Hillary
Clinton, Vows to Embrace an Extremist Agenda on
Israel
By Glenn
Greenwald
February
19, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept" -
Former
President Bill Clinton on Monday met in secret (no
press allowed) with roughly 100 leaders of South
Florida’s Jewish community, and, as the Times
of Israel reports, “He vowed that, if
elected, Hillary Clinton would make it one of her
top priorities to strengthen the U.S.-Israel
alliance.” He also “stressed the close bond that he
and his wife have with the State of Israel.”
It may be
tempting to dismiss this as standard, vapid
Clintonian politicking: adeptly telling everyone
what they want to hear and making them believe it.
After all, is it even physically possible to
“strengthen the U.S.-Israel alliance” beyond what it
already entails: billions of dollars in American
taxpayer money transferred every year, sophisticated
weapons fed to Israel as it bombs its defenseless
neighbors, blindly loyal diplomatic support and
protection for everything it does?
But Bill
Clinton’s vow of even greater support for
Israel is completely consistent with what Hillary
Clinton herself has been telling American Jewish
audiences for months. In November, she
published an op-ed in The Forward in
which she vowed to strengthen relations not only
with Israel, but also with its extremist prime
minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.
“I have
stood with Israel my entire career,” she proclaimed.
Indeed, “as secretary of state, [she] requested more
assistance for Israel every year.” Moreover, she
added, “I defended Israel from isolation and attacks
at the United Nations and other international
settings, including opposing the biased Goldstone
report [which documented widespread Israeli war
crimes in Gaza].”
Clinton
media operatives
such as Jonathan Alter have tried to undermine
the Sanders campaign by claiming that only Sanders,
but not Clinton, has committed the sin of
criticizing Obama: “Hillary stopped criticizing
Obama in 2008, when [Obama] was nominee; Sanders
stopped in 2015, so he could run as Dem.” Aside from
being creepy — it’s actually healthy to criticize a
president and pathological to refuse to do so — this
framework is also blatantly false. Clinton,
in her book and
in interviews, has often criticized Obama for
being insufficiently hawkish: making clear
that she wanted to be more militaristic than the
Democratic president who has literally
bombed seven predominantly Muslim countries
(thus far).
Her
comments on Israel have similarly contained implicit
criticisms of Obama’s foreign policy: namely, that
he has created or at least allowed too much
animosity with Netanyahu. In her Forward op-ed,
she wrote that the Israeli prime
minister’s “upcoming visit to Washington is an
opportunity to reaffirm the unbreakable bonds of
friendship and unity between the people and
governments of the United States and Israel.” She
pointedly added: “The alliance between our two
nations transcends politics. It is and should always
be a commitment that unites us, not a wedge that
divides us.” And in case her message is unclear, she
added this campaign promise: “I would also invite
the Israeli prime minister to the White House in my
first month in office.”
Last month,
Clinton wrote an
even more extreme op-ed in the Jewish Journal,
one that made even clearer that she intends to
change Obama’s policy to make it even more
“pro-Israel.” It begins: “In this time of terrorism
and turmoil, the alliance between the United States
and Israel is more important than ever. To meet the
many challenges we face, we have to take our
relationship to the next level.”
“With every
passing year, we must tie the bonds tighter,” she
wrote. Tie those bonds tighter. Thus:
As part
of this effort, we need to ensure that Israel
continues to maintain its qualitative military
edge. The United States should further bolster
Israeli air defenses and help develop better
tunnel detection technology to prevent arms
smuggling and kidnapping. We should also expand
high-level U.S.-Israel strategic consultations.
As always,
there is not a word about the oppression and
brutality imposed on Palestinians as part of
Israel’s decadeslong occupation. She does not even
acknowledge, let alone express opposition to,
Israel’s repeated, civilian-slaughtering bombing of
the open-air prison in Gaza. That’s because for
Clinton — like the progressive establishment
that supports her — the suffering and violence
imposed on Palestinians literally do not exist. None
of this is mentioned, even in passing, in the
endless parade of pro-Clinton articles pouring forth
from progressive media outlets.
Beyond
progressive indifference, Clinton has been able to
spout such extremist rhetoric with little notice
because Bernie Sanders’ views on Israel/Palestine
(like his foreign policy views generally) are, at
best, unclear. Like many American Jews, particularly
of his generation, he has
long viewed Israel favorably, as a crucial
protective refuge after the Holocaust. But while he
is
far from radical on these matters, he at least
has
been more willing than the standard Democrat,
and certainly more willing than Clinton, to
express criticisms of Israel. Still, his
demonstrated preference for focusing on domestic
issues at the expense of foreign policy has
unfortunately enabled Clinton to get away with all
sorts of extremism and pandering in this area.
Clinton partisans — being Clinton partisans — would,
if they ever did deign to address Israel/Palestine,
undoubtedly justify Clinton’s hawkishness on the
ground of political necessity: that she could never
win if she did not demonstrate steadfast devotion to
the Israeli government. But for all his foreign
policy excesses, including on Israel, Obama has
proven that a national politician can be at least
mildly more adversarial to Israeli leaders and still
retain support. And notably, there is at least one
politician who
rejects the view that one must cling to standard
pro-Israel orthodoxy in order to win; just
yesterday, Donald Trump vowed “neutrality” on
Israel/Palestine.
As I
noted a couple of weeks ago, Clinton advocates
are understandably desperate to manufacture the most
trivial controversies because the alternative is to
defend her candidacy based on her prior actions and
current beliefs (that tactic was actually pioneered
by then-Clinton operative Dick Morris, who had his
client
turn the 1996 election into a discussion of
profound topics such as school uniforms). If you
were a pro-Clinton progressive, would you want to
defend her continuous vows to “strengthen” U.S.
support for the Netanyahu government and ensure that
every year “we must tie the bonds tighter”?
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