a New American Century (PNAC) as especially revelatory.
The genealogy of PNAC’s ideas, however, suggests a much broader
set of motivations than loyalty to Israel. PNAC made its debut
in 1997 by issuing a statement of principles decrying drift in
US foreign and defense policy and calling instead for “a Reaganite
policy of military strength and moral clarity.” The statement
was signed by six hawkish politicians, most notably Cheney and
Rumsfeld. Among the signatories who were soon to be household
names were I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby and Paul Wolfowitz.[15]
Next
came two letters, one addressed to Bill Clinton and the second
posted to the House and Senate majority leaders. The occasion
for the PNAC letters was the pending failure of containment in
ensuring that Iraq was not reconstituting its banned arsenal.
In a speech in 1997, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright had
made clear that regime change was containment’s real agenda,
saying that the US would back sanctions “as long as it takes”
to usher in “a successor regime” that would comply with UN resolutions.[16]
PNAC’s
concern was the fate of US Middle East policy goals, not the
integrity of UN resolutions. “It hardly needs to be added,” they
wrote to Clinton, “that if Saddam does acquire the capability
to deliver weapons of mass destruction…the safety of American
troops in the region, of our friends and allies like Israel and
the moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world’s
supply of oil will all be put at hazard.” Unless Saddam’s regime
was taken out, “We will have suffered an incalculable blow to
American leadership and credibility; we will have sustained a
significant defeat in our worldwide efforts to limit the spread
of weapons of mass destruction…. This could well make Saddam
the driving force of Middle East politics.” The hawks gathered
by PNAC did not fear Iraq’s putative weapons; they feared the
potential of an “uncontained” Iraq to disrupt US hegemony in
the region.
At
one level, the PNAC letters did not diverge from previous articulations
of US interests in the Middle East. A September 1978 Joint
Chiefs of Staff memorandum listed three strategic goals for the
US in the region: “to assure continuous access to petroleum resources,
to prevent an inimical power or combination of powers from establishing
hegemony and to assure the survival of Israel as an independent
state in a stable relationship with contiguous Arab states.”
Kenneth Pollack, who ran Iraq policy at Clinton’s National Security
Council and then authored a book-length case for invading Iraq
in 2002, writes that these goals “have guided US policy ever
since.”[17]
But
the PNAC letters about Iraq sprung from a deeper ideological
well. The introduction to PNAC’s full-length report, Rebuilding
America’s Defenses, published in 2000, summarized the group’s
agenda: “At present the United States faces no global rival.
America’s grand strategy should aim to preserve and expand this
advantageous position as far into the future as possible.” PNAC
recommended adding $15–20 billion in defense spending annually,
“restoring” the size of the active-duty military to 1.6 million
personnel and “selectively” modernizing military hardware.[18]
Most
of the PNAC members are staunchly and vocally pro-Israel. What
unites the neo-conservatives with their traditional Cold Warrior
confréres Cheney and Rumsfeld is not Israel, however, but a common
set of ideas about US power. The convergence of interests first
appeared in the aborted Defense Policy Guidance of 1992. This
document is the Pentagon’s classified internal assessment, made
every two years, of comprehensive military strategy. In 1992,
the task fell to Paul Wolfowitz, who set about conceiving a justification
for maintaining the military at something approaching Cold War
strength. He delegated the actual writing of the Defense Policy
Guidance to his top aide Libby, who in turn passed it off to
his colleague Zalmay Khalilzad. What Khalilzad came up with stunned
Washington when the draft was leaked to the press: The US was
uniquely qualified to be the sole superpower, and to maintain
that status, the US should actively block the rise of any possible
rival.[19]
Khalilzad
was specific: “In the Middle East and Southwest Asia, our overall
objective is to remain the predominant outside power in the region
and preserve US and Western access to the region’s oil.” The
White House swiftly disowned the document, but it found an appreciative
reader in Dick Cheney. “You’ve discovered a new rationale for
our role in the world,” Khalilzad recalls being told by his boss.[20] Rebuilding America’s Defenses cites
the 1992 Defense Policy Guidance as its primary intellectual
inspiration.[21] When
the Cheney Defense Department was reunited in the administration
of George W. Bush, much of this “inspiration” made its way into
the 2002 National Security Strategy. Together with Washington’s
long-standing interest in Persian Gulf oil, the genealogy of
PNAC suggests that the decision to invade Iraq was determined
by grand ambitions for US power—not a “desire to make Israel
more secure,” as Mearsheimer and Walt assert.
Wanted:
A Counterweight
In
the 15 months since the publication of “The Israel Lobby,” history
has thrown up a series of Rorschach blots in which it is possible
to see confirmation or refutation of the Mearsheimer-Walt thesis.
While Israel bombarded and invaded Gaza in the summer of 2006,
following the capture of a single Israeli soldier, the Bush administration
sat on its hands. The White House continues to hew to Israel’s
position that “there is no partner” on the Palestinian side as
long as Hamas has ministers in the Palestinian Authority. Is
this because the lobby will not permit otherwise, or because
the Bush administration is bent on preventing any Islamist movement
from exercising effective governance, lest movements elsewhere
take heart? For 34 days in the summer of 2006, Israel bombed
and shelled Lebanon while Washington actively blocked a ceasefire
in the name of Israel’s “right to defend itself.” Certainly AIPAC
and the Christian right were pushing the same line, but President
Bush’s immediate casting of blame upon Iran and Syria for provoking
the war suggested a deeper-seated agenda than solidarity with
Israel. There is reason to believe that Bush green-lighted Israel’s
assault to neutralize an Iranian ally in advance of eventual
US strikes upon Iran’s nuclear facilities. Certainly, it appears
that the US only dropped its resistance to a ceasefire when Israel
proved incapable of defeating Hizballah quickly. In 2007, despite
the belligerent clamor from AIPAC and other elements of the Israel
lobby, the prospect of an attack on Iran seems to have faded.
But the key factor here is the deepening disaster in Iraq and
the constraints it imposes.
Mearsheimer
and Walt have taken a courageous step, one that their professional
positions certainly did not require and that opened them up to
vociferous criticism—most of it hysterical and unfair. Others
should take the professors up on their challenge to open up a
debate that has not occurred broadly enough in the past (and
this review is offered in that spirit).
The
influence of the Israel lobby should neither be underestimated
nor overstated. It is not some omnipotent force that can turn
the world’s sole superpower against its own perceived interests.
The lobby derives its strength, in some measure, from being largely
unopposed in Washington. Israel will remain a strong US ally,
for many reasons, for the foreseeable future. But that need not
mean that the US cannot pressure Israel into the compromises
required for a just peace with the Palestinians. This can happen
if a counterweight to the Israel lobby is built. But such a counterweight
is only effective if it understands what its opponent can and
cannot accomplish. In this task, the Mearsheimer-Walt paper is
a good foundation upon which rational discussion can build.
Endnotes
[1] For
a detailed history of various pro-Israel lobbying groups, see
J. J. Goldberg, Jewish Power: Inside the American Jewish Establishment (Boston:
Addison-Wesley, 1996) and Edward Tivnan, The Lobby: Jewish
Political Power and American Foreign Policy (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1987).
[2] See,
for example, Peter Novick, The Holocaust in American Life (Boston:
Houghton-Mifflin, 1999).
[3] See
the work of Melani McAlister, especially “A Cultural History
of the War Without End,” Journal of American History (September
2002), and her book, Epic Encounters: Culture, Media and US
Interests in the Middle East, 1945–2000 (Berkeley, CA: University
of California Press, 2001).
[4] For
detailed histories of the early development of the “special relationship”
between the US and Israel see the works of Abraham Ben-Zvi, particularly Decade
of Transition: Eisenhower, Kennedy and the Origins of the American-Israeli
Alliance (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1998)
and John F. Kennedy and the Politics of Arms Sales to Israel (London:
Frank Cass Publishers, 2002). For a more concise review, see
Avi Shlaim, The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World, pp.
200–217 and other parts.
[5] See,
among others, William B. Quandt, Peace Process: American Diplomacy
and the Arab-Israeli Conflict Since 1967 (third edition)
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2005), Shlaim
and Be-Zvi cited above and William B. Quandt, Decade of Decisions:
American Policy Toward the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1967–1976 (Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 1977).
[6] Quandt, Peace
Process), p. 52.
[7] US
News and World Report, June 19, 1967, quoted in Joel Beinin,
“The United States-Israeli Alliance,” in Tony Kushner and Alisa
Solomon, eds. Wrestling with Zion: Progressive Jewish-American
Responses to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (New York:
Grove Press, 2003), p. 42.
[8] Gershom
Gorenberg, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of
the Settlements, 1967–1977 (New York: Times Books, 2006),
p. 57.
[9] Interestingly,
in this period, Kissinger helped to propagate in Arab capitals
the notion that Jewish campaign donors were behind US assistance
to Israel. During a December 17, 1975 meeting with Saadoun Hammadi,
then foreign minister of Iraq, he said: “[Our backing for Israel]
originated in American domestic politics…. So it was not an American
design to get a bastion of imperialism in the area. It was much
less complicated. And I would say that until 1973 the Jewish
community had enormous influence.” Memorandum of conversation
between Kissinger and Hammadi, Paris, December 17, 1975. Accessible
through the National Security Archive.
[10] For
insights into how the lobby wields power in Congress, see Michael
Massing, “The Storm Over the Israel Lobby,” New York Review
of Books, June 8, 2006.
[11] Noam
Chomsky, Fateful Triangle: The US, Israel and the Palestinians (Boston:
South End Press, 1999), pp. 15, 21, 24–26.
[12] For
an excellent overview of post-September 11 American attitudes
toward Israel, see http://www.pipa.org/OnlineReports/IsPal_Conflict/IsPal_May02/IsPal_May02_rpt.pdf.
[13] Charles
D. Smith, “The ‘Do More’ Chorus in Washington,” Middle East
Report Online, April 15, 2002.
[14] The
full text of the paper can be found online at http://www.iasps.org/strat1.htm.
[15] The
full list of signatories includes six politicians: Jeb Bush,
governor of Florida and presidential brother, Cheney, 2000 Republican
presidential candidate Steve Forbes, former Vice President Dan
Quayle, Rumsfeld and former Rep. Vin Weber (R-MN), now an extremely
well-connected Washington lobbyist. Three other signatories became
senior officials in the Bush administration: Libby, Wolfowitz
and Elliott Abrams, now in charge of Middle East policy at the
National Security Council. Lower-ranking Bush officials who signed
the statement are State Department Counselor Eliot Cohen, Undersecretary
of State for Democracy and Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky, Aaron
Friedberg, a Princeton professor who served in Cheney’s office
from 2003–2005 as deputy assistant for national security, ex-ambassador
to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad and Peter Rodman, an assistant secretary
of defense. Four signatories worked at the Pentagon or the NSC
under Reagan or Bush the Elder: Frank Gaffney, Fred C. Iklé,
Stephen P. Rosen and Henry Rowen. Neo-conservative intellectuals
and academics who signed are Midge Decter, Francis Fukuyama,
Donald Kagan and Norman Podhoretz. Rounding out the list are
three conservative Catholic or evangelical culture warriors:
Gary Bauer, William J. Bennett and Catholic theologian George
Weigel.
[16] Associated
Press, March 27, 1997.
[17] Kenneth
Pollack, The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq (New
York: Random House, 2002), p. 15. Pollack has since penned another
book, The Persian Puzzle, which argues against an attack
on Iran.
[18] Project
for a New American Century, Rebuilding America’s Defenses (Washington,
DC, September 2000), pp. ii, iv.
[19] James
Mann, Rise of the Vulcans: The History of Bush’s War Cabinet (New
York: Viking, 2004), pp. 198–210.
[20] Ibid.,
p. 211.
[21] Rebuilding
America’s Defenses, p. ii.

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