The 'Israel
Lobby' Myth
By George P. Shultz
Posted September 9, 2007
U.S. News & World
Report
Israel is
a free, democratic, open, and relentlessly self-analytical
place. To hear harsh criticism of Israel's policies and
leaders, listen to the Israelis. So questioning Israel for its
actions is legitimate, but lies are something else. Throughout
human history, they have been used not only to vilify but to
establish a basis for cruel and inhuman acts. The catalog of
lies about Jews is long and astonishingly crude, matched only
by the suffering that has followed their
promulgation.
Defaming the Jews
by disputing their rightful place among the peoples of the
world has been a long-running, well-documented, and
disgraceful series of episodes across history. Again and again
a time has come when legitimate criticism slips across an
invisible line into what might be called the "badlands," a
place where those who should be regarded as worthy adversaries
in debate are turned into scapegoats, targets, all-purpose
objects of blame.
In
America, we protect all speech, even the most hurtful lies. We
allow a virtual free-for-all by which laws are adopted,
enforced, and interpreted. Hundreds of millions of dollars are
spent yearly to influence this process; thousands of groups
vie for influence. Among these are Jewish groups that have
come under renewed criticism for being part of an all-powerful
"Israel lobby," most notably in a book published this week by
Profs. Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer.
Jewish
groups are influential. They also largely agree that the
United States should support Israel. But the notion that they
have anything like a uniform agenda and that U.S. policy in
Israel and the Middle East is the result of this influence is
simply wrong.
One
choice. Some critics seem overly impressed with the
way of thinking that says to itself, "Since there is a huge
Arab Islamic world out there with all the oil, and it is
opposed to this tiny little Israel with no natural resources,
then realistically the United States has to be on the Arab
side and against Israel on every issue, and since this isn't
the case, there must be some underhanded Jewish plot at work."
This is a conspiracy theory, pure and simple.
Another
tried and true method for damaging the well-being and security
of the Jewish people and the State of Israel is a dangerously
false analogy. Witness former President Jimmy Carter's book
Palestine-Peace Not Apartheid. Here the association
on the one hand is between Israel's existentially threatened
position and the measures it has taken to protect its
population from terrorist attacks, driven by an ideology bent
on the complete eradication of the State of Israel, and, on
the other, the racist oppression of South Africa's black
population by the white Boer regime.
The
tendency of mind that lies behind such repulsive analogies
remains and is reinforced by the former president's views,
spread across his book, which come down on the anti-Israel
side of every case. These false analogies stir up and lend
legitimacy to more widely based movements that take the same
dangerous direction.
Anyone who
thinks that Jewish groups constitute a homogeneous "lobby"
ought to spend some time dealing with them. For example, my
decision to open a dialogue with Yasser Arafat after he met
certain conditions evoked a wide spectrum of responses from
the government of Israel, its political parties, and American
Jewish groups who weighed in on one side or the other. Other
examples in which the United States rejected Israel's view of
an issue, or the view of the American Jewish community,
include the sale of arms to Saudi Arabia and President
Reagan's decision to go to the cemetery at Bitburg,
Germany.
The United
States supports Israel not because of favoritism based on
political pressure or influence but because the American
people, and their leaders, say that supporting Israel is
politically sound and morally just.
We are a
great nation. Mostly, we make good decisions. We are not babes
in the woods. We act in our own interests. And when we
mistakenly conclude from time to time-as we will-that an
action or policy is in America's interest, we must take
responsibility for the mistake.
So, on
every level, those who blame Israel and its Jewish supporters
for U.S. policies they do not support are wrong. They are
wrong because, to begin with, support for Israel is in our
best interests. They are also wrong because Israel and its
supporters have the right to try to influence U.S. policy. And
they are wrong because the U.S. government is responsible for
the policies it adopts, not any other state or any of the
myriad lobbies and groups that battle daily-sometimes with
lies-to win America's support.
George
Shultz was secretary of state from 1982 to 1989. This is
excerpted from his introduction to The Deadliest Lies:
The Israel Lobby and the Myth of Jewish Control
by
Abraham Foxman (Palgrave Macmillan).