AIPAC
Spent Millions of Dollars to Defeat the Iran Deal. Instead, It May
Have Destroyed Itself
By M.J. Rosenberg
September 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Nation" -
It
is hard to exaggerate the damage inflicted on AIPAC by the
congressional defeat of its efforts to torpedo the Iran nuclear
deal. It is not as if AIPAC won’t live to fight again, because it
will, but this defeat has ruptured the status quo, possibly forever.
The extent of its efforts to defeat the deal was
unprecedented even for a lobby known for its no-holds-barred wars
against past White House initiatives it considered unfriendly to
Israel, going all the way back to the Ford administration. AIPAC,
and its cutout Citizens For A Nuclear Free Iran, reportedly budgeted
upwards of $20 million for a campaign that included flooding the
airwaves with television spots; buying full-page newspaper ads,
arranging fly-ins of AIPAC members to Washington, organizing
demonstrations at offices of AIPAC-friendly members of Congress who
were believed to be wavering, and ensuring that problematic
legislators were officially warned by precisely the right donor.
Rank-and-file AIPAC members were largely irrelevant to the process.
Money did the talking, and also the yelling and the cursing when
necessary. As one congressional staffer put it to me, “Taking money
from AIPAC is like getting a loan from the mob. You better not
forget to pay it back. They walk into this office like they own it.”
AIPAC is not a mass-membership organization. It
claims 100,000 members, which probably means it has fewer than that.
But no matter, it is, or was until now, viewed as speaking for all 6
million American Jews. In fact, whenever it testifies on Capitol
Hill, it
says it is speaking for the entire organized community. The
truth, however, is that 82
percent of American Jews belong to no Jewish organizations at
all, meaning not only that there is no organization that speaks for
them, but that no organization even knows exactly who they are.
Legislators believe that AIPAC is the Jewish voice
because (again, until now) that is what they heard from their Jewish
donors. Although only
4 to 6 percent of American Jews cast their votes based on Israel
policy, and even though Jews have voted consistently Democratic
since 1928 (about 70 percent voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and
2012), the donor class led by AIPAC has convinced politicians both
that Jews are primarily interested in Israel and that their votes
are in play, when, in reality, Jews are the most unwavering of
Democrats, second only to African-Americans. And much the same
dynamic is at play when it comes to Iran. In fact, the
one scientific poll of Jews on attitudes toward the Iran deal
showed 49 percent for it, with 31 percent against. (Writing in the
September 9 Washington Post, Harold Meyerson
explains exactly where the Jewish community stands today, a
picture that is very different from the one painted by AIPAC.)
So why don’t politicians know this?
In 2008, I met with then Senator Barack Obama (I
was working for a pro-Israel organization at the time) and asked him
if he would, if elected president, listen to pro-peace Jewish voices
on Israel or just AIPAC. He said, “I can’t hear you.” Taking him
literally, I spoke louder.
He said, that no, what he meant was that, on
Israel, he almost exclusively heard from the lobby. “Back home, I
hear from my AIPAC friend, Rosenberg, every week. Is he your
cousin? Anyway, your side needs to organize. You need to make your
voice heard so I can’t ignore you.”
That wish was answered by J Street, which, with
Obama’s help, has become the anti-AIPAC. J Street doesn’t have the
money AIPAC has, and it probably never will. But during the battle
over the Iran deal it acted as a counterweight to AIPAC, playing a
major role in destroying both the media’s and Congress’s conception
of a Jewish community united behind Netanyahu.
Those efforts played a role in AIPAC’s defeat, a
process that really took off when Obama started inviting J Street to
the White House whenever he met with the old-guard Jewish
organizations like AIPAC, the American Jewish Committee, and the
Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations. Obama told
me that he wanted progressive Jewish voices to speak louder; he
didn’t say that he would create the amplifier. But he did.
But J Street didn’t do a fraction as much to
defeat AIPAC as AIPAC and the Netanyahu government did themselves.
Starting as far back as 2008, when the Israeli leadership first had
to consider that Barack Obama would likely win the election, it did
not take kindly to the president. Media reports told of Israelis
being immune to the Obama mania that had seized the planet. Maybe it
was his middle name or maybe something else. In 2012, Netanyahu all
but endorsed Mitt Romney, allowing his associates to denigrate the
president.
Netanyahu’s animus came to a head when his
ambassador to the United States arranged for him to speak to a joint
meeting of Congress about Iran this past March, without even letting
the White House know that the prime minister was planning a visit.
Netanyahu came and—how else to put this?—dissed the president of the
United States in his own capital.
At that moment, the battle against the Iran
agreement became a partisan battle: Likud and the Republicans
against the American president and the Democrats. That never
changed. In the end, the majority of Republicans in Congress lined
up against the deal, while all but a couple dozen Democrats lined up
for it. The Israelis and the Republicans either forgot that they
would need Democrats to win or thought that, with sufficient
inducements, they would come around. Ultimately, they lost that bet.
Still, it was not preordained; Netanyahu and his
allies on the American right had a real shot at winning if they had
not turned Israel into a Republican plaything. But they crossed that
Rubicon and it will be hard crossing back. The bipartisan love
affair with Israel has cooled. In the future, AIPAC’s influence will
depend, more than ever before, on whether or not legislators believe
they can safely defy it.
AIPAC’s power is built on the belief that it
cannot be challenged with impunity, a belief that is on the verge of
being exposed as illusory. When Senator Chuck Schumer, AIPAC’s
Senate enforcer on Israel-related issues, cannot even deliver his
and New York’s junior senator, Kirsten Gillibrand, it is clear that
the bad old days of lobby intimidation may be passing. When as
stalwart an AIPAC supporter as Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman
Schultz defects because she fears that choosing AIPAC over a
Democratic president could cost her the post she holds as chair of
the Democratic National Committee, the power dynamic has clearly
changed. When Congressman Jerry Nadler, who represents more Orthodox
Jews than any other member of Congress, tells AIPAC that he won’t be
with them this time, it is impossible not to sense a political
earthquake.
In 2014, it was hard to find a single Jewish
member of Congress (not even Senator Bernie Sanders) who would break
with AIPAC’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza. One year later, nine
of 11 Jewish senators and most of the Jewish House members are
bucking AIPAC and the Israeli government on, of all things, the
Islamic Republic of Iran.
The Iran nuclear issue, more than any other, was
one on which AIPAC could not afford to lose. That is because
imposing and then maintaining sanctions on Iran has been the primary
focus of the lobby for two decades. It was in 1994 that AIPAC
published a 76-page policy document, “Comprehensive U.S. Sanctions
Against Iran: A Plan for Action,” calling for legislation to impose
a full embargo on trade with Iran by the United States, along with
an added “secondary boycott” mechanism by which the United States
would also impose sanctions on foreign entities that traded with
Iran. By 1996, the AIPAC-drafted Iran-sanctions bill was law, made
more comprehensive and onerous each time it was renewed.
True, AIPAC also uses its power to prevent US
recognition of a Palestinian state, but in recent years Palestine
has taken a back seat to Iran as the primary focus of the lobby.
That may be because Iran is infinitely more of a threat to Israel’s
regional interests than the Palestinians, or because it believes it
is easier to achieve a consensus in the “pro-Israel” community
against the hateful mullahs than the hapless Palestinians. After
all, who could possibly believe that the Palestinians could imperil
Israel’s existence? Yet that idea is central to AIPAC’s entire
campaign against the Iran deal.
Ironically, and happily for those who had
despaired of making headway on the Palestinian issue, AIPAC’s Iran
defeat presages difficulties for the lobby on that front too. After
this, it is harder to imagine Congress standing in mute silence, as
it has in the past, the next time the Israeli government decides to
teach the Palestinians another one of its bloody lessons about the
need to accept occupation without resistance.
But that depends on what happens now. I referred
earlier to the belief, almost universally held in Congress, that
legislators cannot defy AIPAC with impunity. I said that belief is
on the verge of being shown to be an illusion. What I mean is this:
Either legislators who supported the Iran deal (particularly those
representing states or districts with a significant number of Jewish
voters) face AIPAC-generated reelection difficulties in primaries or
the general election, or AIPAC will be revealed to be nothing but a
paper tiger.
After all, it is the fear of reelection problems
that keeps most legislators in line. Even those from “safe” states
or districts fear campaign funds’ being directed to their opponents
or simply kept away from them.
That is how AIPAC works. Back in the 1980s, when I
was an AIPAC employee, I shared an office with the staffer whose job
was to advise both the pro-Israel PACs and the big individual donors
on whom to give to and whom to boycott. AIPAC had lists of
candidates to help and candidates to hurt, and it made its views
known to anyone who asked and many who didn’t. No, it did not fund
candidates itself but its staffers and wealthy captains around the
country put out the definitive word on who was a friend and who was
an enemy. Over the years, some of those enemies went down to defeat,
but many more had to work surprisingly hard to prevail over
(suddenly) well-funded opponents.
Fortunately for AIPAC, there have never been that
many “enemies” that needed punishment. There are few Israel-related
votes and, when they have come along, few legislators vote “wrong.”
The biggest Israel vote is on the Israel aid package, which is part
of the overall foreign-aid budget and has not been controversial for
years. Instead, the fear factor comes in on votes relating to aid to
Palestinians; supporting and opposing a Palestinian state; Israel’s
occupation of the West Bank and blockade of Gaza; and the idea of
linking aid to Israel to its commitment to the peace process and
human rights. It is on issues like these that Israel could claim the
support of a thoroughly intimidated Congress. Until now, Iran policy
was also on that list, with legislators rushing to curry support
with AIPAC donors by taking a hard line on all issues related to
Iran.
But not after this week. Suddenly AIPAC is being
defied by hundreds of senators and representatives on an issue it
has deemed a matter of life or death for Israel.
What does it do to maintain its deterrent
capacity? Does it instigate primaries or steer campaign
contributions away from most of the Democrats in Congress, including
many who have been, until now, its closest allies? Or does it,
accepting the impossibility of taking them all on, give them a pass?
Or does it give some a pass and not others?
One thing is certain. The only way for AIPAC to
remain the force it has been is by going after its enemies. And
winning. And not just in 2016 but in 2018 and 2020, in a series of
cycles of retribution. If it doesn’t do that, it will become a shell
of its former self, only able to deliver noncontroversial votes on
matters directly related to the survival of Israel and largely
useless where US and Israeli security interests clash, as with Iran.
That last category includes, most notably, the Palestinian issue,
which has undermined US national interests for decades, but on which
our hands have been tied by fear of AIPAC retribution.
At this point, no one can predict what will happen
but I’ll venture a guess. AIPAC will not take on those who opposed
it on Iran. On the contrary, it will try to get back in their good
graces.
And the next time a vote comes
up where legislators are torn, it is just possible that they will
vote their conscience—one way or another—without worrying too much
about what AIPAC will do. And that will be good news for everyone,
including the State of Israel. But mostly for the United States.
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