"I'm going to address
Congress in Washington, not only as the Prime Minister of
Israel but also on behalf of the entire Jewish People,"
declared Netanyahu, at one of the highlights of the
intensifying public debate in Israel and the United States.
J-Street, the left-wing American Jewish lobby, was quick to
respond with a petition stating: "No, Mr. Netanyahu. You do
not speak for me. Benjamin Netanyahu has a mandate to
represent the State of Israel. He has no mandate to speak on
behalf of Jews in the United States." Within a few days the
petition was signed by more than twenty thousand American
Jews. Even Abe Foxman of the ADL - a pillar of the American
Jewish establishment - desperately called upon Netanyahu to
cancel his speech and put out the spreading conflagration.
The invitation to
Congress which Netanyahu arranged for himself, behind the
back of the White House, brought to the surface the growing
gap between Israel and the American Jewish community. The
overwhelming majority of American Jews tend to the liberal
side of the political spectrum. Several generations of
American Jews at the same time tended to render a deep
emotional support to Israel, which also expressed their
feeling of guilt for not having done enough to prevent to
save European Jews.
In the fifties and early
sixties, it was fairly easy for progressive American Jews to
support the State of Israel, which at the time had an
international reputation as an egalitarian country with the
Kibbutz Movement as its main showcase. But already for a
long time, Jews who support any Progressive issue and
campaign, in the United States itself and worldwide, find it
difficult to link this with supporting the State of Israel –
ever more difficult, with Israel being most of the time
under right-wing nationalist governments, blatant racism
spreading from the margins of Israeli society into the heart
of the political establishment, settlements ever growing and
expanding at the expense of the meager land remaining to the
Palestinians, and every few years the TV screens being
filled with footage of the death and destruction left by the
Israeli Air Force in Lebanon or Gaza. Especially the younger
generation of American Jewish community feels increasingly
alienated from Israel. Some of them express it in open -
sometimes very blunt – criticism. Many others just turn away
quietly.
All
of this intensified with the appearance of Barack Obama on
the scene. Most American Jews greeted his election to the
presidency with enthusiasm and joy. The Jews were among
Obama’s most prominent and consistent supporters in both
2008 and 2012. Conversely, many in Israel - including the
Prime Minister elected by the Israelis, his cabinet
ministers and his political party – regarded Obama with
suspicion from the outset, and their suspicion soon
developed into hostility, if not outright hatred.
In 2011, in the
midst of a heated confrontation with Obama, Netanyahu
succeeded to get himself invited to speak at Congress. At
that time, the gambit worked well - Netanyahu got a standing
ovation from legislators of both parties, and his speech in
Congress greatly helped derail the attempt which Obama made
at the time, to promote an Israeli-Palestinian agreement
based on the 1967 borders. Since then, however, much water
had flowed through both the Jordan River and the Potomac.
Netanyahu increased his outright involvement in American
politics, and did not bother to hide his strong support for
and identification with the Republican Party. American
politics itself became more polarized, and most American
Jews found themselves at the opposite pole to that in which
the Prime Minister of Israeli took his stand.
The confrontation could
have broken out two months ago, had Obama chosen not to
exercise the American veto in the UN Security Council, when
the Palestinian draft resolution came to the vote. But the
President of the United States chose another ground for his
battle with Netanyahu: Iran.
The outline of the emerging
agreement with Iran is already quite clear, even if the
details have not yet been finalized: Iran will remain a
"Threshold State", possessing the potential to acquire
nuclear weapons, but it will avoid taking this last step and
allow international monitoring of its compliance with this
condition. Of course, no one will require the State of
Israel, which had successfully taken that last step some
fifty years ago (in an intensive confrontation with
then-President John F. Kennedy), to give up its nuclear
arsenal (at least two hundred bombs, as of the account given
by Mordechai Vanunu in1986), or the missiles capable of
carrying those bombs to any point in the Middle East and
further afield, or the German-made submarines sailing deep
under the waters of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean
and ready at any moment to launch these missiles bearing
those bombs.
According to Netanyahu, this agreement which Obama intends
to sign with Iran would be "A bad agreement, a calamitous
agreement, an agreement which would endanger the very
existence of Israel" and therefore "It is my duty to go to
Washington and address Congress and do everything in my
power to prevent the signing of the evil agreement with
Iran. I will not flinch, I am determined to go."
It seems that he did
manage to convince the right-wing constituency in Israel.
The planned Congress speech became the focus of the ongoing
Israeli elections campaign. The opposition parties are
calling for Netanyahu to cancel the speech, and now this
call is joined by five former Ambassadors who at different
times represented the State of Israel in Washington. But the
hardcore right-wing voters are far from disliking an all-out
confrontation with the President of the United States and
with large parts of the American public, including many
American Jews. According to the polls, this does not
diminish willingness to vote for Netanyahu – it might even
increase it.
In the United States, the situation is very different.
Netanyahu in effect set the Democrat Senators and
Representatives - and Jewish Americans, traditional
supporters of the Democratic party – an unequivocal choice,
forcing them to choose between an Israeli Prime Minister
openly supporting the Republicans and a President of the
United States from the Democratic Party. Did Netanyahu
realize that faced with such a clear-cut dilemma, the choice
of American Legislators and Jews may not be for him?
In all this big
fuss, a very low profile is kept by one group which has a
vital interest in what transpires on Capitol Hill: AIPAC,
the veteran, mighty Israeli Lobby. For decades, AIPAC
officials spent tireless effort in order to build a
bipartisan power base in Congress, so that no matter which
party holds the White House or has a majority in the House
and Senate, support for the Israeli government policies
would always remain solid. What do the AIPAC people feel
today - when Netanyahu, like a bull in a china shop, is
rampaging and destroying all that they spent decades to
construct? I would guess they are gnashing their teeth, like
a shrewd lawyer whose client insists upon sabotaging and
ruining the defense case.