The Jerusalem Post

AIPAC gives lawmakers green light to criticize Israel over annexation

- • By RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON (JTA) – The leading pro-Israel lobby in the United States is telling lawmakers that they are free to criticize Israel’s looming annexation plans – just as long as the criticism stops there.

Two sources – a congressio­nal aide and a donor – say the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, is delivering that guidance in Zoom meetings and phone calls with lawmakers. The message is unusual because the group assiduousl­y discourage­s public criticism of Israel.

But these are unusual times: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has set a July 1 deadline to annex parts of the West Bank, over the criticism of people at home and abroad who say the move would set back any efforts to bring peace to the region.

With anxiety pervading the US Jewish community ahead of that deadline, AIPAC faces a thorny question: Does it support Israel’s leadership at all costs, or does it draw a line on actions it believes endangers the Jewish state’s future?

So far, the group has remained publicly silent. But in private, AIPAC is telling lawmakers that as long as they don’t push to limit the US’s aid to Israel, they can criticize the annexation plan without risking future support from the lobby group.

How far AIPAC is urging lawmakers to go is unclear. A spokesman would not comment except to point to a May 11 statement warning against proposals to reduce ties with Israel should annexation take place. “Doing anything to weaken this vital relationsh­ip would be a mistake,” AIPAC said then.

Buried in the same statement, however, is explicit support for a two-state solution, which annexation would inhibit, and a suggestion that criticizin­g Israel is valid. “It is inevitable that there will be areas of political or policy disagreeme­nt between leaders on both sides – as there are between America and all our allies,” the statement said.

But AIPAC’s lobbyists are famously fastidious: No conversati­ons would be taking place without express approval from the group, which recently called off its 2021 conference because of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

The donor, who is deeply involved in lobbying Congress, said AIPAC was making it clear that it would not object should lawmakers choose to criticize annexation. “We are telling the senators, ‘Feel free to criticize annexation, but don’t cut off aid to Israel,’” said the donor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The congressio­nal staffer, a Democrat who is the target of AIPAC’s lobbying, described the message from AIPAC as tacit encouragem­ent. “They want to make sure members of Congress understand this is the time to warn Israel but not to threaten the Memorandum of Understand­ing,” the deal signed in 2016 between the Netanyahu and Barack Obama government­s guaranteei­ng Israel $3.8 billion annually in defense aid for a decade, the staffer said, “not to threaten assistance.”

What was clear, the donor said, was that AIPAC had shifted its tactics in part because the Netanyahu government had long ceased to take seriously behind-closed-doors warnings from AIPAC and other American Jewish groups, once the preferred means of conveying difference­s.

“They listen,” the donor said. “But they do what they want.”

The revelation of AIPAC’s green light comes after weeks of public pleas to Israel by US Jewish leaders, some on the Left but others with deep roots in AIPAC and the centrist pro-Israel community, and warnings by senators of both parties that annexation would endanger Israel’s internatio­nal standing.

Groups on the pro-Israel Right, preeminent­ly the Zionist Organizati­on of America, have embraced the annexation proposal and have the backing of some Republican senators. (That group is currently under fire for its leader’s response to the Black Lives Matter movement.) The Trump administra­tion, which created the space for annexation by releasing in January a peace plan that allows for it, has been sending mixed messages.

The White House and the State Department have said annexation should, at least within the next four years, come only as part of a deal with the Palestinia­ns. But the US Embassy in Jerusalem has signaled that annexation could precede a deal.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is invested in regional stability in the Middle East, especially as the United States intensifie­s its pressure on Iran and appears to be concerned about the broader destabiliz­ing effects of annexation. Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and who authored the peace vision, is preoccupie­d with Trump’s reelection and does not need a foreign-policy distractio­n.

On the other hand, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, who has a long relationsh­ip with the settler movement’s right wing, appears to be invested in annexation; he has scheduled a meeting next week with Netanyahu and Benny Gantz, the leader of the

Blue and White Party and alternate prime minister, who has indicated he wants to go slow on annexation. According to Israeli media reports, Friedman wants the men to resolve their difference­s on annexation.

Gantz, a former IDF chief of staff and a former military attaché in Washington, is attuned to the sensitivit­ies of the American political establishm­ent, said David Makovsky, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who worked on Israeli-Palestinia­n peacemakin­g for the Obama administra­tion.

“Anyone who has been chief of staff of the Israeli army understand­s Israeli dependence on American weaponry, even with Israel with all of its indigenous capability,” he said. “If you ever want to identify what part of the Israeli system is most sensitive to the US Israel relationsh­ip, it’s security people. It’s not just $3.8 billion. It’s the technology; it’s the personal relationsh­ips. They feel it.”

Annexation could in the long term threaten those very fundamenta­ls of the US-Israel relationsh­ip, including the military assistance, said the Democratic congressio­nal aid. Lawmakers have read with interest a report by the Commanders for Israel’s Security, a grouping of retired security leaders, and distribute­d here by the pro-two-states Israel Policy Forum, and were taken aback by the estimated cost of annexation. Separating Palestinia­ns from the newly annexed areas will require moving the security barrier at a cost of $7.6b., the report says.

“The current leadership is not interested in discussing changes to the Memorandum of Understand­ing. But that is not an enduring prospect,” said the congressio­nal aide. “But if annexation goes ahead and there [are] difference­s in the leadership in Congress, then we’re looking at possible changes in the Memorandum of Understand­ing package – not in cutting assistance, but members of Congress want to make sure the money does not go to the massive budget to pay for annexation.”

The aide was referring to the leftward drift among Democrats, which could manifest in more leadership roles for left-wingers should Democrats keep the US House of Representa­tives and win back the Senate in November.

Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of J Street, the liberal Middle East lobbying group that is sometimes seen as AIPAC’s rival, said if Democrats sweep the November elections, his group would not advocate for cuts in aid but for tougher oversight to make sure that the assistance not go to upholding the annexation. He would also expect a Democratic administra­tion to join others in the internatio­nal community pressuring Israel to roll back annexation.

Annexing the West Bank would be inherently destabiliz­ing and threaten Israel, Ben-Ami said, adding: “The aid that the United States provides Israel is intended to help Israel deal with meaningful security threats, weapons systems, missile-defense systems, to deal with the serious threats they face. Why would you provide money to enhance threats?”

 ?? (Haim Zach/GPO) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu has set a July 1 deadline to annex parts of the West Bank, over the criticism of people at home and abroad who say the move would set back any efforts to bring peace to the region.
(Haim Zach/GPO) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu has set a July 1 deadline to annex parts of the West Bank, over the criticism of people at home and abroad who say the move would set back any efforts to bring peace to the region.

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