by Richard Baehr
A new documentary, "The J Street Challenge," is being
shown in a series of cities in North America, including Chicago, where I
attended a screening this past weekend. The movie focuses on the left-wing
Obama-supporting group that was founded in 2008 by Jeremy Ben-Ami, and that has
successfully marketed itself as a pro-Israel, pro-peace organization, or merely
pro-peace (when pro-Israel is less readily saleable on some college
campuses).
As the film convincingly
demonstrates, J Street has been anything but a pro-Israel group, and has been
unremittingly hostile to the current government of Israel on pretty much every
issue -- from opposing sanctions (and even the threat of military action by
either the United States or Iran) in dealing with the Iranian nuclear program,
to exclusively blaming settlements in Judea and Samaria for the absence of
peace, to advancing the Goldstone Report in Congress, to demanding that pressure
be applied by the United States on Israel to accept the negotiating demands of
the Palestinian Authority.
J Street has attracted a large number
of members in its first few years, and has established branches or chapters in
many cities and college campuses. It has been heavily funded in its first few
years by anti-Zionist hedge fund billionaire George Soros (a fact denied by
Ben-Ami for several years, until tax filings revealed his lies), some donors who
may be fronting for Soros (including a woman from Hong Kong no one knows who
gave close to $1 million), and a leading figure in a front group for the Iranian
regime, the National
Iranian American Council. It is an unusual collection of people who in any
case would never be described as pro-Israel. Jeremy Ben-Ami himself came to J
Street after a career in public relations, with firms that have represented the
government of Saudi Arabia, among others.
In the case of Soros, he has never
been a shrinking violet on the subject of Israel. He has been a consistent
critic, and has always wanted the United States to follow the lead of the
European nations in distancing itself from Israel. So far, America has resisted
this path, though President Barack Obama almost certainly would prefer to follow
the European approach -- which involves pressuring Israel to make the
concessions necessary to achieve a two-state solution, assuming there are any
concessions that would ever get the Palestinians to say yes to a deal that would
end the conflict (with no more claims) and leave Israel as a Jewish-majority
state. Most importantly, J Street has provided a vehicle to begin the work on
changing the narrative on Israel within the Jewish community -- in synagogues,
Jewish federations, and Hillels, and more broadly, in colleges, the media, and
Congress.
It is no secret that the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee has had a long successful history of lobbying
members of Congress to support a strong U.S.-Israel relationship. Given that
Israeli governments move from Right to Left and back again (and are therefore at
times more willing and at other times less willing to be accommodating with
negotiating concessions), and American presidents have also been more or less
supportive of Israel (Obama, Jimmy Carter, Dwight D. Eisenhower and George H. W.
Bush among the less friendly; Harry Truman, Bill Clinton, Lyndon Johnson,
Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush among the more supportive), it
has been easier for AIPAC to focus on members of Congress, rather than the
executive branch, to shape a consistent bipartisan agenda on Israel.
J Street is in business in large part
to weaken AIPAC and to pull away Democrats, especially leftist Democrats, from
the bipartisan consensus on Israel in Congress. In an era where for the last 20
years the relations between members of the two parties in Congress has frayed,
as a growing percentage of members from both parties have become more
ideological and less willing to compromise, support for Israel has been one of
the very few issues where members from the two parties joined together. J Street
has worked to make those in Congress who are further to the Left adopt the
positions of their ideological twins outside of Congress, who have pretty much
all turned on Israel -- whether in the universities, the media, or
synagogues.
AIPAC adopted a strategic posture of
ignoring J Street. And to date, J Street has been unsuccessful in creating a new
group within the Democratic Party in Congress that will challenge AIPAC.
However, Obama has applied pressure on Democrats in Congress, particularly in
the Senate, where Democrats still have the majority, to stand down from
challenging him on issues, such as approving new sanctions on Iran if the
current negotiating framework breaks down. Forced to choose between their leader
and AIPAC, Obama won and AIPAC retreated and pulled the sanctions bill, a
victory that J Street trumpeted as its own victory, as it of course had parroted
whatever Obama called for from the beginning of his presidency (his "blocking
back," as Ben-Ami has called it).
Truth be told, the consensus on
Israel in Congress today represents a pretty low bar for achievement -- voting
for foreign aid, signing onto some nonbinding resolutions, and cheering for
Israel's prime minister when he speaks to Congress. For sure, there are real
champions for the U.S.-Israel relationship in Congress, and they still come from
both parties (Senators Mark Kirk and Robert Menendez, members of Congress Peter
Roskam, Eliot Engel and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen), though many more these days are
Republicans. However, it is easy to see how this dynamic could change in the
future, and J Street is investing to make this happen.
On college campuses, future American
leaders and political figures are being exposed to the progressive narrative
that groups matter more than nations or individuals. You are defined by your
membership in a racial/religious/ethnic group, and that is what has shaped
your privilege or lack thereof, and your worldview. Morality is defined as
supporting underdogs and the weaker party in conflicts, and achieving a
redistribution of power and wealth/income to achieve more fairness in individual
societies and in the world.
Israel loses in this equation, since
it is viewed by the Left as a colonial power created by the West that drove out
an indigenous people and that is now preventing Palestinians from achieving the
self-determination to which they are entitled. This almost entirely false
narrative is backed by nasty anti-Semitic groups that are largely Muslim (such
as Students for Justice in Palestine) or anti-Zionist (Jewish groups such as
Jewish Voices for Peace). When these groups battle pro-Israel groups to pass
boycotts/divestments/sanctions measures in student governments, J Street has
more often than not been arm-in-arm with, or in some cases, more quietly behind
the groups that are pushing BDS resolutions and trashing Israel.
The vote last week by the Conference
of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations not
to add J Street to their membership ranks was less a reflection of J
Street's alleged pro-peace politics (there are existing pro-peace groups within
the conference) but anger at J Street's aggressiveness in working to splinter
the consensus among Jewish organizations on issues like Iran or the peace
process and undermine or harm existing members of the conference to make them
less effective.
J Street would be happy if, over
time, it became the group that Democrats in Congress lined up behind, and AIPAC
was left for the Republicans, which would of course mean the end of a bipartisan
consensus in Congress on anything impacting Israel, since J Street can be
defined by its opposition to AIPAC's agenda. In essence, J Street's goal is to
make Israel a Democrats versus Republicans issue, as is the case for so much
else in Congress and America, especially since the Left believes that
demographic changes in America will soon make the Democrats the dominant
political party. Soon it hopes that hostility to Israel will be as much a
mainstream Democratic Party issue as global-warming hysteria, affirmative
action, immigration reform, increasing the minimum wage, and raising tax rates
on the wealthy.
"The J Street Challenge" is an attempt to
offer a clear-eyed view of the real J Street agenda -- especially its goal to
destroy the bipartisan consensus on Israel, so that its soft, mushy PR campaign
of presenting itself as the group representing the pro-peace, pro-Israel
majority in America can be seen for what and who is really behind the propaganda
campaign.
Richard Baehr
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8305
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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