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 Jenny Tonge's Victory Over the Israeli Lobby 
	Controlling British Government  By Ramzy BaroudAl-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 23, 2012 
 
 
 The Rest is Hasbara: Jenny Tonge’s Victory over the Lobby
 “My 
	  Lords, I was in Gaza six weeks ago,” began Baroness Tonge, when she spoke 
	  at the House of Lords in January 2009. “Now, as a result of the impotence 
	  of the international community, not just in Gaza, but…over 40 years of 
	  occupation of Palestine by Israel, those institutions that I visited are 
	  rubble and many of the children with whom I played are dead.”
 
 Jenny Tonge, then a member of the UK’s Liberal Democrat party, was a 
	  dangerous British politician as far as Israel was concerned. She not only 
	  dared to use strong language while referencing Israeli actions in the 
	  occupied territories, she also demanded action from her government
 
 For this she was subjected to the same, predictable verbal abuse by 
	  Israeli officials and media, by the pro-Israeli British lobby, and even by 
	  some of her peers. However, calling Tonge ‘anti-Semitic’ was never going 
	  to be convincing. The formidable woman has spent years of her life serving 
	  her community – as a doctor, MP and spokesperson for Health for Liberal 
	  Democrats in the House of Lords – and has amassed far too much credibility 
	  to be shaken by defamatory accusations.
 
 Moreover, very few will 
	  agree that calling for “the immediate—and I mean immediate—establishment 
	  by the United Nations Security Council of an independent fact-finding 
	  commission to Palestine to investigate all breaches of international law” 
	  constitutes anti-Semitism in any way.
 
 But for those who insist 
	  that Israel is above any criticism, the mere suggestion that Israel should 
	  be investigated for alleged war crimes is an unforgivable act. Any hint of 
	  criticism can easily be misrepresented to equal the questioning of the 
	  very existence of the state, and casually labeled as racism.
 
 The 
	  Baroness is not easily intimidated, however. Speaking at Middlesex 
	  University on February 23, she stated that, “Israel is not going to be 
	  there forever in its present form,” a reference to the country’s current 
	  racially-based political identity as a ‘Jewish State,’ which leaves native 
	  Muslim and Christian Arabs vulnerable to institutional racism and 
	  discriminatory laws.
 
 Many others have already warned from the 
	  increasingly anti-democratic nature of Israel, especially with the rise of 
	  religious and ultra-nationalist parties. Leading scholars, Noble 
	  Laureates, acclaimed anti-Apartheid figures and former US presidents have 
	  all made similar calls, targeting the skewed nature of the Israeli 
	  political establishment, which grants rights to people of Jewish lineage 
	  while denying basic civil rights to all others.
 
 Tonge was not 
	  targeting any race, but rather the small, yet powerful cliques that have 
	  long infested both British and US politics in areas concerning Israeli and 
	  the Middle East. “One day, the American people are going to say to the 
	  Israel lobby in the USA: enough is enough,” she said. “Israel will lose 
	  support and then they will reap what they have sown” (The Guardian, Feb 
	  9).
 
 In stating the obvious, Tonge irked British politicians, 
	  including members of her own party, who speak of ‘peace in the Middle 
	  East’ while actively undermining any real efforts to achieve such peace. 
	  Ed Miliband, leader of the Labour Party, said there was “no place in 
	  politics for those who question the existence of Israel.” Tonge, in fact, 
	  had done no such thing. Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, 
	  stated, “I asked Baroness Tonge to withdraw her remarks and apologize for 
	  the offense she has caused. She has refused to do so and will now be 
	  leaving the party.”
 
 Since his sudden rise to close to the top of 
	  British political hierarchy, Clegg has moved substantially from his 
	  original stance regarding Palestine and Israel. In his article in the 
	  Guardian on December 21, 2009, he had articulated a strong position 
	  against the Israeli blockade on Gaza, and asked: “And what has the British 
	  government and the international community done to lift the blockade? Next 
	  to nothing. Tough-sounding declarations are issued at regular intervals 
	  but little real pressure is applied. It is a scandal that the 
	  international community has sat on its hands in the face of this unfolding 
	  crisis.”
 
 Once in the government, Clegg changed his position. 
	  Tonge, on the other hand, remained consistently audacious, regardless of 
	  position or perks. Her stance in 2012 mirrored other stances she has taken 
	  in the past. In 2006, she uttered what few before dared to even speak in 
	  private: “The pro-Israeli lobby has got its grips on the western world, 
	  its financial grips. I think they've probably got a grip on our party,” 
	  she said (BBC, Sep 21, 2006.) Then, as in now, her comments were 
	  manipulated by the media to imply something entirely different from what 
	  she had clearly intended. Her exit from the party was a testament to the 
	  will of this strong British woman, but also to the power of the very 
	  Israeli lobby she often criticized.
 
 It is important to remember 
	  that Tonge’s battle is not a skirmish within the ranks of the political 
	  elites. Rather, it’s a war of narratives, where Israel and its ‘friends’ 
	  insist on silencing any meaningful debate on Palestine-Israel. The other 
	  side, encompassing Tonge and numerous others, is slowly encroaching on 
	  Israel’s well-guarded discourse, and making serious inroads.
 
 A 
	  recent episode in the war of narratives involved Gunther Grass, German 
	  author of the widely acclaimed anti-Nazi novel, The Tin Drum. Grass has 
	  now done what many others, especially in Germany, never dared to do. He 
	  criticized Israel for its aggressive posturing towards Iran. Israeli 
	  officials responded by calling the man every bad word in the book of 
	  defamation.
 
 The typical ‘storm’ created by Israeli responses has, 
	  however, not managed to enact a typical response this time. Nicholas 
	  Kulish wrote in the New York Times that judging by the ‘outpouring’ of 
	  comments by German politicians and media, “it would appear that the public 
	  had resoundingly rejected (Gunter’s) work…But even a quick dip into the 
	  comments left by readers on various Web sites reveals quite another 
	  reality” (April 13). According to Kulish, “Mr. Grass has struck a nerve 
	  with the broader public, articulating frustrations with Israel here in 
	  Germany that are frequently expressed in private but rarely in public.” He 
	  adds that “charge of anti-Semitism aimed at Israel’s critics is widely 
	  viewed as a blunt instrument that silences debate, and in the process 
	  prevents Mr. Grass from making a point…”
 
 While Israel does 
	  occasionally succeed in silencing critics, the tried and true tactic of 
	  the past is becoming less effective. In the final analysis, neither Tonge 
	  nor Gunter have actually lost to the lobby. In the world of ideas, only 
	  the credibility of one’s views actually makes a difference. The rest is 
	  hasbara.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	  is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	  PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
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