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Written by Douglas M. Bloomfield Douglas M. Bloomfield
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Category: News News
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Published: 09 July 2009 09 July 2009
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Last Updated: 09 July 2009 09 July 2009
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Created: 09 July 2009 09 July 2009
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Ron Wyden is on the board of advisors of The Israel Project (TIP) which
is strategizing how to accuse people opposed to Israel's illegal
settlements of being for ethnic cleansing.
The Israel Project (TIP): Change the policy, or change the subject?
http://www.njjewishnews.com/njjn.com/070909/opedChangePolicy.html
Douglas M. Bloomfield
by Douglas M. Bloomfield
July 9, 2009
If you can’t convince ’em, accuse ’em. That’s the advice from The
Israel Project (TIP) for pro-Israel activists answering questions about
settlements. Rather than try to defend Israeli settlements, change the
subject. If that doesn’t work, try accusing those who advocate removing
Jewish settlements of promoting “a kind of ethnic cleansing to move all
Jews” from the West Bank.
TIP calls that “the best settlement argument” in its 2009 Global
Language Dictionary, a manual on how to talk to journalists and opinion
molders about the Arab-Israeli conflict. I received a copy of the
settlements chapter over the electronic transom, but the 140-page
document is closely held and not for the public or the press to see.
Look for more to begin leaking out soon.
“The single toughest issue” to defend among Americans generally and
American Jews in particular is settlements, says the manual, and
“hostility towards them and towards Israeli policy that appears to
encourage settlement activity.”
The Obama administration is pressing a very reluctant Israeli government to freeze all settlement construction.
Instead of defending settlements, go on the attack, advises TIP, a
Washington-based group that seeks to enhance Israel’s image among
journalists and policy makers.
According to Ori Nir of Americans for Peace Now, former Amb. Zalman
Shoval, a close advisor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said in a
Washington appearance last month that no Israeli government should be
expected to engage in ethnic cleansing against its own citizens, i.e.,
settlers.
Similarly, TIP says the “best argument” for settlements is this: Since
Arabs citizens of Israel “enjoy equal rights,” telling Jews they can’t
live in the Palestinian state “is a racist idea.” (Palestinian Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad said this week that Jews would be welcome to live
in the Palestinian state and enjoy the same rights Israeli Arabs enjoy
in Israel.)
Until Israeli policy changes, TIP suggests deflecting critics by
mentioning Israel’s “willingness to negotiate” and stressing how
“Israel has already sacrificed in the name of peace” and got
terrorists’ missiles in return.
It falls back on the old and disproven argument that “the settlements
are necessary for the security of Israel.” That may have been true
decades ago, but not in this missile age.
And dovish groups believe exactly the opposite — that the settlements
are a security liability. “American Jews increasingly realize that
settlements undermine Israel’s ability to survive, long term, as a
democratic Jewish state and that they undermine America’s national
security interest in a stable, peaceful Middle East,” said Nir.
Yehuda Ben Meir, a former Knesset member from the pro-settler National
Religious Party who served in Menachem Begin’s government, called
Netanyahu’s insistence on expanding settlement construction “harmful to
Israel’s security and national interests.”
Begin agreed to a three-month settlement freeze in 1978 to give peace
negotiations a chance, and he was no less a Zionist than Netanyahu, Ben
Meir said. A six-month freeze today will do “no harm” to Israel and
will give the Arabs a chance to “adopt genuine moves toward
normalization.”
The Obama administration is trying to turn a settlement freeze into a
thaw in Arab attitudes toward Israel through a package of reciprocal
confidence-building measures. The advantage for Israel is clear: if the
Arabs come through and begin normalization, there is something to build
on at the peace table. But if the Arabs respond — as Washington Post
columnist David Ignatius predicts — with demands for more concessions,
Israel can thaw the settlement freeze, and responsibility for the lost
opportunity will clearly be on the Arab side.
The Netanyahu government’s opposition to the freeze is more political
than security-minded. Yet despite a letter from half of Netanyahu’s
Likud Knesset faction opposing a freeze (and Palestinian statehood), it
is unlikely they or other right-wing partners would bring down the
government over the issue and lose their fiefdoms and access to the
taxpayers’ cookie jar. Netanyahu, on the other hand, by supporting the
two-state solution and the settlement freeze, would have a good chance
of forming a centrist coalition and healing any rift with Washington.
The TIP manual concedes, “Public opinion is hostile to the settlements — even among supporters of Israel.”
That is evident on Capitol Hill as well as in the Jewish community.
Right-wing groups and political partisans are trying to whip up
opposition to the administration’s policies — including some virulent
personal attacks on Obama reminiscent of last year’s smear campaign —
but it isn’t working. A Gallup poll in May showed the President enjoys
a 79 percent approval rating among American Jews.
Netanyahu, whose popularity here doesn’t compare, is smart enough to know he’d lose in a head-to-head confrontation with Obama.
“The government cannot stand against the entire world for long without
the support of American Jewry, and when the Israeli people itself is
divided. The government must demonstrate national responsibility, and
the sooner the better,” said Ben Meir.
Douglas M. Bloomfield is the president of Bloomfield Associates Inc., a
Washington lobbying and consulting firm. He spent nine years as the
legislative director and chief lobbyist for AIPAC.