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April 8, 2015
Jews Downgraded
"Why did Obama send a lowly vice-presidential adviser to inform American Jewish leadership about his Iran deal?" asks writer Lee Smith, below.
Maybe for the same reason it sent National Security Adviser Susan Rice to speak at the AIPAC conference just days after she publicly blasted Israeli PM Netanyahu for his upcoming address to Congress. Ms. Rice, you see, was sent because President Obama, VP Biden, and Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter had suddenly become unavailable.
American Jewry's influence in Washington, DC has been "downgraded" (see below). No surprise, as American Jewry’s blind loyalty to the Democratic Party is legendary.
An overwhelming majority of American Jews self-identify as "Liberals" and for them, "Liberalism" trumps all. Given the choice between a nuclear-armed Iran and ruffling Mr. Obama's feathers, the overwhelming majority will likely support Obama, Israel be damned.
The problem is that while most American Jewish voters may be stuck in a time warp of 70 years ago, the Democratic Party of yesteryear is not the Democratic Party of today. The Democratic Party of today – which includes the Congressional Black Caucus (a Democrats-only club) - couldn't care less about Israel, beyond empty rhetoric and gestures.
Remember the Israel-bashing signs at the recent Ferguson riots? What did Israel have to do with Ferguson, Missouri? NOTHING, of course, but when rabid Jew/Israel-haters such as the Nation of Islam, Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), et al are involved, as they were in Ferguson, why let an Israel/Jew-bashing opportunity go to waste?
So here we are today, with the Democratic Party and its leader, President Obama, having told Israel and American Jewry essentially to take a hike. If we make it through the next 2 years, will American Jewry's voting habits change in any meaningful way?
American Jews, like other minority constituencies, would be much better served if they reserved their support and vote for the political party that delivered on their particular/unique concerns.
And today, the #1 concern for all Americans is (or should be) national security, for without security little else matters. The world is currently undergoing realignment, with traditional alliances shifting, in most cases for the worst. That can be chalked up to a Commander-in-Chief whose foreign policy/national security blunders will no doubt go down in the history books, but we digress...
The point is that whatever is good (or bad) for US national security will likely be good (or bad) for Israel's security, if for no other reason than both countries share common values – of freedom, human rights, democracy and the Rule of Law – and face common threats, and for the most part have been there for each other in times of need.
As we have said repeatedly over the years, there is NOTHING ideological about national security, which is why we (NSR) shun political/ideological labels. There are things that make sense and things that don't, and a basic knowledge and understanding of world history/world affairs help in seeing the difference between the two.
Tablet Magazine | April 8, 2015
Honey, I Shrunk the Jews!
Why did Obama send a lowly vice-presidential adviser to inform American Jewish leadership about his Iran deal?
By Lee Smith
Almost as soon as the White House reached the nuclear framework agreement with Iran, it began sending out senior administration officials to brief domestic allies and rivals in order to sell the deal. The president himself called Speaker of the House John Boehner, while National Security Adviser Susan Rice and U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power got other legislators on the phone. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz made the administration’s case for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Agreement over the weekend on the Sunday talk shows. Guess who didn’t get briefed.
Well, not exactly. Key Jewish community leaders did get a briefing—not from the president or the secretary of state or the national security adviser, but from Joe Biden’s National Security Adviser Colin Kahl. One participant told CNN that the call went smoothly. “There were definitely pointed questions,” said the source, “but it was very respectful.”
Maybe CNN’s source was biting his tongue, or perhaps he just doesn’t get the joke. Kahl was the administration official who removed the recognition of Jerusalem as capital of Israel from the 2012 Democratic platform. And it was as a scholar at the Washington, D.C.-based think tank Center for New American Security that Kahl floated a 2013 trial balloon hinting that the administration’s policy was, contrary to President Barack Obama’s promises, not prevention of an Iranian nuclear bomb but containment and deterrence of it. As it turns out, this was the exact same policy Kahl outlined to American Jewish leaders last week, in what amounts in policy circles to a victory lap.
It’s a pretty nasty joke the White House played. But even if Kahl didn’t have a long personal history as the administration’s point man on the downgrade Israel beat, the fact that Obama sent the vice president’s aide to brief Jewish leaders on an issue of vital concern to them suggests how little the commander in chief now respects or fears the power of a community he once courted so assiduously. For instance, there was the famous 2009 conference call during which he told a gathering of community leaders that it was in the best interests of Israel as well as the United States to put some “daylight” between the White House and Jerusalem. Having been warned nearly six years ago, in person, it should hardly come as a surprise to those same American Jewish leaders that it’s now daytime.
The vanishing political import of the American Jewish community appears to have taken least some of its leaders—used to Oval Office sit-downs and plenty of concerned hand-holding—by surprise. But you can bet it didn’t take Obama six years to comprehend the political import of James Baker’s famous observation about the Jewish community’s voting patterns. If, as the former secretary of state once said, “F— the Jews; they don’t vote for us anyway,” Obama saw the flip-side of Baker’s crude insight: The president could stick it to the Jews, since they’d vote for Democrats no matter what.
Obama was able to hammer away at AIPAC and the pro-Israel lobby largely because the liberal segments of the Jewish community found it convenient to believe that Obama’s target was just Benjamin Netanyahu, the stubborn and arrogant right-wing prime minister who drove decent people crazy. Sure, Bibi speaks proper English and went to MIT. But he built housing in settlements, he didn’t end the occupation, he stopped pretending to negotiate with a partner who also stopped being willing to pretend to negotiate, and then he made public his disagreement about Obama’s Iran deal, and spoke to Congress, to boot. Whatever stresses existed in the American-Israeli relationship were clearly Bibi’s fault. If he stopped being such a jerk, then good American Jewish liberals like themselves would all be eating latkes in the White House again.
What these community leaders seemed not to have fully understood is that American Jewish political power is linked not just to the financial power of Jewish donors or the influence of Jewish voters in a few key cities but more fundamentally to the strategic importance of the American-Israel relationship. What they certainly did not see is that tension with Bibi served Obama very nicely in a much bigger strategic move, which was the main aim of Obama’s Middle East policy since 2009: namely, to downgrade the U.S. alliance with Israel in order to make room for America’s new can-do regional partner, Iran.
The hardly coincidental byproduct of Obama’s dramatic and far-reaching Middle East realignment is that the American Jewish community is getting a down-grade. The irony of course is that the more distance the American Jewish community puts between themselves and the Jewish national homeland, the less they matter to anybody on either side of the American political divide or in Israel. That’s just basic political math. The fact that the American Jewish community flunked its political math test is why the White House sent Colin Kahl to deal with Jewish community leaders—as far as Obama is concerned, it’s addition by subtraction.
Original article here.
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Notable Quotables
"Mr. Netanyahu is one of the most media-savvy politicians on the planet. On Friday he appeared live via video link on 'Real Time with Bill Maher,' taking the host’s alternately sardonic and serious line of questioning with gazelle-like alacrity."
~ Anthony Grant, jourrnalist who has written for many major newspapers and worked in television at Paris and Tel Aviv, interviewing former PM Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, at the outset of Mr. Netanyahu's new book (more here).
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