On the boil: Obama, the Democrats
09/30/2012 14:19
Candidly Speaking: The disproportionately high profile of American Jews in the US presidential contest and the efforts invested by both candidates in portraying themselves as supportive of the Jewish state has assumed surrealistic levels.
US President Obama at White House Rose Garden Photo: Yuri Gripas / Reuters
The disproportionately high profile of American Jews in the US presidential contest and the efforts invested by both candidates in portraying themselves as supportive of the Jewish state has assumed surrealistic levels.
Overall, Israel’s
standing in the US today is at an all-time high. Yet, the Democratic Convention
spotlighted the emergence of a hostile anti-Israeli component of the party which
threatens to undermine the long-standing bi-partisan support of Israel
exemplified by the standing ovations Netanyahu received during his May 2011
address to Congress.
Economic issues will invariably be the dominant
factor influencing voters, and most American Jews will base their political
choice on a multi-dimensional basket of issues. But the majority would like to
be assured of the wellbeing of the Jewish state and expect their president to
behave toward Israel as an ally and be sensitive to its security
requirements.
Although most Jews continue to support Obama, growing
numbers, especially the Orthodox, have concluded that on the basis of his
tortuous Cairo speech and his earlier diplomatic battering of Israel, he is more
committed to the Palestinian than the Israeli narrative and will vote against
him.
With the impending elections, Obama launched a concerted charm
offensive to avoid further defections from his Jewish constituency. He repeated
that he will “always have Israel’s back,” emphasized his exemplary record in
strengthening Israel’s defense capabilities and reiterated that he had delivered
the most pro-Israeli speech at the UN, unprecedented by any US
president.
Initially, it seemed he was succeeding. But subsequently,
Jewish angst was revived by numerous aspects of Obama’s behavior. There are
intensified doubts regarding his genuine intention to resort to the military
option if needed to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power. These anxieties
were reinforced by Obama’s failure to repudiate the intimidating rhetoric from
administration spokesmen conveying veiled threats against Israel acting
independently, especially the offensive remark by Joint Chief of Staff General
Martin Dempsey, who did not wish “to be complicit” if Israel acted against
Iran’s nuclear project.
Another cause for concern was the cozy US
relationship with Turkey in which the US surrendered to their demands to exclude
Israel from joint military exercises or even participate in a conference on
global terrorism. There was also Obama’s failure to adequately condemn the Non
Aligned Summit which endorsed Iran’s nuclear policy, appointed a Holocaust
denier as its new head and whose representatives from 120 countries listened
politely to the genocidal ravings of their Iranian hosts.
But the most
chilling message was the elimination of pro-Israel components from the current
Democratic National Platform. In particular, the deletion of all reference to
recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel – which conformed to the
policy of the administration. After a huge outcry and following three calls for
approval from delegates, it was clumsily reinserted, provoking a flood of
audible boos from many delegates.
But other key clauses relating to
Israel were not restored. These included reference to “Israel, our most reliable
Middle East ally,” condemning Hamas, rejecting a return to the indefensible 1949
armistice lines and calling for Palestinian refugees and their descendants to be
resettled in a Palestinian state rather than in Israel. Washington Post
columnist Jennifer Rubin described this platform as “the most radically
unsupportive statement of policy on Israel by any major party since the founding
of the state of Israel.”
Subsequently, Obama and Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton’s harsh dismissal of Israel’s plea to draw red lines in relation
to moving beyond sanctions combined with the president’s refusal to meet
Netanyahu during his visit to New York, served to heighten tensions with Israel
even before the elections. It also provided a chilling projection of what to
expect from a second Obama term.
Why don’t Jews abandon a party that is,
at best, ambivalent towards the Jewish state?
The reality for most American Jews
is that since the era of President Franklin Roosevelt, their bond with the
Democratic Party is embedded as a political DNA and even considered a
quasi-religion.
Yet it is likely that President Obama would have acted
even more harshly against Israel were Jews not such an important component of
the Democratic party. There is therefore a positive aspect to ongoing Jewish
involvement to retain existing Democratic Congressional bipartisan support – in
the absence of which Israel’s defense infrastructure would erode and the
international community would undoubtedly throw us to the wolves.
So when
influential pro-Israel Democratic Congressmen or prominent Jewish Democrats like
Stuart Eizenstat or Dennis Ross retain their party affiliation, even those
disagreeing with them should be relieved that within this prevailing dangerous
Democratic political terrain there remain influential Jews willing to combat
those seeking to distance the US from its traditional alliance with
Israel.
Alan Dershowitz exemplifies this. He is a devoted champion of
Israel who recently reaffirmed his support of Obama despite having previously
condemned his policies, even comparing him to Chamberlain.
To his credit,
Dershowitz condemned the Democratic party platform and even after the amendments
told The Algemeiner that he was bitter “not only with regard to Jerusalem,” but
also with the other crucial issues which were not reinstated. He accused “rogue
elements” within the Democratic party, from ArabAmericans to anti-Israeli Jews,
of seeking to undermine “the bi-partisan support for Israel which characterized
American politics since 1948” and to destroy the US- Israel alliance. He vowed
to convey this to the president who he hoped would “make statements prior to the
elections reaffirming the contents of his 2008 platform.”
Thus, even
those who would aspire to see more Jews demonstrating displeasure with Obama at
the polls should realize that it is a disservice to Israel to demonize
Democratic supporters like Dershowitz if they speak up and protest against
anti-Israeli policies.
This is not an endorsement of those who argue that
Jews should avoid regarding Israel as a wedge issue in the elections. It is
precisely during the election season that American Jews should maximize their
democratic right to influence policy by responsibly criticizing and objecting to
policies they consider to be flawed or immoral.
Indeed, to ensure that
politicians take greater account of Jewish sensitivities, one would expect
mainstream American Jewish leaders, while remaining apolitical, to speak out far
more aggressively against any party which adopts anti-Israeli positions, whether
Democrat or Republican.
This applies especially now, despite the fact
that if re-elected, Obama is capable – as he was following the last elections –
of reneging on his undertakings. Indeed, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
recently unblushingly told an international journalist that like all
politicians, President Obama’s remarks about Israel prior to elections should
not be taken too seriously.
Indicators suggest that the majority of Jews
will continue to vote for Obama but despite conflicting polls, an increasing
minority, especially the most committed, is likely to oppose him and may well
provide the lowest level of support for a Democrat president since
Carter.
In addition, many Jews, unwilling to sever their umbilical cord
to the Democratic party, may well continue supporting their Democratic
Congressional representative yet oppose Obama at the presidential poll – which
would actually serve to reinforce bipartisanship towards Israel, currently under
siege.