Jews Divided on Iran? Not Really (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 03/19/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/03/19/jews-divided-on-iran-j-street-tikkun-aipac/
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Worry over the threat of an Iranian nuclear weapon is one issue that
has long united the pro-Israel community. The strength of this
consensus, which is shared by the majority of Americans, is such that
the only real division is over whether it is advisable for Israel or
the West to strike Iran relatively soon or to wait a while for
crippling sanctions to force a diplomatic solution before force is
used. Some on the left continue to weakly argue that Iran doesn’t
want to build such a weapon or, alternatively, that a nuclear Iran
can be contained. But President Obama’s recent speech to the AIPAC
conference in which he reiterated his determination to stop Iran and
disavowed a containment strategy, demonstrated that such voices are
very much on the margins of public debate, let alone the Jewish
community.
However that didn’t stop the New York Times from running an article
today on the front page that claimed in the headline in the version
published online on Sunday afternoon “Pro-Israel Groups Differ on
Iran” (by Monday, the headline had been changed to read “Hawks Steer
Debate on How to Take on Iran”). But those readers eager to discover
which mainstream Jewish groups were taking a contrary position on
Iran were disappointed. The only organizations that the Times could
find to back up that headline were J Street and Tikkun. While the
former claims to be “pro-Israel” even the latter’s adherents do not
attempt to play that game. But however you wish to label them, the
idea that disagreement from these two left-wing outliers constitutes
any sort of a Jewish debate is comical. Perhaps only in the pages of
the New York Times or that of Tikkun itself, could a situation where
the opposition of groups as marginal as these be considered a serious
news story.
The article attempts to frame the debate as one between evangelical
Christians and “neocons” on the right and the peace faction on the
left represented by J Street and Tikkun. But there is, in fact, no
great division on the issue. It is true that conservatives are deeply
skeptical of President Obama’s promises on the issue and point out
that his actions have never matched the fierce rhetoric on the
subject that he has been spouting since even before he was elected
president. But the argument about whether Obama has done much on the
issue or if he will ultimately do anything at all is a very different
question than the one posed by the Times.
As even the Times noted, the only opposition to tough sanctions that
mandate an oil embargo on Iran came from the far left or the
isolationist far right. But to represent the views put forward by
Dennis Kucinich and Ron Paul as having anything but a miniscule
following in the country in general, let alone in the Jewish
community is an astonishing distortion.
As for J Street, while it once hoped to replace AIPAC as the voice of
American Jewry on Israel, that is an assertion that is not treated
seriously anywhere but in the pages of the Times. J Street’s
positions opposing Israeli measures of self-defense and refusal to
join the consensus on Iran has prevented it from achieving the
success it thought it would achieve. Congress pays little attention
to its attempt to bite AIPAC’s ankles on the issues and even
President Obama, whose cause it was set up to support against attacks
from the left, has deserted it. Obama’s speech to AIPAC made it clear
that, at least while he was running for re-election, he has ditched
the group’s agenda of pressure on Israel for the sake of a dead-in-
the-water peace process.
As for Tikkun, it is so far out of the mainstream that it makes J
Street look moderate. Tikkun isn’t merely a supporter of Israel’s
discredited Peace Now faction as is the case with J Street. It is a
home for those on the far left who oppose the state’s existence
altogether and back measures of economic warfare to bring it to its
knees.
The Times article framed J Street and Tikkun as representing a
sizable Jewish faction simply because the editorial slant of the
piece demanded it. To claim they represent anything but the far left
is absurd. Indeed, the piece’s conclusion contradicted both the lead
and the headline when it noted:
The harder line that Mr. Obama articulated also happens to be good
domestic politics, according to experts. The president’s statements,
they said, calmed the jitters of some Jewish voters about his support
for Israel and defused the effort of Republican presidential
candidates to use Iran as a wedge issue against him.
That is true. While the left hopes to buttress what it believes is
Obama’s true wish to stay out of a conflict on Iran, his tilt on the
issue shows that he knows there are very few votes, Jewish or non-
Jewish, to be won by sounding as soft on Iran as J Street and Tikkun
would like. The only real Jewish debate on the issue is strictly in
the imaginations of these extremists and their cheering section at
the Times.
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