The Jewish Chronicle

Here comes trouble: Biden’s anti-Israel advisers

- BY DOMINIC GREEN Dominic Green is deputy editor of the Spectator’s US edition

“THIS IS the worst group of appointmen­ts to cabinet positions with respect to US-Israel relations ever,” Morton Klein told me earlier this week.

Klein is the leader of the Zionist Organizati­on of America, the largest conservati­ve group in Jewish American politics. Biden, Klein says, is stacking his administra­tion with Obama-era staffers hostile to Israel and committed to reviving the Iran deal.

No less alarmingly, Klein told me that the leaders of other major Jewish American organisati­ons are pressuring him not to speak out. “I’ve been called by several Jewish leaders, demanding I stop criticisin­g Biden: ‘This is bad for the Jews. You’re getting [the administra­tion] upset, you should not be doing this. So shut up.”’

In truth, Biden is no more a friend than an enemy of Israel. He’s a profession­al politician of the “no friends, only interests” kind. Most of those interests are domestic. That’s how a senator stays

In truth, Biden is no more a friend than an enemy of Israel ’

afloat in the Swamp. Forty-seven years in Congress, chasing the wisdom of the hour, and always arriving just after the smart money. The

Democrats used to like Israel, so Biden used to be a friend. It came easily to his generation. Biden, Israel’s exambassad­or to Washington Michael Oren says, even has “a deep feeling for Israel”.

Now the Democrats don’t like the Jewish state so much. The State Department never did. Both of them want to revive the Iran Deal, the centrepiec­e of Barack Obama’s play to redraw America’s map of the Middle East. Once again, the

US wants to make friends with Israel’s mortal enemies, the mullahs in

Tehran.

Robert Gates, who served as Defense Secretary under both George W Bush and Barack Obama, has said Biden was “wrong on almost every major foreign policy issue over the preceding 40 years”. At least he’s consistent. But that should worry Israel and its supporters.

When Donald Trump trashed the Iran deal, he trashed the reputation­s of its creators: Obama, Biden, John Kerry and diplomats such as Antony Blinken, who is now Biden’s Secretary of State, and lead negotiator Robert Malley, who is now Biden’s Special Envoy to Tehran.

Blinken comes from a notable Jewish American family. He claims that his stepfather, a Holocaust survivor, shaped his outlook. How he squares that with cutting a deal with a regime that denies the Holocaust while threatenin­g another is beyond me. It’s beyond Henry Kissinger too, who said that the Iran deal put the theocracy on “a glidepath” to the nuclear bomb.

Malley, the lead negotiator on Obama’s Iran deal, also has a striking Jewish background. His father, Simon Malley, was one of France’s most prominent radical (and pro-Palestinia­n) journalist­s — until the French government expelled him in 1980.

Malley fils denies that it was Yasser Arafat’s intransige­nce that sank the Camp David talks in 2000. In 2008, he left Obama’s campaign when it emerged that he had been meeting with Hamas. Since then, Malley has led the invariably antiIsrael Internatio­nal Crisis Group. He insists he’s not anti-Israel, just pro-peace. Of course.

Then there’s Maher Bitar, the freshly appointed senior director for intelligen­ce at the National Security Council. Bitar, a Palestinia­n American, was on the board of the anti-Zionist group Students for Justice for Palestine. Not forgetting Matt Duss, who used to be Bernie Sanders’ foreign-policy adviser and is now tipped a job at the State Department. Duss comes from a family of Christian evangelica­l anti-Israel activists. He has compared Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza to “segregatio­n in the American South”. He calls the Mossad’s assassinat­ion of Iran’s nuclear mastermind Mohsen Fakhrizade­h “terrorism”. With friends like these…

Blinken emphasises Biden’s history of friendline­ss to Israel. He reminds us that in 2014, when Israel was under rocket fire from Gaza, Biden hastened to secure Congressio­nal funding for

Iron Dome missiledef­ence batteries.

Blinken doesn’t mention the unfriendly Biden. That’s the Biden who received

Matt Duss calls the assassinat­ion of Fakhrizade­h terrorism’

a tongue-lashing from Menachem Begin in 1982 after threatenin­g to cut off US aid: “I am a proud Jew. Three thousand years of culture are behind me,” Begin said, “and you will not frighten me with threats.”

That’s also the Biden who hasn’t phoned Netanyahu. It’s a gentle threat, but it’s a sign of what’s to come.

As a diplomat, Blinken doesn’t mention the obvious. Biden is 78 years old. He’s plainly past his best and heavily reliant on his advisers. He’s on his way out before he’s on his way in.

It won’t be Biden who sets his administra­tion’s negotiatin­g terms with Iran. It’ll be his aides and experts. If the US and Iran make it back to the negotiatin­g table, the US may become very unfriendly indeed to Israel. That will split the Jewish American groups too.

Morton Klein tells me that the heads of two major Jewish organisati­ons recently phoned to beg him to stop talking.

“They said, ‘Mort, this harms our chances to be at the table. It harms our chances for the administra­tion to call us, to ask our opinion.’”

“I said, ‘These people they’re appointing, they don’t give a damn about your opinion.’”

 ??  ?? Left: Morton Klein Right: Robert Gates
Left: Morton Klein Right: Robert Gates
 ??  ?? Barack Obama
Left: Michael Oren Right: Robert Malley Antony Blinken
Barack Obama Left: Michael Oren Right: Robert Malley Antony Blinken

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