by MJ Rosenberg, AIPAC insider
I was watching John Brennan’s Senate hearing and suddenly the words to the John Lennon song Imagine came into my head, with a slight twist.
Imagine there’s no lobby
It’s easy if you try
No memorized talking points
No need to lie.
I’m in good company when I contemplate a world without AIPAC. Upon his election as prime minister in 1992, Yitzhak Rabin told the lobby that
Israel would be better off without it and that it did more harm than
good. He wanted AIPAC out of the way because he was planning a peace
initiative with the Palestinians and knew that AIPAC would try (as it
did) to thwart his efforts.
Of course, Rabin’s effort to eliminate AIPAC failed. He was, after
all, only the prime minister of Israel. And AIPAC is AIPAC, an
institution dedicated to preserving its own power, not Israel’s
security. Rabin was dedicated to working with the United States
government to advance peace not to organizing billionaires to thwart US
goals.
The reason I was contemplating an alternate universe without the
Israel lobby was that I was struck by the contrast between a
Congressional hearing (Brennan’s) in which Israel was not an issue,
hence no lobby involvement, and one in which there seemed to be no other
issue, Chuck Hagel’s.
In fact, neither hearing should have been about Israel. Although both
the heads of the Department of Defense and the CIA have some
involvement with Israel (the CIA director actually more), Israel is not a
major concern of either one. Nonetheless, the Hagel hearing was almost
entirely about Israel while Brennan’s was about actual CIA policies,
largely drone strikes and interrogation practices.
I admit that I am overstating my case when I say that absent the
Israel lobby there is no need for a public official to lie. I believe
that most public officials lie when they consider it necessary to defend
themselves, the bad policies they have implemented or their superiors.
For some, lying is an autonomic response to pretty much any question.
One small example: did you ever see an executive or legislative
branch official refuse to answer a question by saying that he hasn’t
read a particular report. That is almost always a lie. If a reporter
knows about it, the official in question has almost surely does too. And
just because the lobby was not looking over Brennan’s shoulder when he
testified about drones and torture, there is no way he was always
telling the complete truth.
But most of the time Brennan and the senators were free to engage in a
serious discussion of the issues based on what both the nominee and the
legislators believe is best for the United States. Although, depending
on one’s view, either Brennan or the senators (or both) were terribly
wrong, it would be hard to argue that their positions were dictated by a
lobby and that lobby’s ability to deliver campaign funding.
The Hagel hearing, on the other hand, wasn’t really a hearing at all.
For the senators it was just an opportunity to audition in front of
current or potential donors.
It was like getting a speaking role at the AIPAC annual conference,
an opportunity to demonstrate that a legislator was 100% for whatever
the lobby is for.
The worst thing was that a hearing about leading the Pentagon barely
touched on any of the issues that affect America’s military. So eager
were the senators to suck up to the lobby by proclaiming undying
devotion to Israel that they barely mentioned the 1.5 million Americans
on active duty and all the problems they face. Nor was there much
interest expressed in the current war in Afghanistan or our continuing
role in Iraq. Or about when the use of military force is warranted and
when it isn’t.
No, it was all about Israel, actually not so much Israel as the
Israel lobby. What, other than the desire to please the lobby, could
have made Sen. Kristen Gillibrand (D-NY) ask for Hagel’s commitment that
Israel’s aid package would be exempt from sequestration cuts, unlike
all the programs that actually affect her constituents?
But her pandering to AIPAC was typical, replicated by such other
lobby devotees as Lindsey Graham (R-SC) who histrionically read from a
lobby script attesting to the lobby’s non-existence – and demanded that
Hagel apologize for ever suggesting that there is such a thing as the
(gasp) “Jewish lobby.” Graham, no special fan of Israel, is concerned
about a challenge from a Tea Party candidate in 2014 and is eager to
raise money from AIPAC-associated donors to help him withstand the
challenge
Of course, Gillibrand is from New York but that barely matters any
more. She, like her Republican colleagues — Graham, Ted Cruz of Texas,
Roy Blunt of Missouri, David Vitter of Louisiana and Mike Lee of Utah, —
was playing for money not votes, national money. Although the
Republicans know that that lobby donors are unlikely to support
right-wing Republicans, they also know (as Jesse Helms discovered) that
enthusiastic pandering to AIPAC will make it harder for their Democratic
opponents to raise money. Not when, to use AIPAC’s term, the Republican
incumbent is a “staunch supporter” of Netanyahu.
In short, the Hagel hearing was a nauseating spectacle.
By comparison, but only by comparison, the Brennan hearing was a
textbook example of American democracy at its best. Sure, there were
lobbyists in the room but they didn’t write the script. Yes, some of the
positions Brennan and some of the senators took are truly appalling.
And some senators made no sense at all.
Nonetheless, the Brennan hearing was not a fundraiser. It was about
issues, even principles and morality. The difference, of course, was the
absence of the lobby.
Imagine.
http://mjayrosenberg.com/2013/02/08/imagine-no-israel-lobby/
Saturday, 9 February 2013
Imagine: No Israel Lobby
Posted @ 11:52
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