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       US-Israel Strange but ‘Stable’ Alliance:  
	US Senate Await Israeli Instructions from AIPAC 
  By Ramzy 
	Baroud 
       Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 1, 2014
  
	
	  
	US Vice President, Joseph Biden, attending funeral of Israeli war 
	criminal Ariel Sharon 
	
	Congressmen grilling Chuck Hagel, during his confirmation, so he 
	announces his loyalty to Israel and retract every criticism to the policies 
	of the Zionist, Apartheid state. 
	***   Israel is often viewed by Washington politicians as the most 
	‘stable’ ally in the Middle East. But stability from the American 
	perspective can mean many things. Lead amongst them is that the ‘ally’ must 
	be unconditionally loyal to the diktats of the US administration. This rule 
	has proven to be true since the United States claimed a position of 
	ascendency, if not complete hegemony over many regions of the world since 
	World War II. Israel, however, remained an 
	exception.   The rules by which US-Israeli relations are 
	governed are perhaps the most bewildering of all foreign policies of any two 
	countries.   An illustration of this would be to consider these 
	comments by Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon quoted in the Israeli 
	news portal Ynetnews. “The American security plan presented to us is not 
	worth the paper it's written on,” he said, referring to efforts underway 
	since July by American Secretary of State John Kerry, “who turned up here 
	determined and acting out of misplaced obsession and messianic fervor.” 
	Kerry “cannot teach me anything about the conflict with the Palestinians,” 
	said Ya’alon.   So far, Kerry has made ten trips to the Middle East 
	with the intention of hammering out an agreement between Israel and the 
	Palestinian Authority (PA). Based on media reports, it seems that the 
	potential agreement is composed in such a way that it mostly accommodates 
	Israel’s ‘security’ whims and obsessions, including a proposal to keep 
	eastern West Bank regions and the Jordan Valley under Israeli military 
	control. In fact, there is growing interest in the idea of ‘land swaps” 
	which was floated by Israel’s notorious Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman 
	ten years ago.   “When Mr. Lieberman first proposed moving 
	Arab-populated Israeli towns near the present border into Palestine in 
	exchange for Jewish settlement blocs in the Palestinians’ West Bank being 
	incorporated into Israel, he was branded a racist firebrand,” wrote the 
	Economist on Jan. 18. “Liberals accused him of promoting the forcible 
	‘transfer’ plan, akin to ethnic cleansing, proclaimed by a rabbi, Meir 
	Kahane, who vilified Arabs while calling for a pure Jewish state.”   
	Those days are long gone, as Israeli society drifted rightward. “Even some 
	dovish Israeli left-wingers find such ideas reasonable.” Back then, the 
	Americans themselves were irked, even if just publically, whenever such 
	ideas of ‘population transfers’ and ethnic cleansing were presented by 
	Israel’s ultra-right politicians. Now, the Americans find them malleable and 
	a departure point for discussion. And it’s Kerry himself who is leading the 
	American efforts to accommodate Israel’s endless list of demands – of 
	security and racial exclusiveness even if at the expense of Palestinians. So 
	why is Ya’alon unhappy?   The Defense Minister, who sat immediately 
	next to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during talks with Kerry, was 
	unapologetic about his reasoning: “Only our continued presence in Judea and 
	Samaria and the River Jordan will endure.” It means unrelenting Israeli 
	military occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.   Netanyahu 
	is hardly an innocent bystander in all of this, although for diplomatic 
	reasons he often entrusts his government minions to deliver such messages. 
	The Prime Minister is busy issuing more orders to populate the occupied West 
	Bank with Jewish settlements, and berating every government that rejects 
	such insidious behavior as being anti-Israel, ‘pro-Palestinian’ or worse, 
	anti-Semitic. This was the case again in recent days following another 
	announcement of settlement expansion.   On Jan. 17, Netanyahu called 
	on Europe to stop its “hypocrisy”. On the same day, Israel’s foreign 
	ministry summoned the ambassadors of Britain, France, Italy and Spain, 
	“accusing their countries of pro-Palestinian bias,” reported the BBC online. 
	According to the ministry, the “perpetual one-sided stance” of these 
	countries is unacceptable.   Yet, considering that Europe has 
	supported Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territories for 
	decades, economically sustained the ‘Jewish state’ and its over 100 illegal 
	Jewish settlements, and continue with its often unconditional military 
	support of Israel, the accusations may appear strange and equally 
	bewildering to that of Ya’alon against John Kerry.   
	How could a country the size of Israel have so 
	much sway over the world’s greatest powers, where it gets what it wants and 
	more, hurls regular insults against its sustainers, and still asks for more? 
	  European countries found themselves in Israel’s firing line because a 
	day earlier, the four EU countries took the rare step of summoning Israeli 
	ambassadors to object to the Netanyahu government’s latest announcement of 
	illegal settlement expansion (that of an additional 1,400 new homes). EU 
	foreign policy Chief Catherine Ashton has even went to the extent of calling 
	the settlements “an obstacle to peace”, although hardly an advanced position 
	considering that Israel’s colonial project in Palestine has been in motion 
	for 46 years.   But even that is too much from the Israeli point of 
	view. “The EU calls our ambassadors in because of the construction of a few 
	houses?” Netanyahu asked as if baffled by a seemingly foreboding act, in a 
	Jan 16 press conference. He even had the audacity to say this: “This 
	imbalance and this bias against Israel doesn't advance peace,” and also 
	this, “I think it pushes peace further away because it tells the 
	Palestinians: 'Basically you can do anything you want, say anything you want 
	and you won't be held accountable.”   There is no sense in arguing 
	with Netanyahu’s strange logic, but the question regarding Israel’s 
	stronghold over the US and EU remains more pressing than ever, especially 
	when one considers the ruckus in US Congress. No, the congress is not 
	revolting because of the unmitigated power of the Zionist lobby, but for 
	something far more interesting.   There seems to be a level of 
	confusion in US Congress because members of the Senate are yet to feel 
	serious pressure by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) 
	over a bill that proposes more sanctions on Iran.   “The powerful 
	pro-Israel lobby has not engaged in a shoe-leather lobbying campaign to woo 
	wayward senators and push Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to 
	schedule a vote on the bill .. While the group supports the bill — authored 
	by Sens. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) — it is not yet 
	putting its political muscle behind a push for an immediate vote,” reported 
	Politico, citing key senators and their aides.   To say the least,
	it is disturbing that the US Senate is completely 
	bewildered that AIPAC, which lobbies for the interest of a foreign power, is 
	yet to provide its guidelines regarding the behavior of America’s 
	supposedly most respected political representatives.   
	“I don’t know where AIPAC is. I haven’t talked to 
	anybody,” said Senate Armed Services Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich.). “I don’t 
	know what they’re doing,” said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).   
	This alone should shed some light on the seemingly bewildering question of 
	the ‘strong bond’ and ‘stable’ alliance of Israel and the US – and to a 
	lesser degree EU countries. This is not to suggest that Israel has complete 
	dominance over US foreign policy in the Middle East, but to ignore Israel’s 
	indispensable role in shaping the outlook of US foreign policy is dishonest 
	and inconsistent with the facts, to put it mildly.    - Ramzy Baroud 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant and the 
	editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is “My Father Was a 
	Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London). 
	
  
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