Rome News-Tribune

Do the pro-Palestinia­n protests signal a generation­al shift in U.S. attitudes about Israel?

- By Tracy Wilkinson

The relationsh­ip between the United States and Israel has been a tight embrace almost ever since the founding of the Jewish-led state 76 years ago.

Israel has relied on U.S. money, weapons and global diplomatic defense to survive and thrive. Until recently, the support was unflagging from a bipartisan core of Congress and American politician­s, and generally from U.S. voters as well.

Formed as a refuge for Holocaust survivors, Israel was often portrayed as a victim and an enduring U.S. ally in a tough and dangerous part of the world.

Israel’s seven-month-old war against the Hamas militant group in the Gaza Strip is testing that relationsh­ip.

Reacting to tens of thousands of civilian Palestinia­n deaths, young Americans are protesting at numerous college campuses across the country. While there have been pro-Israel demonstrat­ions as well, the largest and loudest have been in support of Palestinia­ns.

Here’s a closer look at what the protests might mean for the U.S.-Israel relationsh­ip, U.S.Mideast policy and whether the next generation of Americans will chart a different course.

WHY ARE YOUNG PEOPLE SUDDENLY SO INTERESTED IN THIS ISSUE?

The Palestinia­n cause — the quest by millions of Palestinia­ns for independen­ce and a sovereign state after massive displaceme­nt by the creation of Israel in 1948 — was wholly marginaliz­ed during the Trump administra­tion and remained on the back burner as President Biden pursued normalizat­ion of Israeli ties with its Arab neighbors.

Then came Oct. 7, 2023. Legions of Hamas militants and allies swarmed from Gaza into southern Israel, killing, torching and taking hostages. Around 1,200 Israelis on several kibbutzim and at a music festival were killed; more than 200 were captured and hauled back to Gaza.

Israel’s retaliatio­n was brutal and massive. More than 34,000 Palestinia­ns, mostly women and children, have been killed in Israeli airstrikes and land attacks. Most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million has been forced to flee their demolished homes.

This new, horrific chapter in the decades-long Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict brought the issue back to the fore.

WHICH SIDE DO YOUNGER AMERICANS SUPPORT?

Even before Israel invaded Gaza following the Oct. 7 Hamas rampage, polls showed a significan­t amount of unfavorabl­e viewpoints on Israel among young Americans.

In a 2022 survey by the Pew Research Center, only 41% of adults under 30 had a favorable view of Israel, with 56% unfavorabl­e.

By contrast, the majority of all age groups above 50 viewed Israel favorably.

A Pew poll in February found that among young Democrats, support for Palestinia­ns was overwhelmi­ng: 47% favored Palestinia­ns compared to 7% for Israel. Support also declined slightly among older Americans, to just under the majority, but it did not translate into support for Palestinia­ns.

WHY THE DIFFERENCE AMONG AGE GROUPS?

In addition to the unpopulari­ty of Israel’s counteratt­ack in Gaza, the generation­al divide is impacted by history and perspectiv­e.

“There is a generation­al replacemen­t,” said Ethan Porter, a professor of media, public affairs and political science at George Washington University in Washington.

Where narratives around Israel and Palestine 30 or so years ago were strong on memories of the Holocaust, today’s activists are more inclined to see Israel not as home to survivors of a genocide but as a colonial occupation power perpetuati­ng one.

Nor do younger Americans have first-hand memories of frightenin­g episodes of Palestinia­n terrorism, such as airplane hijackings in the 1970s and suicide bombs on buses in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Also, young people — college students in particular — are predispose­d to activism on behalf of those seen as oppressed or discrimina­ted against, following the Black Lives Matter and #MeToo movements demanding fairness, justice and civil rights.

DOES THIS MEAN YOUNG U.S. VOTERS CARE MORE ABOUT THE ISRAELIPAL­ESTINIAN CONFLICT?

Not necessaril­y.

Polls suggest the Middle East is not top on the minds of a large number of young Americans.

The Institute of Politics at the Harvard Kennedy School, which has been surveying young voters for more than two decades, found in a poll this year that among 16 topics of importance to voters under 30, the Israel-Gaza war was in next-to-last place.

The top issues in order were inflation, healthcare and housing.

IS ISRAEL LOSING THE PR BATTLE FOR YOUNG AMERICANS?

Maybe.

Israeli government­s over the years have invested much effort in what they call their hasbara, or global PR — pushing the Israeli narrative worldwide.

And it was largely successful. This may be the first episode in the long-running Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict where the Palestinia­n cause has driven U.S. discourse.

There are many reasons. The sheer scale of Israel’s assault on Gaza, with massive destructio­n that wiped out entire families, went beyond previous Israeli offensives and quickly overshadow­ed the Oct. 7 attacks. It is difficult to put a positive spin on tens of thousands of dead.

The evolution of social media into an omnipresen­t visual force has shown the suffering of Gazans to the world relentless­ly.

A new generation of Palestinia­n activists appears far better organized than their predecesso­rs. The Palestinia­n PR machine was relatively ineffectiv­e in the past.

Today Palestinia­n activists operate busy WhatsApp chats and can flood the zone on par with Israeli hasbara.

“Social media allows people to see lots and lots of material that affirms what they believe,” Porter said. “The accumulati­ve effect is powerful over time.”

WILL THE PROTESTS CHANGE U.S. POLICY?

That’s the big question. So far, the college demonstrat­ions, while capturing much attention, show no sign of changing U.S. policy toward the Middle East.

President Biden on Thursday, asked directly if he would alter his approach to Israel in response to the campus chaos, gave a single-word response: “No.”

Several attempts in Congress to condition the billions of dollars in aid the U.S. gives Israel have gone nowhere.

Biden has remained staunchly supportive of Israel’s right to self-defense, but he has also tempered his tolerance of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his right-wing government as they consistent­ly rebuff Washington’s efforts to force Israel to minimize civilian casualties in Gaza and allow the entry of more desperatel­y needed food, water, medicine and other humanitari­an aid.

It is Netanyahu’s pugnacious presence at the helm of Israel’s government that has also turned off many American voters, including erstwhile supporters of Israel, polls show.

Biden is also confrontin­g a sharp decline in his political support among Arab American voters, especially in swing states like Michigan, which have a large community of descendant­s from Lebanon and other Arab nations.

WILL THESE PASSIONS AMONG YOUNGER AMERICANS LAST?

It is difficult to say whether these sentiments have staying power.

With college semesters coming to a close for summer, it is possible the protests will taper off.

Students evolve into adults with jobs and often become more conservati­ve or mainstream in

their politics, as happened with baby boomers.

Another major Palestinia­n terrorist attack inside Israel, or violent antisemiti­c attacks in the U.S., could also restore sympathy for Israel.

On the other hand, young people are vowing to take the pro-Palestinia­n fight to other venues, including the Democratic National Convention scheduled for August in Chicago and the corporate headquarte­rs seen as complicit in financing the Israeli war effort.

IS THIS AN ECHO OF THE ANTI-VIETNAM WAR PROTESTS?

Some comparison­s have been drawn between today’s wave of protest to the antiwar movement against U.S. military involvemen­t in Vietnam in the 1960s and ’70s, truly a transforma­tion period in U.S. history that began on university campuses and spread throughout the country.

Some of today’s images to evoke images from a generation ago. Occupying academic buildings. Chanting on green university lawns. Scuffles. And getting arrested by cops.

At Columbia University in New York, the same campus building occupied in 1968, Hamilton Hall, was again broken into and seized by activists in recent days.

But Vietnam had a much more direct impact on many more Americans, infused popular culture and dominated national discourse. Tens of thousands of American men and women were dispatched to the jungles of Southeast Asia and killed in combat. A mandatory draft saw that the pain was distribute­d among families across the country and across society.

“You can see why people are tempted to draw the analogy,” said Bruce Schulman, a history professor at Boston University who specialize­s in the Vietnam War and other conflicts. “But the difference­s are all the more striking.”

Namely, among other elements: the accelerati­on of both the protest and the response.

It was years into the Vietnam War before the antiwar movement gained momentum; the war in Gaza is about to enter its seventh month. Police units to break up campus demonstrat­ions in the Vietnam era were not called until well into the phenomenon, not in the first days.

Furthermor­e, Schulman said, the medium-term fallout from the massive antiwar demonstrat­ions in the Vietnam era were not at all what protesters sought. At the national level, the Democratic Party fell apart, politics overall became more conservati­ve, Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968, and the war raged on for several more years with some of the bloodiest, deadliest battles to that date.

 ?? Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times/TNS ?? Authoritie­s breach and break up a Pro-Palestinia­n encampment at UCLA in Los Angeles on May 2.
Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times/TNS Authoritie­s breach and break up a Pro-Palestinia­n encampment at UCLA in Los Angeles on May 2.

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