White House hopefuls
side with Israel
by James J. Zogby
During the past
decade, the end of the Cold War, the Palestinian intifada, the Gulf War and the Middle
East peace process have all combined to change both the context of the Middle East policy
debate in the United States and the way most candidates address Middle East issues. There
are, of course, still those who are not serious. For example, at a recent Republican
presidential debate, a reporter asked candidate Gary Bauer, As president, where
would peace in the Middle East rank in your list of priorities? Do you support a
Palestinian state? And what would you do to insure the safety and security of both Arabs
and Jews?
Bauer answered: Well, a Middle Eastern settlement is extremely important from the
standpoint of the United States and from the standpoint of the world. But Ill tell
you what I will not do and that is do what this administration has done for the last seven
years and that is browbeat the state of Israel, our most reliable friend and ally, to give
up more land for security. We all know what the map looks like: this little sliver
of a democratic nation in the middle of the Middle East surrounded by hostile powers, much
larger than them. And its the little sliver of a democracy thats being told
its got to trade land for peace. I believe Israel has been our only reliable
ally. I would stand with them. I would make sure that their security was safe and that the
relationship between the two of us prospered. And I would begin to put some pressure on
those other countries in the Middle East that rely on us to be their defense, their safety
net. That if they want to be our ally, then they need to be friends with Israel, our major
ally in the region.
That answer, and the fact that Bauer was not challenged by any other candidate on the
stage, made it clear that it is still possible to pander and promote an anti-peace agenda
and get away with it despite the changes that have taken place in the Middle East, the
changes in US perceptions of the region, and the peace policies pursued by the past three
administrations. In part, this is due to a growing partisan split resulting from the role
that the religious right and old Cold War neo-conservatives are playing in shaping
Republican attitudes on Middle East issues. This split can be seen in the treatment given
by the candidates to a number of critical Middle East issues.
Jerusalem. Israel has long claimed Jerusalem as its capital. Official US policy,
dictated by both national interests and international law, does not recognize this claim
and has, therefore, refused to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
Nevertheless, both the Republican and Democratic parties platforms continue to call
for such a move or at least call for recognizing Israels claim to the city. Some
political observers have become quite cynical about the fact that in the past, the very
candidates who have proposed moving the embassy, once elected, adopt the long-standing US
policy of refusing to make such a move.
One noteworthy example of this was Ronald Reagan who, by any measure, was a strong
supporter of Israel and had repeatedly promised to recognize the Jewish states claim
to Jerusalem. When Congress attempted to force Reagans hand with legislation on
Jerusalem in 1984, the president threatened to veto. He won. With the advent of the Middle
East peace process, a new obstacle was placed in the way of an embassy move. Israel and
the PLO agreed in the Oslo Accords to defer any action on Jerusalem until the final-status
talks of their negotiations. They also agreed that neither party would take any unilateral
steps that might predetermine the outcome of these final status questions, including
Jerusalem. It was, therefore, quite disturbing that in 1995, the Republican-led Congress
forced the hand of the Clinton administration by passing (with a veto-proof margin)
legislation requiring US recognition of Jerusalem as Israels capital and mandating a
move of the US Embassy by 1999. Clinton had used a national-security waiver provision in
the legislation to delay implementation of this move.
Reflecting the partisan split on this and other Middle East issues, the leading proponent
and sponsor of the 1995 embassy bill was Senator Robert Dole. Dole attempted to use this
issue, without success, against Clinton during their 1996 presidential campaign. In the
2000 contest, the partisan rift continues. In recent remarks made mostly before
conservative Jewish groups (although John McCain, characteristically, addressed the same
remarks to an Arab-American audience) every Republican candidate has promised to make the
embassy move a priority for his administration. One, without thinking of the implications,
responded to a trick question by promising to move Israels US Embassy to East
Jerusalem! George W. Bush, apparently repudiating his fathers position that
Jerusalem was occupied territory which was subject to negotiations, has offered some
contradictory views on the subject. On two occasions when asked if he would move the
embassy, he seemed to indicate that he would not since it might screw up the peace
process. An official campaign spokesperson later clarified Bushs
remarks, saying that what he really meant was that he intends to set the
process in motion as soon as he becomes president. On another occasion, Bush himself
stated that he would move the embassy to Jerusalem and that he recognized Jerusalem as the
undivided and eternal capital of Israel. The other Republican contenders have
said the same.
On the Democratic side, on the other hand, candidates Al Gore and Bill Bradley, while
having established strong pro-Israel records during their Senate careers, have taken more
cautious stands. In a policy statement, Bradley states: As a practical matter, each
country designates its own capital. For this reason, I believe the United States should
move its embassy to Israel to Jerusalem. The move should, however, be timed so as not to
disrupt peace negotiations.
Gore has been careful to support the administrations position in the peace process.
A spokesman summarized Gores position as the following: He believes that the
status of Jerusalem is among the issues the two parities will resolve in direct
negotiations and that it would not be helpful to the peace process for the US
administration to prejudge the final-status issues. Moreover, while speaking to
pro-Israel audiences, Gore has not mentioned Jerusalem or the claim that it is
Israels eternal and undivided capital. Recently Gore was asked during a
December 1999 visit to Brooklyns Orthodox community about the embassy and the
question of Jerusalem. He replied that Israel itself had asked the United States not to
take actions that would damage Americas role as a peace facilitator and the future
status of Jerusalem must be resolved only by the negotiating parties, Israel and the
Palestinian Authority. Pressure. Another area where Republicans have taken issue
with the policy of the Democratic administration is a mirror reflection of the 1992
criticism which Democrats, then led by Bill Clinton, offered of the Bush administration.
At that time, it was George Bush and Secretary of State James Baker who led the Middle
East peace effort and had used pressure to help Israel decide to move the process forward.
Many believe that the appearance of US displeasure with the Yitzak Shamir-led Likud
government helped the Labor government of Yitzhak Rabin win in 1992. The ability of a
government to maintain strong and friendly ties with the United States is a key issue in
internal Israeli politics.
In 1992, Clinton, who actually agreed on most matters of Middle East policy with the Bush
administration, made the Republicans use of pressure on Israel an issue
in the campaign. As president, Clinton pledged that he would not publicly pressure Israel
to make decisions in the peace process. However, the presidents subtle but quite
real use of pressure against the Netanyahu government was successful in getting the
Israelis to agree to negotiate and come to an agreement with the Palestinians. When the
Netanyahu government would not honor that agreement, the US administrations clear
signs of displeasure, like the actions of Bush and Baker in 1992, helped Israelis see the
need to change governments in 1999. It is therefore ironic that this year Republicans are
challenging the Democratic president for being too tough on Israel. George W. Bush stated
that a lasting peace will not happen if our government tries to make Israel conform
to our vision of national security. McCain offers his own criticism: I will
never ask Israel to sacrifice tangible land in exchange for intangible promises. And I
will never ask them to finalize any peace accord until all the provisions of Oslo and
subsequent agreements have been met. For too long, the nation of Israel has bargained in
good faith but received little in return. Steve Forbes is even more direct (and, in
some ways, bizarre) in his criticism of the Clinton administration. After meeting
Netanyahu, Forbes praised him for standing up to outside forces (presumably
the US government) demanding Israeli concessions to gain a peace agreement with the
Palestinians. That means Israel cannot make one-sided concessions, he said,
because that just feeds the intransigence of the other side. During a
televised debate, Forbes went on to say the following: As president, Im not
going to twist Israeli arms to get a false peace.
Iraq. If there is one area where a near consensus exists amongst the candidates of
both parties, it is in the general approach they would take toward Iraq. The Clinton
administration inherited the Iraq dilemma from the Bush administration. The contours of
this problem are defined by a number of factors: a defiant regime in Baghdad; an unstable
situation within Iraq with a no-fly zone protecting a Kurdish population in the north and
another no-fly zone operation in the south which is dominated by an equally restive and
often oppressed Shiite population; a critical situation for US allies in the Gulf who
worry about the instability and volatility created by the continuing standoff; and a
devastating sanctions policy that is blamed for severe hardships and deaths of over 1
million Iraqis and which has inflamed anti-US sentiment in the entire region. With the
Iraqi regime rejecting continuation of the international arms-inspection program and
maintaining its defiant posture with regard to fulfillment of other UN-imposed
obligations, hard-liners in Congress passed, and the Clinton administration endorsed, an
act requiring the United States to support the overthrow of the government in Baghdad. The
Iraqi opposition in exile, the beneficiary of the Iraq Liberation Act, is, by all
accounts, incapable of overthrowing the regime. And US allies in the Middle East worry
about continued US support for such an ineffective effort. Nevertheless, because of
pressure emanating from Republican hard-liners, from pro-Israel activists and others,
there is very little incentive for candidates from either party to deviate from existing
policy, except to push in a more hard-line direction.
Where there are differences, they are in emphasis. Gore articulates the
administrations position and attempts to cast it in a positive light. Regime
change, as the current US policy has come to be termed, is supported by Gore as is
continuation of the sanctions policy. For example, Gore has repeatedly emphasized that the
US conflict with Iraq does not involve the Iraqi people. He maintains that the United
States has always supported the humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people and is
willing to look at ways to improve the effectiveness of the humanitarian programs in
Iraq, including lifting current ceilings which can be used to purchase food and
medicine. Gore adds that he even looked forward to the day when we have peace
between the United States and Iraq.
Bradley has not yet articulated a fully developed Iraq policy. He has, on a few occasions,
been forced to explain his opposition to the 1991 resolution to empower the Bush
administration to use force to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. In his only statement on Iraq
policy, Bradley Sates: Saddam Hussein continues to be a threat to his own people and
to his neighbors. In 1990, he invaded an Arab country, Kuwait, and he continues to try to
develop the capability to intimidate his Arab neighbors in defiance of the entire
international community. Until the threat ends, the international community must continue
its sanctions, while working harder to ensure that the proceeds from the sale of oil
permitted under the United Nations resolutions go to help the people of Iraq, not continue
to prop up Saddam and finance his weapons programs.
The Republican candidates have taken a characteristically tougher approach while basically
agreeing with existing policy. Bush has indicated that he intends to take a hard line in
dealing with Iraq. According to Bush, he would not ease sanctions and would not negotiate
with Saddam but would help opposition groups to overthrow him and he make sure that the
Iraqi leader lived up to agreements he signed in the early 1990s. McCain has advocated a
comprehensive overhaul of US national security with a rogue state rollback
policy to deal with countries such as Iraq and North Korea. McCain supports the Iraq
Liberation Act and providing the Iraqi opposition with the means to overthrow Saddam. He
does not believe UN sanctions should be lifted. Forbes advocates tough measures to
end Saddam Husseins reign of terror with a comprehensive strategy to remove
Saddam from power. In February 1998, Forbes outlined a plan to overthrow Saddam. It
included lifting sanctions and bans on the sale of oil in areas freed from Saddams
control and US military assistance in the region to help protect a new Iraqi government.
What emerges is that with regard to the most perplexing and stubborn issue facing US
policy, the candidates are in basic agreement. They present no new ideas, but largely seek
a continuation of the complex and, at times, contradictory policy of sanctions and
containment and regime change that has yielded little result in the past 10
years. What is clear is that these issues and the positions of the candidates on critical
Middle East policy questions should be the subject of greater public debate and press
scrutiny. With the peace process at a critical stage, with the security of important US
allies and interests at risk in the Gulf, with the expectations that the United States
will continue to have a significant involvement in the region, critical issues of Middle
East policy cannot be ignored.
There is growing alienation from the United States developing in many sections of Arab
public opinion today . The persistence of a perceived US double standard in its policy
toward the region should be a matter of concern for those who seek to shape US policy
during the next four years. Worn-out cliches, pandering and dangerous and provocative
posturing will not do.
James J. Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute, wrote this article for The
Daily Star