Interesting piece from Tablet Magazine, which will never be published on the Huffington Post:
"Back in 2006, in response to the “Israel Lobby” thesis of John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, I wrote
this: “Israel does not need the whole array of organizations that claim
to work on its behalf. The rationale for keeping Israel strong is
hardwired in the realities of the Middle East. The United States does
not have an alternative ally of comparable power. And if the
institutions of the lobby were to disappear tomorrow, it is quite likely
that American and other Western support would continue unabated.”
Mearsheimer and Walt doubted
that I believed this to be true: “If he is correct, then the people who
bankroll AIPAC and The Washington Institute for Near Eastern Policy and
other like-minded organizations are wasting their money, and Kramer
himself is wasting his time. Kramer claims that all this effort is
unnecessary, but his own behavior suggests otherwise.”
I never responded: I didn’t want friends to think they were “wasting
their money” by supporting organizations that do fulfill a role, but
that role is vastly different from the one assigned to them by
Mearsheimer and Walt. They believe the “lobby” is all that prevents
Israel from being exposed as a liability. The opposite is true: The
“lobby” is fueled by Israel’s value as a strategic asset in an unstable
region. The professors confuse cause and effect.
But if Israel doesn’t depend on pro-Israel advocacy (from which I
exclude the coolly analytical Washington Institute), what purpose do
such organizations serve? They energize some substantial number of
American Jews to stay affiliated with the Jewish people at a time when
traditional forms of affiliation are waning. Israel’s batteries charge
them. Businessmen and dentists come to Washington to advocate for
Israel, and they feel like players on the world stage. Those who do are
far more likely to visit Israel and embrace an Israeli cause. Younger
ones might even make the decision made by myself (and many of my
colleagues at Shalem College) to settle in Israel. Yes, I’m a classic Zionist, who believes that the ingathering of the Jews is their preferred destiny.
So, the measure of the “lobby” isn’t its ability to change U.S.
policy on Iran or stop the nomination of Chuck Hagel. The State of
Israel and its resilient people will decide how and when Iran will be
stopped, and Hagel’s appointment won’t stand in their way. I measure
pro-Israel advocacy by the degree to which it sustains Jewish peoplehood
outside Israel and draws Jews into a deeper commitment to Israel than
an annual visit to Capitol Hill.
And here is a revelation for Walt and Mearsheimer. I’m not so
delusional as to believe that my writing and speaking on Israel’s behalf
make a difference. If Israel is strong, the United States will value
it. If it is weak, nothing anyone says will redeem it. So, why do we
bother? It’s something the two “experts” can’t possibly fathom: Ahavat Yisrael, love for the people of Israel. And expressions of love are their own reward."
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