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For almost four
decades, in the US and world-wide, many Arabs, Arab Americans,
progressives and even leftists have debated the role and impact of the
pro-Israel lobby in the US. In this article, Dr. Massad, demystifies and
dismantles many of the arguments that have dominated this ongoing
debate. He provides an objective understanding of pro-Israel lobby in
the US within the context of US policies and interests and decisively
situates it, where it truly belongs: in the service of US imperial
interests. The challenge to combat US imperialism, however, persists and
with this understanding, anti-imperialist forces will have to define
their strategy. While acknowledging and emphasizing the immense power
of pro-Israel lobby in the
US,
Massad insists that the US government is responsible for making
US
policies which that lobby supports.
* * *
In the last 25 years,
many Palestinians and other Arabs, in the United States and in the Arab
world, have been so awed by the power of the US pro-Israel lobby that
any study, book, or journalistic article that exposes the inner
workings, the substantial influence, and the financial and political
power of this lobby have been greeted with ecstatic sighs of relief that
Americans finally can see the "truth" and the "error" of their ways.
The underlying
argument has been simple and has been told time and again by
Washington's regime allies in the Arab world, pro-US liberal and Arab
intellectuals, conservative and liberal US intellectuals and former
politicians, and even leftist Arab and American activists who support
Palestinian rights, namely, that absent the pro- Israel lobby, America
would at worst no longer contribute to the oppression of Arabs and
Palestinians and at best it would be the Arabs' and the Palestinians'
best ally and friend. What makes this argument persuasive and effective
to Arabs? Indeed, why are its claims constantly brandished by
Washington's Arab friends to Arab and American audiences as a persuasive
argument? I contend that the attraction of this argument is that it
exonerates the
United States'
government from all the responsibility
and guilt that it
deserves for its policies in the Arab world and gives false hope to many
Arabs and Palestinians who wish America would be on their side instead
of on the side of their enemies.
Let me start with the
premise of the argument, namely its effect of shifting the blame
for US policies from the
United States
onto Israel and its US lobby. According to this logic, it is not the
United States that should be held directly responsible for all its
imperial policies in the Arab world and the Middle East at large since
World War II, rather it is Israel and its lobby who have pushed it to
launch policies that are detrimental to its own national interest and
are only beneficial to Israel. Establishing and supporting Arab and
other Middle East dictatorships, arming and training their militaries,
setting up their secret police apparatuses and training them in
effective torture methods and counter-insurgency to be used against
their own citizens should be blamed, according to the logic of these
studies, on Israel and its US lobby. Blocking all international and UN
support for Palestinian rights, arming and financing Israel in its war
against a civilian population, protecting Israel from the wrath of the
international community should also be blamed not on the United States,
the studies insist, but on Israel and its lobby. Additionally, and in
line with this logic, controlling Arab economies and finances,
dominating key investments in the
Middle East, and imposing structural adjustment policies by the IMF
and the World Bank which impoverish the Arab peoples should also be
blamed on
Israel, and not the United States. Finally, starving and then invading
Iraq,
threatening to invade Syria, raiding and then sanctioning Libya and
Iran, besieging the Palestinians and their leaders must also be blamed
on the Israeli lobby and not the US government. Indeed, over the years,
many pro-US Arab dictators let it leak officially and unofficially that
their US
diplomat friends have told them time and again how much they and
"America" support the Arab world and the Palestinians were it not for
the influence of the pro- Israel lobby (sometimes identified by the
American diplomats in more explicit "ethnic" terms).
While many of the
studies of the pro-Israel lobby are sound and full of awe-inspiring
well- documented details about the formidable power commanded by groups
like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and its
allies, the problem with most of them is what remains unarticulated.
For example, when and in what context has the United States government
ever supported national liberation in the
Third World? The record of the United States is one of being
the implacable enemy of all Third World national liberation groups,
including European ones, from Greece to Latin America to Africa and
Asia, except in the celebrated cases of the Afghan fundamentalists' war
against the USSR and supporting apartheid South Africa's main terrorist
allies in Angola and Mozambique (UNITA and RENAMO) against their
respective anti-colonial national governments. Why then would the
US support
national liberation in the Arab world absent the pro-Israel lobby is
something these studies never explain.
The United States has
had a consistent policy since World War II of fighting all regimes
across the Third World who insist on controlling their national
resources, whether it be land, oil, or other valuable minerals. This
extends from Iran in 1953 to Guatemala in 1954 to the rest of Latin
America all the way to present-day Venezuela. Africa has fared much
worse in the last four decades, as have many countries in Asia. Why
would the United States support nationalist regimes in the Arab world
who would nationalise natural resources and stop their pillage by
American capital absent the pro-Israel lobby also remains a mystery
unexplained by these studies. Finally, the United States government has
opposed and overthrown or tried to overthrow any regime that seeks real
and tangible independence in the
Third World and is especially galled by those regimes that pursue such
policies through democratic elections. The overthrow of regimes from
Arbenz to Goulart to Mossadegh and Allende and the ongoing attempts to
overthrow Chavez are prominent examples, as is the overthrow of
nationalist regimes like Sukarno's and Nkrumah's. The terror unleashed
on populations who challenged the US-installed friendly regimes from El
Salvador and Nicaragua to Zaire to Chile and Indonesia resulted in the
killing of hundreds of thousands, if not millions by repressive police
and militaries trained for these important tasks by the US. This is
aside from direct
US invasions of South
East Asian and Central American countries that killed untold millions
for decades. Why would the US and its repressive agencies stop invading
Arab countries, or stop supporting the repressive police forces of
dictatorial Arab regimes and why would the US stop setting up shadow
governments inside its embassies in Arab capitals to run these
countries' affairs (in some cases the US shadow government runs the Arab
country in question down to the smallest detail with the Arab government
in question reduced to executing orders) if the pro-Israel lobby did not
exist is never broached by these studies let alone explained.
The arguments put
forth by these studies would have been more convincing if the Israel
lobby was forcing the United States government to pursue policies in the
Middle East that are inconsistent with its global policies elsewhere.
This, however, is far from what happens. While US policies in the Middle
East may often be an exaggerated form of its repressive and anti-
democratic policies elsewhere in the world, they are not inconsistent
with them. One could easily make the case that the strength of the
pro-Israel lobby is what accounts for this exaggeration, but even this
contention is not entirely persuasive. One could argue (and I have
argued elsewhere) that it is in fact the very centrality of Israel to US
strategy in the Middle East that accounts, in part, for the strength of
the pro-Israel lobby and not the other way around. Indeed, many of the
recent studies highlight the role of pro-Likud members of the Bush
administration (or even of the Clinton administration) as evidence of
the lobby's awesome power, when, i t could be easily argued that it is
these American politicians who had pushed Likud and Labour into more
intransigence in the 1990s and are pushing them towards more conquest
now that they are at the helm of the US government. This is not to say,
however, that the leaders of the pro-Israel lobby do not regularly brag
about their crucial influence on US policy in Congress and in the White
House. That they have done regularly since the late 1970s. But the
lobby is powerful in the
United States because
its major claims are about advancing US interests and its support for
Israel is contextualised in its support for the overall US strategy
in the
Middle East. The pro- Israel lobby plays the same role that the
China
lobby played in the 1950s and the
Cuba lobby still plays to this day. The fact that it is
more powerful than any other foreign lobby on Capitol Hill testifies to
the importance of Israel in US strategy and not to some fantastical
power that the lobby commands independent of and extraneous to the US
"national interest." The pro-Israel lobby could not sell its message
and would not have any influence if
Israel was a
communist or anti-imperialist country or if Israel opposed US policy
elsewhere in the world.
Some would argue that
even though Israel attempts to overlap its interests with those of the
US, that its lobby is misleading American policy- makers and shifting
their position from one of objective assessment of what is truly in
America's best interest and that of Israel's. The argument runs as
follows: US support for Israel causes groups who oppose Israel to hate
the US and target it for attacks. It also costs the
US
friendly media coverage in the Arab world, affects its investment
potential in Arab countries, and loses its important allies in the
region, or at least weakens these allies. But none of this is true.
The United States has been able to be Israel's biggest backer and
financier, its staunchest defender and weapon-supplier while maintaining
strategic alliances with most if not all Arab dictatorships, including
the Palestinian Authority under both Yasser Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas.
Moreover, US companies and American investments have the largest
presence across the Arab world, most prominently but not exclusively in
the oil sector. Also, even without the pathetic and ineffective efforts
at US propaganda in the guise of the television station Al-Hurra, or
Radio Sawa and the now-defunct Hi magazine, not to mention
US-paid journalists and newspapers in Iraq and elsewhere, a whole army
of Arabic newspapers and state-television stations, not to mention
myriad satellite television stations celebrate the US and its culture,
broadcast American programmes, and attempt to sell the US point of view
as effectively as possible encumbered only by the limitations that
actual US policies in the region place on common sense. Even the
offending Al-Jazeera has bent over backwards to accommodate the US point
of view but is constantly undercut by actual US policies in the region.
Al-Jazeera, under tremendous pressure and threats of bombing from the
United States, has for example stopped referring to the
US
occupation forces in Iraq as "occupation forces" and now refers to them
as "coalition forces". Moreover, since when has the
US
sought to win a popularity contest among the peoples of the world? Arabs
no more hate or love the United States than do Latin Americans,
Africans, Asians, or even and especially Europeans.
Finally we come to
the financial argument, namely that the US gives an inordinate amount of
money to Israel
-- too exorbitant a cost that is out of proportion to what the US gets
in return. In fact, the
United States spends
much more on its military bases in the Arab world, not to mention on
those in Europe or Asia, than it does on Israel. Israel has indeed been
very effective in rendering services to its US master for a good price,
whether in channelling illegal arms to central American dictatorships in
the 1970s and 1980s, helping pariah regimes like Taiwan and apartheid
South Africa in the same period, supporting pro-US, including Fascist,
groups inside the Arab world to undermine nationalist Arab regimes, from
Lebanon to Iraq to Sudan, coming to the aid of conservative pro- US Arab
regimes when threatened as it did in Jordan in 1970, and attacking Arab
nationalist regimes outright as it did in 1967 with Egypt and Syria and
in 1981 with Iraq when it destroyed that country's nuclear reactor.
While the US had been able to overthrow Sukarno and Nkrumah in bloody
coups, Nasser remained entrenched until
Israel effectively
neutralised him in the 1967 War. It is thanks to this major service
that the
United States
increased its support to Israel exponentially.
Moreover, Israel neutralised the PLO in 1982, no small service to many
Arab regimes and their US patron who could not fully control the
organisation until then. None of the American military bases on which
many more billions are spent can claim such a stellar record. Critics
argue that when the US had to intervene in the Gulf, it could not rely
on Israel
to do the job because of the sensitivity of including it in such a
coalition which would embarrass Arab allies, hence the need for direct
US intervention and the uselessness of
Israel
as a strategic ally. While this may be true, the
US
also could not rely on any of its military bases to launch the invasions
on their own and had to ship in its army. American bases in the Gulf did
provide important and needed support but so did
Israel.
AIPAC is indeed
powerful insofar as it pushes for policies that accord with US interests
and that are resonant with the reigning US imperial ideology.
The power of the pro-Israel lobby, whether in Congress or on campuses
among university administrators, or policy-makers is not based solely on
their organisational skills or ideological uniformity. In no small
measure, anti- Semitic attitudes in Congress (and among university
administrators) play a role in believing the lobby's (and its enemies')
exaggerated claims about its actual power, resulting in their towing the
line. But even if this were true, one could argue, it would not matter
whether the lobby has real or imagined power. For as long as Congress
and policy-makers (and university administrators) believe it does, it
will remain effective and powerful. I of course concede this point.
What then would have been different in
US policy in the
Middle East absent Israel and its powerful lobby? The answer in short
is: the details and intensity but not the direction, content, or
impact of such policies. Is the pro-
Israel lobby extremely powerful in the United States? As someone who
has been facing the full brunt of their power for the last three years
through their formidable influence on my own university and their
attempts to get me fired, I answer with a resounding yes. Are they
primarily responsible for US policies towards the Palestinians and the
Arab world? Absolutely not. The United States is opposed in the
Arab world as elsewhere because it has pursued and continues to pursue
policies that are inimical to the interests of most people in these
countries and are only beneficial to its own interests and to the
minority regimes in the region that serve those interests, including
Israel. Absent these policies, and not the pro-Israel lobby which
supports them, the United States should expect a change in its
standing among Arabs. Short of that, the United States will have to
continue its policies in the region that have wreaked, and continue to
wreak havoc on the majority of Arabs and not expect that the Arab
people will like it in return.
* Dr. Massad is
associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at
Columbia University. His recent book The Persistence of the Palestinian
Question was published by Routledge. |