The Jerusalem Post

At J Street conference, Trump, Netanyahu seen as two peas in a rotten pod

- R #Z 30/ ,".1&"4

WASHINGTON (JTA) – The liberal Jewish Middle East lobby J Street launched its 10th anniversar­y conference with repeated and unflatteri­ng comparison­s of the two leaders of the countries it straddles, Israel and the United States.

The villains who cropped up over and over at the conference opening on Saturday night were Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump.

“All across the globe liberal democracy is in retreat,” Jeremy Ben Ami, J Street’s president, said Saturday as the conference opened. “J Street proudly opposes these trends, and we couldn’t be clearer in the threat President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu pose.”

Beyond the fiery rhetoric, the conference reflected the anxieties of a group – and a larger leftist movement – that is seeking means of influence while conservati­ves control, for now, all the levers of power in the United States and Israel.

‘We are here to call out – and to change – a right-wing, populist government with a leader who thrives on hatred and division; who mocks and attacks the press; and who sees the strangers among us as a danger to be feared and mistreated, not as fellow humans,” said keynote speaker Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers.

“Hmm, about which country am I speaking?” she continued, to laughter. “The truth is that Israel beat us to it, with a right-wing leadership years before we had Donald Trump, before right-wing populists captured leadership in Europe, but here we are – the similariti­es are abundant.”

Even though more than 3,000 activists were in attendance this year, J Street’s diminished influence was palpable.

The group during the Obama administra­tion required the massive Washington Convention Center, it held this year’s conference at a hotel; J Street was instrument­al in 2015 in helping to pass the Iran nuclear deal, now Trump appears ready to dismantle it next month; J Street’s operating credo when it was establishe­d in 2008 was to advance the two-state solution, in 2018 Trump and Netanyahu have both retreated from commitment to a twostate outcome.

The unfavorabl­e comparison­s of Netanyahu to Trump and vice versa included allegation­s that each leader undercuts democratic norms by marginaliz­ing dissent, delegitimi­zing media and demonizing immigrants.

“In both countries we see the same contempt for civil rights. [We see] racism, xenophobia, politics of fear starting at the highest levels of government,” said Tamar Zandberg, the new head of the opposition Meretz Party in the Knesset. She excoriated Netanyahu and Trump for forming alliances with the European far Right, where expression­s of antisemiti­sm still proliferat­e.

There also were multiple references to Netanyahu’s recent broadsides against the New Israel Fund, the umbrella fund-raiser for a number of civil society groups, which Netanyahu blames for efforts to thwart his plan to deport tens of thousands of African asylum seekers in Israel.

“Netanyahu and Trump both try to call us unpatrioti­c,” Zandberg said. “True patriotism is not in their hands, true patriotism is here in this room.”

The unity of purpose in facing down Trump and Netanyahu did not entirely paper over substantia­l difference­s. A panel on Sunday morning on combating the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israel featured, at times, fraught exchanges over whether the BDS movement deserved opposing. (J Street, as an organizati­on, opposes BDS.)

Weingarten noted the difficulti­es of grappling with a far Left that opposes Israel’s existence. She praised J Street for persisting “even while the rest of the world ignores your work, even sometimes our progressiv­e allies condemn you.”

Zandberg offered unqualifie­d praise to the United States, Britain and France for launching missile attacks over the weekend against targets in Syria believed to be the origin of chemical weapon attacks on civilians. Ben Ami said there was a need to stop the Assad regime in Syria, but said Trump needed to seek congressio­nal approval for his actions.

Zandberg also decried the likelihood that Trump will kill the Iran deal, which swaps sanctions relief for a rollback in Iran’s nuclear program. (Trump says the deal is fatally flawed and is to Iran’s advantage.)

But she added a component no one else mentioned: Iran, which is helping to prop up the Assad regime, must under no circumstan­ce remain in Syria.

“We cannot accept the military presence of Iran, the only country in the world that threatens to destroy Israel, on our northern border,” she said.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? THIS SIGN on the front of a ‘Nechonit’ van says ‘Yad Sarah is with the bereaved families – transport service for the wheelchair-bound.’
(Courtesy) THIS SIGN on the front of a ‘Nechonit’ van says ‘Yad Sarah is with the bereaved families – transport service for the wheelchair-bound.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel