The United States can do without AIPAC, even though Israel most likely cannot.
Take action by attending Move Over AIPAC, a gathering in Washington DC from May 21-24, 2011, to expose AIPAC and build the vision for a new US foreign policy in the Middle East! More information can be found at www.MoveOverAIPAC.org.
Not too many people have heard of AIPAC, which stands for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. It is not a PAC, under the standard definition of Political Action Committees, but a lobbying group. Here is how AIPAC describes itself on its website:
“For more than half a century, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has worked to strengthen the U.S.-Israel relationship. From a small pro-Israel public affairs boutique in the 1950s, AIPAC has grown into a 100,000-member national grassroots movement described by The New York Times as “the most important organization affecting America’s relationship with Israel.”
That goal is one that we would ordinarily admire—American citizens bonding together to let their government know how they feel about issues that are important to them, as Americans. The problem here is that AIPAC is a group of American citizens who have bonded together to influence the American government to work for the interests of a foreign government—Israel.
Years ago, when Wolf Blitzer was an AIPAC employee and we appeared together on a panel discussion, he literally shouted at me that, as Americans, AIPAC members had the right to lobby Congress. My response then was the same as it is now: when lobbying is being done for a foreign government, as AIPAC does, it’s wrong.
I always believed that, as much as I admire the country from which my parents emigrated, Lebanon, I would never put its interests above those of the United States. But that’s what is done by AIPAC whose mantra is that Israel is America’s best ally in the Middle East and therefore needs uncritical support. Let us examine that claim.
During the 1967 Middle East war, our greatest ally, Israel, did its level best to destroy a U.S. Navy ship, the U.S.S. Liberty, a lightly armed intelligence ship ordered by the Navy to sail off the coast of Israel and Egypt to monitor communications during the fighting. That was a simple enough assignment, but the outcome was a bit more complicated. Despite clear markings on the Liberty, and a huge American flag flying from its stern, the Israeli military undertook a sustained and vicious attack on the ship and its crew, killing 34 American sailors and wounding 170 more. After receiving distress calls from the Liberty, the U.S. Naval command in the Mediterranean dispatched two fighter jets to come the ship’s rescue. However, when Lyndon Johnson learned that the attack on the Liberty came from the Israelis, he ordered that the jets be recalled.
The ship didn’t sink, in spite of the  attempt by the Israelis to  scuttle it, and it limped back to a port in  Spain, where the crew was  ordered to speak to no one, especially the  press, about what had  happened.  Those able bodied members of the crew  were bitter then and  remain bitter today about the way the U.S.  government abandoned them to  the tender mercies of the Israeli  military, their bitterness stemming  not only from the malicious attack  on the ship and its crew, but also  from the indifference of their  government, which chose Israel’s welfare  over theirs.  AIPAC has done  its best to prevent any investigation of  the incident by Congress,  mostly by threatening retribution against any  committee that would dare  to hold hearings on the affair.   (See James  Scott’s book, Attack  on the Liberty.  Scott’s father was a young ensign on board the Liberty  at the time of the attack).
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