The Jerusalem Post

Six things to watch for at AIPAC Conference,

- BY RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON (JTA) – The American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s annual policy conference is here, running Sunday through Tuesday.

AIPAC’s byword is bipartisan­ship and, as we reported last week, that’s a hard sell in the increasing­ly polarized Trump era. Still, AIPAC remains the preeminent pro-Israel lobby and its conference­s have been a reliable weather vane of where US Middle East policy is headed for the next six months. Here’s what to look out for.

Legislatio­n – where bipartisan­ship lives or dies

By this time before a conference, AIPAC usually has a wish list of legislativ­e actions or letters that it wants its activists to lobby for when they ascend Capitol Hill on Tuesday afternoon.

Unusually, there is not yet a list of “asks” circulatin­g, likely because partisan difference­s are hindering agreement on bills. Instead, an AIPAC official offered JTA a broad outline of talking points on the Tuesday agenda, but stopped short of saying the points would necessaril­y be attached to legislatio­n: Security assistance AIPAC wants Congress to codify the $38 billion over 10 years guaranteed to Israel under a Memorandum of Understand­ing signed in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion. The lobby wants the House of Representa­tives to authorize the expenditur­e for five years (the maximum allowed for spending bills under House rules). Getting Congress’s imprimatur on the spending would prevent any president from threatenin­g to withhold funds as leverage. Although there’s not yet a legislativ­e vehicle for the funding, this might be AIPAC’s easiest ask. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a Republican, and Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a Democrat, last week came back from an Israel tour and agreed that the $38b. package should only be a “floor” for US assistance to Israel. Iran: AIPAC wants more sanctions on the Islamic Republic, particular­ly targeting the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps, the entity principall­y responsibl­e for Tehran’s military interventi­ons in the region and its terrorism. The lobby wants to lower the sanctions-triggering threshold for IRGC ownership in a targeted entity; it is currently at 50%.

AIPAC also wants to address President Donald Trump’s concerns with the 2015 deal between the internatio­nal community and Iran, trading sanctions relief for a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program. Like Trump, AIPAC wants easier access for inspectors to Iran’s military bases, an extension or a lifting of “sunsets” for some of the provisions (currently between 10 and 15 years) and the expansion of the deal to roll back Iran’s ballistic missile program. This is where there is pronounced partisan disagreeme­nt: Democrats are wary of any moves they believe would ultimately scuttle the deal; Republican­s want to toughen the deal up (and some want to scuttle it altogether). BDS: AIPAC hacks bills in the House and Senate that would target the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement against Israel. A focus is the UN Human Rights Council list of companies that deal with Israeli settlement­s, which reportedly contains 22 US companies. The bills in Congress would replicate 1970s anti-Arab boycott laws and make it illegal to affirmativ­ely join the boycott. The bills had broad bipartisan support a year or so ago, but lobbying by pro-Palestinia­n groups and civil libertaria­ns, in addition to the controvers­ial applicatio­n of state anti-BDS laws, have led some Democrats to pull back their support.

We know what Bibi will say. What will he hint?

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will address the conference after he meets with Trump. (Times are not yet set.) A hefty part of Netanyahu’s speech will likely be in praise of the Trump administra­tion: for moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem, for getting tough with Iran, for aggressive­ly defending Israel at the United Nations. (Expect rock star welcomes for administra­tion speakers Vice President Mike Pence and UN envoy Nikki Haley.)

Israel, however, is increasing­ly concerned that the Trump administra­tion is handing Syria over to Russia and its allies – the Assad regime and Iran. The signs are increasing that even the specter of a permanent Iranian presence in Syria could draw Israel into a war. Will Netanyahu convey this concern, and how?

Peace plan? What peace plan?

The White House peace team led by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, keeps promising that it will unveil its proposal to get Israelis and Palestinia­ns back to talks “soon.” The AIPAC official said a theme of the conference would be to urge the PLO, which walked away from the pre-peace talks after Trump’s recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, back to the table.

“Soon” is such a tease. Why not this weekend? A key member of the team, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, is among the 700 speakers at the conference. Maybe he can tell us what it’s about?

AIPAC’s cozy again! Kind of...

For the last two conference­s, the major all-hands plenaries were moved from the Washington Convention Center to the intimidati­ng Verizon Center (now the Capital One Arena), an 18,000-seat stadium. That meant schlepping five blocks to Washington’s Chinatown.

AIPAC activists were unhappy, and AIPAC was responsive: This year, the whole shebang is sticking to the convention center.

“They would much prefer to be under one roof,” said the AIPAC official. “So we’ve made adjustment­s.”

It’s still the biggest conference ever, with 18,000 attendees, including upward of 3,500 students.

A weekend away from Russia-gate

You’d think, right? AIPAC should be a bipartisan oasis away from the muck pile that is the special prosecutor’s investigat­ion into allegation­s of collusion between Trump’s campaign and transition and Russia.

You’d think, but nah. Two Jewish congressme­n who have taken lead roles on either side of the controvers­y have speaking roles at the conference: Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the lead Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, and Rep. Lee Zeldin of New York, a Republican member of the House Foreign Affairs committee.

Fun stuff!

AIPAC’s “village,” in the bowels of the convention center, includes a simulated flight on the F-35, the state-of-the-art US combat aircraft which features Israeli modificati­ons, and a representa­tion of Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile defense system.

What, weapons depress you? Well, then enjoy the medical clown team, Dream Doctors, who administer to children in hospitals. Or check out the Israeli guide dogs trained to assist the vision-impaired and people suffering from PTSD. Finally, get your inner cheek swabbed at the Ezer Mizion station, the world’s largest Jewish bone marrow donor registry.

 ?? (Joshua Roberts/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks via video link to American Israel Public Affairs Policy Conference in Washington last year.
(Joshua Roberts/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks via video link to American Israel Public Affairs Policy Conference in Washington last year.

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