By Medea Benjamin and Ariel Gold
June 25, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Joe Biden wants you to
believe that he is opposed to Israel’s likely annexation
of parts of the West Bank that Netanyahu plans to carry
out in July. “I do not support annexation,”
he
said during a call with American Jewish donors on
June 16. But only a month ago, Biden senior foreign
policy advisor Tony Blinken
insisted that under absolutely no circumstances, not
even the annexation of the West Bank, would Biden
consider reducing or withholding U.S. military aid to
Israel. And contrary to the position of his former boss,
President Obama, Biden also pledged that if elected, he
would keep disagreements with Israeli policies
private.
That’s not what the American people want. In a new
Washington Post
poll, 67 percent of respondents said that it is
“acceptable” or actually the duty of elected
representatives to question the Israeli-American
relationship. Among Democrats, that number was an
overwhelming 81 percent.
The call to be more openly critical of Israeli policy
reflects Israel’s continued lurch to the right and
President Trump’s embrace of that, as well as diligent
campaigning by Palestinian-Americans and progressive
American Jews. Another factor was the example set by
Jewish presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, who talked
passionately about Palestinian rights.
This sentiment that US leaders must take a critical
look at Israeli policies is reflected in a
letter recently sent to Biden by over 100 groups,
calling on him to adopt policies toward the Israeli
government and Palestinian people “based on the
principles of equality and justice for all.” Endorsers
of the letter include the American Friends Service
Committee, American Muslims for Palestine, CODEPINK,
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), If Not Now
and Jewish Voice for Peace.
The letter came out of concern that Biden’s positions
on Israel/Palestine are to the right of those of
President Obama – who openly clashed with Israel
regarding such issues as settlements and the Iran
nuclear deal – and only a pinch less hawkish than those
of Trump.
Biden’s positions were made painfully clear in a May
18 statement on his campaign website entitled
Joe Biden and the Jewish Community: a record and a plan
of friendship, support, and action. It opened by
conflating the Jewish state with Jewish values, and went
on to brag about Biden’s role in increasing military aid
to Israel at the end of the Obama administration. It
also promised that Biden, in violation on the First
Amendment, would continue attacks on individuals and
organizations that boycott Israel for political reasons
and referred to Palestinian “choices” to commit
violence.
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Within days of the statement’s release, the
backlash was so fierce that the degrading language
of Palestinian “choices” was removed. But the
statement remains a testament to Biden’s unwavering
support for the rightwing Netanyahu government.
While Biden represents a candidate who is tone deaf
to changing U.S. sentiment towards Israel, many in the
Democratic party are leaving him in the dust. The sea
change among Democrats in general, and young Jews in
particular, was best captured in a few key moments
during the Democratic presidential race. The first was
in March 2019, when eight out of the ten Democratic
presidential candidates refused to attend the conference
sponsored by the American-Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC), recognizing the pro-Israel lobby as
an impediment to achieving a just and lasting peace in
Palestine/Israel. Another key moment was at the October
2019 conference organized by the liberal Jewish group J
Street, when the audience burst into applause after then
candidate Bernie Sanders suggested leveraging the $3.8
billion the US gives to Israel towards pushing Israel to
respect Palestinian human rights. On the debate stage
during the primaries, Bernie Sanders was also lauded for
accurately referring to Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin
Salman as a
murderer and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu as a
racist.
When Sanders suspended his run for the Democratic
nomination, Biden indicated that he would integrate some
of the politics of the party’s progressive wing to
reflect the energized grassroots movement the Sanders
campaign had built. He set up task forces to focus on
health care, immigration, education, criminal justice
reform, climate change and the economy, and tapped
popular politicians such as Progressive Caucus co-chair
Rep. Pramila Jayapal and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez.
But no task force was set up for foreign policy, and
Biden has done nothing to incorporate progressive
concerns into his Israel/Palestine platform.
That’s why the letter to Biden by over 100
organizations is so critical. It points out that by
giving Israel “unlimited diplomatic protection and
massive military financing,” the US “has enabled the
country to entrench its occupation, expand its illegal
settlements, impose a 13-year-long siege and wage three
wars against Gaza, pass laws that officially deny equal
rights to Israeli citizens who are not Jewish, all under
the veneer of peacemaking.” The letter lays out the
tenets of a strategy based on fairness and equality,
including:
- explicit opposition to Israel’s occupation of
the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and its
unlawful blockade (abetted by Egypt) of the Gaza
Strip;
- recognition of Israel’s obligations toward the
inhabitants of the Gaza Strip, a protected
population, according to international law;
- support for conditioning US military funding to
Israel on an end to Israeli violations of
Palestinian human rights and adherence to all
relevant US laws;
- support for H.R. 2407, the “Promoting Human
Rights for Palestinian Children Living Under Israeli
Military Occupation Act,” to ensure that no US
dollars contribute to Israel’s a military detention,
interrogation, abuse and/or other ill-treatment of
Palestinian children;
- calling on Israel’s government to repeal the
Jewish Nation-State Basic Law and to ensure that
Palestinian citizens of Israel and other non-Jewish
citizens in the country enjoy equal rights with
Jewish citizens by passing a basic law guaranteeing
those rights;
- opposition to the use of US security assistance
against protected populations, including in Gaza,
and calling on Israel’s government to protect
civilians from settler violence;
- support for Palestinian refugee rights
consistent with international law and relevant UN
resolutions;
- promise to relocate the US Embassy back to Tel
Aviv until such time as the international status of
East Jerusalem has changed from its current status
as occupied territory;
- a promise to provide full US cooperation with
the International Criminal Court’s investigation
into alleged war crimes committed by all sides in
the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the
Gaza Strip;
- rejection of US recognition of Israeli
sovereignty over any territories now occupied,
absent an internationally recognized final agreement
with the Palestinians.
The groups want Biden to oppose illegal and immoral
Israeli policies such as annexation with deeds, not just
words. To be fair, Biden is far from the only Democratic
Party leader paying lip service to opposing annexation
while acting to maintain the status quo. Recently, 120
lawmakers in the House and 30 in the Senate sent letters
voicing their opposition to annexation. They include
such stalwart
backers of Israel as Chuck Schumer, Robert Menendez,
Ben Cardin, and Steny Hoyer. Hoyer is known for being
the closest member of Congress to AIPAC and Schumer,
Cardin, and Menendez were three of the only four Senate
Democrats to support Israel’s opposition to the Iran
nuclear deal in 2015. They are also leaders of the
Israel Anti-Boycott Act to outlaw the boycott,
divestment, and sanctions movement, even at the expense
of the First Amendment. While it is a remarkable
achievement that so many Democratic lawmakers registered
their opposition to annexation, without measures to hold
Israel accountable such statements are toothless.
With annexation imminent, a case pending in the
International Criminal Court for war crimes, and Gaza
trapped in a 12-year-long siege complicated by a
pandemic, the stakes are high. Biden’s unconditional
support for Israel’s rightwing government is not only
less and less popular among Americans, but it guarantees
continued repression against Palestinians and continued
unrest in the region. Let’s hope
this
letter from over 100 organizations shows Biden the
widespread support for him to shed his
”Israel-right-or-wrong” position and instead openly and
explicitly distinguish right from wrong.
Medea Benjamin is cofounder of
CODEPINK for Peace, and author of several books,
including
Kingdom of the Unjust: Behind the US-Saudi Connection.
Ariel Gold is the national co-director
of CODEPINK and runs the organization’s Middle East
Program.
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