Israel tries to bridge gap with Diaspora amid fears of strained relations with the West
By James M.
Dorsey
Israel’s
first post-Netanyahu government is seeking to rebuild fractured relations with
the Jewish Diaspora and rebrand the country as a liberal rather than an
illiberal democracy against the backdrop of uncertainty about future US policy
towards the Middle East and continued unconditional backing of the Jewish
state.
Uncertainty
about US reliability has been reinforced by the US negotiation with the Taliban
and subsequent withdrawal from Afghanistan that focused on getting the United
States out of a two decade-long forever war with no consideration of the
consequences for Afghan forces and other US allies in Afghanistan as well as in
the Central Asian country’s neighbourhood.
“We cannot
be sure that when the Americans will be needed, they’ll be here to help,” said Yaacov
Amidror, a former Israeli government national security advisor.
Spearheaded
by Diaspora Affairs Minister Nachman Shai and backed by Prime Minister Naftali
Bennett and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, the outreach attempts to ensure
Israel’s umbilical cord with the United States and restore Israel’s image as a
democracy that defends Jews and serves as a safe haven irrespective of their
political views.
Relations
with powerful, liberal-leaning Jewish communities in the United States and
Britain have frayed as a result of former prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s
attempts over more than a decade in office to control media coverage, subvert
the judiciary, refuse entry to the country by Jewish critics of Israel, align
himself with anti-Semitic attacks by men like Hungarian Prime Minister Victor
Orban on liberal philanthropist and Holocaust survivor George Soros, and
hardline policies towards the Palestinians.
The impact
of Mr. Netanyahu’s polarizing policies was evident in statements by Jerome
Nadler, a prominent pro-Israel US Congressman of Jewish descent.
“We don’t
leave our values at the U.S. border; we disdain Mr. Netanyahu’s vile, hateful
rhetoric and are horrified by his efforts to align himself with Donald Trump
and an overtly racist, Kahanist, political party in his own country. We do not
blame an entire country – nor repudiate its very basis for existence – because
of the cruelties of the government leading it. ... We can simultaneously reject
the transgressions of Mr. Netanyahu’s government, validate Palestinian
suffering, and support their right to self-governance, all while opposing
efforts meant to challenge Israel’s right to exist,” Mr. Nadler said.
He made his
remarks in a New York Times op-ed in May that Mr. Netanyahu was still
prime minister and on the day a ceasefire took effect in Israel’s war with
Hamas, the Islamist group that controls the Gaza Strip. Mr. Nadler was
referring to followers of the late racist Israeli American rabbi Meir Kahane.
Rebuilding
relations with significant segments of the Jewish Diaspora is crucial for
Israel not only to secure continued US support but also to bolster the Jewish
state’s claim to occupy a moral high ground. That claim, already challenged by
Israel’s often harsh occupation of Palestinian lands for more than half a
century, is further disputed by mounting Jewish and non-Jewish criticism of the
Jewish state.
Freedom
House noted in its 2020 report that over Mr. Netanyahu’s 12 years as
prime minister Israeli democracy had suffered
"an unusually large decline for an established democracy.” The
Economist Democracy Index, one of the three foremost democracy rating indexes,
rates Israel as a "flawed democracy" with civil liberties far lower
than in all EU countries, including Hungary.
‘If we see
more of the radical left and progressive liberal Jews continuing to support BDS
and Black Lives Matter, and similar to the Palestinians they relate to Israel
as a genocide state or an apartheid state, we may lose America,’” Mr. Shai, the diaspora affairs
minister, warned. Mr. Shai was referring to the Boycott, Disinvestment,
Sanctions or BDS movement that seeks to pressure Israel into withdrawing from
the West Bank.
American
Jews “may be very critical of what’s going on in Israel — I also have a lot of
criticism — it doesn’t matter. We should share the same values, we should
believe in the same things, we should get together and help each other for a
common future,” the minister said.
Mr. Shai
noted in a Cabinet meeting that ensuring support from the American Jewish community
took on added significance with the U.S.-Israel memorandum of understanding on
military aid slated to expire in 2026.
Mr. Shai
suggested by implication that Israel considered American Jewish support more
important than the backing of Evangelists favoured by Mr. Netanyahu even though
they constitute a far larger community and voting bloc in the United States.
American Jews traditionally vote in majority Democratic rather than Republican.
Separately,
Mr. Shai, addressing British Jews, told a Jewish publication in the United
Kingdom: “Israel is your country as much as my country. This is a Jewish state
and a democratic state… We welcome criticism from you and
anyone and we can
argue about things.”
Political
scientist Anders Persson, going beyond Mr. Shai’s efforts, has argued that
“with Netanyahu gone, one of the most important tasks for the Bennett/Lapid
government is to rebrand Israel as a liberal democracy. Being seen as a liberal democracy
is without a doubt the most important part of Israel’s hasbara, or public
diplomacy,” particularly after Tunisian President Kais Saied’s recent power
grab in what was largely seen as the Arab world’s only democracy, Mr. Piersson
said.
Foreign
Minister Lapid sought to repair tense relations with the European Union, the
world’s largest bloc of liberal democracies, during a recent visit to Brussels by emphasizing a shared belief in
human rights, freedom of the press, an independent judiciary, a strong civil
society and freedom of religion. Mr. Bennett is expected to emphasize the same
points during a visit to Washington in the coming weeks.
The Israeli
focus on the Jewish Diaspora is fed by the influence of progressives in the
Democratic Party as well as opinion surveys of the Jewish and non-Jewish public
in the United States.
Democratic
progressives have called for probes into alleged Israeli violations of US law,
accused Israel of apartheid and violations of basic human rights, and attempted
to block the sale of precision-guided missiles to Israel.
A recent survey by the Jewish Electorate Institute,
a group led by prominent Jewish Democrats, found that 34 per cent of American
Jewish voters agreed that “Israel’s treatment of Palestinians is similar to
racism in the United States,” 25 per cent approved the notion that “Israel is
an apartheid state” and 22 per cent asserted that “Israel is committing
genocide against the Palestinians.”
The poll
found that 9 per cent of voters agreed with the statement “Israel doesn’t have
a right to exist.” Among voters under 40, that proportion was 20 per cent.
Similarly, support for Israel among young
American Evangelists
is dropping.
Another poll published this month by the
University of Maryland found that only 8.1 per cent of Democrats blame the
Palestinians for Israel's offensive on Gaza in May, highlighting the growing
partisan divide over perceptions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in
American politics. The majority of respondents - 62.7 per cent - said America's
role in mediating the conflict should "lean toward neither side,” a
significant drop in past blind support for Israel.
Israeli concerns
about its relations with the US are buffeted by the fact that the United States
is seemingly reviewing its military commitment to the Middle East. The review comes
at a time at which the US and Israel have a lot of common concerns: the fate of
the moribund 2015 international agreement that curbed Iran’s nuclear program;
US policy towards Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and China; the decay
of the Palestinian Authority; the collapse of Lebanon; and prospects for
instability in Jordan.
The Bennett
government has to further carefully manage the fallout its plans to expand
Israeli settlements on the West Bank despite the Biden administration’s
objections. Settlements are a bete noire for progressives in the Democratic
Party and other critics of Israel. The move would end a 10 month-long Israeli moratorium
on settlement activity.
A potential
trade-off to prevent a crisis by Israeli settlement policy may be a restrained
US response to the expansion or building of new settlements in exchange for a
halt to Israel’s eviction of Palestinians from their homes, demolition of
Palestinian houses, and tolerance of West Bank settlements established without
government approval.
“We will act in a responsible and
reasonable way and
avoid provocations regarding settlements. The Biden administration knows we are
going to build. We know they don’t like it, and both sides don’t want to reach
a confrontation around this issue," said an Israeli official.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar and a senior fellow at the
National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute
Comments
Post a Comment