By Ramzy Baroud
March 17, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
“I am a Zionist. You
don’t have to be a Jew to be a Zionist,” current
Democratic Presidential candidate, Joe Biden,
said
in April 2007, soon before he was chosen to be
Barack Obama’s running mate in the 2008 elections.
Biden is, of course,
correct, because Zionism is a political movement
that is rooted in 20th-century nationalism and
fascism.
Its use of religious dogmas is prompted by political
expediency, not spirituality or faith.
Unlike US
President, Donald Trump, or Bernie Sanders, Biden’s
only serious opponent in the Democratic primaries,
Biden’s stand on Israel is rarely examined.
Trump has made
his
support for Israel
the cornerstone of his foreign policy agenda since
his inauguration into the White House in January
2017. The American President has basically
transformed into Israel’s political genie, granting
Tel Aviv all of its wishes in complete defiance of
international law.
Sanders, on the
other hand, came to represent the
antithesis
of Trump’s blind and reckless support for Israel.
Himself Jewish, Sanders has promised to restore to
the Palestinian people their rights and dignity, and
to play a more even-handed role, thus ending decades
of US unconditional support and bias in favor of
Israel.
But where does
Biden factor into all of this?
Below is a brief
examination of Biden’s record on Palestine and
Israel in recent years, with the hope that it gives
the reader a glimpse of a man that many Democrats
feel is the rational alternative to the political
imbalances and extremism of the Trump
administration.
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August 1984: Palestinians and Arabs are to
Blame
Biden’s
pro-Israel legacy began much earlier than his stint
as a vice-President or presidential candidate.
When Biden was
only a Senator from Delaware, he spoke at the 1984
annual conference of ‘Herut Zionists of America’.
Herut is the forerunner of Israel’s right-wing Likud
party.
In his speech
before the jubilant right-wing pro-Israel Zionist
crowd, Biden derided the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) and Arab governments, for
supposedly derailing peace in the Middle East.
Biden
spoke
of “three myths (that) propel U.S. policy in the
Middle East” which, according to the American
Senator, are, “the belief that Saudi Arabia can be a
broker for peace, the belief that King Hussein (of
Jordan) is ready to negotiate peace, and the belief
that the Palestine Liberation Organization can
deliver a consensus for peace.”
April 2007: ‘I am a Zionist’
Time only
cemented Biden’s pro-Israel’s convictions, leading
to his declaration in April 2007 that he is not a
mere supporter of Israel – as has become the
standard among US politicians – but is a Zionist
himself.
In an interview
with Shalom TV, and despite his insistence that he
does not need to be Jewish to be a Zionist, Biden
labored to make connections with the ‘Jewish State’
revealing
that his son is married to a Jewish woman and that
“he had participated in a Passover Seder at their
house,” according to the Israeli Ynet News.
March 2013: ‘Qualitative Edge’
This commitment
to Israel became better articulated when Biden took
on greater political responsibilities as the US
vice-president under Obama’s administration.
At a packed AIPAC
conference in March 2013, Biden elaborated on his
ideological Zionist beliefs and his president’s
commitment to ‘the Jewish state of Israel’. He
said:
“It was at that
table that I learned that the only way to ensure
that it could never happen again was the
establishment and the existence of a secure, Jewish
state of Israel. I remember my father, a Christian,
being baffled at the debate taking place at the end
of World War II ..” that any country could object to
the founding of Israel on the ruins of the
Palestinian homeland.
“That’s why we’ve
worked so hard to make sure Israel keeps its
qualitative edge in the midst of the Great
Recession. I’ve served with eight Presidents of the
United States of America, and I can assure you,
unequivocally, no President has done as much to
physically secure the State of Israel as President
Barack Obama.”
December 2014: ‘Moral Obligation’
In one of the
most fiercely pro-Israel speeches ever given by a
top US official, Biden told the annual Saban Forum
at the Brookings Institution in Washington on
December 6, 2014, that, “If there weren’t an Israel,
we would have to invent one”.
In his speech,
Biden added a new component to the American
understanding of its relationship with Israel, one
that goes beyond political expediency or ideological
connections; a commitment that is founded on “moral
obligation”.
Biden
said,
“We always talk about Israel from this perspective,
as if we’re doing (them) some favor. We are meeting
a moral obligation. But it is so much more than a
moral obligation. It is overwhelmingly in the
self-interest of the United States of America to
have a secure and democratic friend, a strategic
partner like Israel. It is no favor. It is an
obligation, but also a strategic necessity.”
April 2015: ‘I Love Israel’
My name is Joe
Biden, and everybody knows I love Israel,” Biden
began his speech at the 67th Annual Israeli
Independence Day Celebration held in Jerusalem in
April 2015.
“Sometimes we
drive each other crazy,” the US vice-president
said
in reference to
disagreements
between Israel and the US over Israeli Prime
Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu’s refusal to halt
construction of illegal Jewish settlements.
“But we love each
other,” he added. “And we protect each other. As
many of you heard me say before, were there no
Israel, America would have to invent one. We’d have
to invent one because … you protect our interests
like we protect yours.”
July 2019: US Embassy Stays in Jerusalem
In response to a
question by the news website, AXIOS, which was
presented to the various Democratic party
candidates, on whether a Democratic President would
relocate the American embassy back to Tel Aviv, the
Biden campaign
answered:
“Vice President
Biden would not move the American embassy back to
Tel Aviv. But he would re-open our consulate in East
Jerusalem to engage the Palestinians.”
October 2019: Support for Israel
Unconditional
In an interview
with the Wall Street Journal on October 31, 2019,
Biden was asked whether he agrees with the position
taken by his more progressive opponent, Bernie
Sanders, regarding US financial support to Israel
and Jewish settlement.
Sanders had said
that, “if elected president he would leverage
billions of dollars in U.S. military aid to Israel
to push Jerusalem to change its policies toward the
Palestinians,” The Hill news website
reported.
Biden’s
response
was that, “ .. the idea that we would draw military
assistance from Israel, on the condition that they
change a specific policy, I find to be absolutely
outrageous. No, I would not condition it, and I
think it’s a gigantic mistake. And I hope some of my
candidates who are running with me for the
nomination — I hope they misspoke or they were taken
out of context.”
March 2020: ‘Above Politics, Beyond Politics’
Biden’s fiery
speech
before the pro-Israel lobby group, AIPAC, at their
annual conference in March 2020, was a mere
continuation of a long legacy that is predicated on
his country’s blind support for Israel.
Biden’s discourse
on Israel – a mixture of confused ideological
notions, religious ideas and political interests –
culminated in a call for American support for Israel
that is “above politics and beyond politics”.
“Israelis wake up
every morning facing an existential threat from
their neighbors’ rockets from Gaza, just like this
past week .. That’s why I’ve always been adamant
that Israel must be able to defend itself. It’s not
just critical for Israeli security. I believe it’s
critical for America’s security.”
Palestinians
“need to end the rocket attacks from Gaza,” Biden
also said. “They need to accept once and for all the
reality and the right of a secure democratic and
Jewish state of Israel in the Middle East.”
– Ramzy Baroud
is a journalist and the Editor of The Palestine
Chronicle. He is the author of five books. His
latest is “These
Chains Will Be Broken:
Palestinian Stories of Struggle and Defiance in
Israeli Prisons” (Clarity Press, Atlanta). Dr.
Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at
the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA),
Istanbul Zaim University (IZU). His website is
www.ramzybaroud.net
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