Kuwait Times

Game over!

- By Dr James J Zogby

Hardline supporters of Israel are in panic mode. It was in evidence earlier last week with the all-out assault on the first Somali, African-born immigrant, refugee, Muslim woman elected to serve in the US Congress. Her crime was that she dared to point out, as a leading New York Times columnist and so many others have in the past, the intimidati­ng role that AIPAC plays in shaping US policy toward Israel. The response was nearly hysterical.

Republican­s used her as a scapegoat, hoping to turn her into a wedge issue to show that Democrats could no longer be trusted as unquestion­able supporters of any and all Israeli policies. Sadly, some Democrats, cowering, piled on and joined in the denunciati­on.

The problem, quite simply, is that those who have given Israel a blank cheque are losing ground among young and minority voters and don’t know what to do. Polls show a deep partisan/demographi­c split on American support for Israel - with millennial­s and minority voters moving away from Israel toward a more balanced, and even pro-Palestinia­n, direction. While Republican­s are quite pleased with this rift and seek to exploit it to their advantage, some Democrats want to have it both ways. They want to maintain the support from these key constituen­cies, while at the same time silencing their opposition to Israeli polices.

Reflecting this shift in attitudes, most of the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al aspirants voted against a Senate bill that encourage states to violate the First Amendment by punishing individual­s who participat­e in boycotting Israel. And, of course, the 116th Congress includes two Muslim women, a Somali and a Palestinia­n, who make no bones about their criticism of Israeli policies that violate Palestinia­n human rights.

Given this changing landscape, the reasons for the panic are clear enough. What is outrageous, however, has been the way supporters of Israel have decided to respond. They have weaponized anti-Semitism, turning it into a blunt instrument in a crude effort to pummel opponents and silence legitimate debate on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. There are currently bills before Congress that redefine anti-Semitism to include criticism of Israel, criminaliz­e participat­ion in the boycott of Israel, and another that condemns antiSemiti­sm, but conflates criticism of Israel with heinous behaviors that defame the Jewish people.

As further evidence of the change that’s afoot, a few weeks back, one of the New York Times newest opinion writers, Michelle Alexander, penned a significan­t piece tracing how and why she, an African American civil rights champion, had come to “make a break with Israel”. This past Sunday, most likely in response to Alexander’s column, the Times published an article by another of their writers, Bret Stephens. The piece was a dizzying mess of faulty logic, bogus “straw men” and fictive history clumsily patched together in an effort to equate what he calls “the progressiv­e left’s criticism of Israel” with anti-Semitism.

Stephens rhetorical­ly asks why the left is so critical of Israel and begins his answer by outlining what he claims is their indictment against Israel: “More than a half-century of occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s that fair-minded people can no longer ignore, especially given America’s financial support for Israel. Continued settlement expansion in the West Bank proves Israel has no interest in making peace on equitable terms. And endless occupation makes Israel’s democracy less about Jewish self-determinat­ion than it is about ethnic subjugatio­n.”

Sounds right to me. But to Stephens this progressiv­e argument is patently false. To make his case, he relies on fictional accounts of history - that are, at best, half true. To establish that Israel has long wanted to recognize a Palestinia­n state, he claims that Israeli prime ministers offered a state in 2000 and 2008, but were rebuffed. In fact, both offers were made by prime ministers who were on their way out the door - both with single-digit favorable ratings and soon to be booted out of office.

Stephens neglected to mention that even thenIsrael­i Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami had conceded that the offer made to the Palestinia­ns in 2000 was inadequate and unworthy of acceptance. His boasting that Ariel Sharon removed every single settlement from Gaza ignores the reality that the withdrawal was done unilateral­ly without consultati­on with the Palestinia­n Authority, as the US had insisted. And that Israel never “left” Gaza, but had simply pulled out the illegal settlement­s, then turned it into a captive open-air prison.

To demonstrat­e Palestinia­n cruelty, Stephens notes the number of Israelis killed by Palestinia­ns in this century, but ignores the fact that eight times more Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israelis during the same period. To prove his bona fides, Stephens declares “I support a two-state solution,” but goes on to argue against those who oppose the very Israeli settlement constructi­on that has made that outcome impossible to realize. He says that those who say that Israel ought to stop building in the occupied lands and make peace with the Palestinia­ns are guilty of “calumny.” In fact, he’s the one guilty of calumny since he claims that the opponents of settlement­s are all guilty of charging Israel with “boundless greed for Palestinia­n land and wicked indifferen­ce to their plight.”

NOTE: Dr James J Zogby is the President of the Arab American Institute

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait