MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

It would have been a safe bet to think that President Barack Obama would be the keynote speaker at the annual meeting last weekend of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the influential pro-Israel lobby group. After all, he is going to Israel later this month if Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu overcomes a growing parliamentary opposition to his leadership and manages to form a coalition government there.

Even the new Secretary of State John Kerry was absent from the usually well-attended event since he was travelling to Europe and the Middle East, also paving, in part, the ground for Obama’s first-ever visit to occupied Palestine and Jordan. Yet, his low-key tour of Europe and the Arab world hardly made front-page news in key American newspapers.

The two absent American leaders, however, may be surprised by the exchanges at the AIPAC conference, reportedly attended by 13,000 persons, and the anti-Israel demonstrations outside its conference doors. Keynote speaker Vice President Joe Biden, known for his adoration of Israel, crowded his lines with praise for Israel, but hardly mentioned the plight of the Palestinians.

He assured his AIPAC audience that Obama was not bluffing about using force to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions and recalled, in closing remarks, a conversation he had with the late Israeli prime minister Golda Meir, who told him that the “secret weapon is we have no place else to go”. Biden recalls assuring her that “our job is to make sure there’s always a place to go, that there’s always an Israel, that there’s always a secure Israel and there’s an Israel that can care for itself”.

In turn, Netanyahu, speaking via satellite from Jerusalem, said that he was ready to discuss with Obama later this month a “meaningful compromise” with the Palestinians, but mentioned nothing about a Palestinian state.

Whether these seemingly harmonious remarks will pave the way for discarding the friction that existed over the past years between the American and Israeli leaders remains to be seen.

Peter Beinart, a Jewish author of The Crisis of Zionism, recently noted that what has been “awful is the refusal [of American Jews] to acknowledge that Jewish power can be abused”, adding that “central to that refusal is the language AIPAC and its allies have created to talk about Palestinians, millions of whom live largely at the mercy of Jewish power, as non-citizens in a Jewish state” which he finds as “dishonest and dehumanising”.

On the first day of the AIPAC conference, a full-page column by Dennis Ross, former US chief negotiator for the Arab-Israel conflict from 1993-2001 and special assistant to President Obama for the Middle East and South Asia from 2009-2011, appeared last Sunday in the opinion section of The New York Times. Titled “To achieve Mideast peace, suspend disbelief”, it suggests “14 points to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict”.

Describing Ross as “Israel’s lawyer”, Ilene Cohen, writing in Mondoweiss.net saw his piece as “very disturbing and dishonest”. She wrote that Ross, now a counsellor to the pro-Israel Washington Institute for Near East Policy, “advocates for Israel, and in return for giving away 8 per cent of their land at the outset of a ‘process’, the Palestinians get nothing but more requirements for what they owe their occupiers”.

At one point, she pointed to “Ross’ wail about ‘poor Israelis, poor Palestinians’ frozen in inaction by mutual distrust”. She added: “The Israelis are the colonisers and the egregious violators of international law; the Palestinians are the ones whose state is being stolen and who live under oppressive occupation. That understanding is almost universally accepted internationally, even if most are too cowardly to do anything about it.”

The AIPAC conference apparently prompted two members of the US House of Representatives to introduce legislation that would make Israel “a major strategic ally”, said to be a one-of-a-kind designation. The bill was sponsored by Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) and Ted Deutch (D-Fla.). It reportedly codifies a number of existing facets of the US-Israeli relationship, including annual defence assistance and cooperation on missile defence, energy research and cyber security.

To cite but one Israel obnoxious action, this week it introduced a new bus line between the occupied West Bank and Israel, making Jews and Arabs ride, henceforth, separate lines. The Palestinians using it are workers with jobs in Israel.

An American friend, Jane Rice, responded to this Israel action: “It’s so degrading! I found it ironic that it’s happening at the same time we’re celebrating Rosa Parks [a symbol of the American Civil Rights Movement] for her courage in defying the discrimination on [American] buses.”

 
 
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