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http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/07/20/israel/print.html

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Rendering public opinion irrelevant
How
are views that are held by large majorities of Americans on key
policy issues rendered forbidden in our political discourse?
Glenn Greenwald
Jul. 20, 2008 | One of the most striking aspects of our
political discourse, particularly during election time, is how
efficiently certain views that deviate from the elite consensus
are banished from sight -- simply prohibited -- even when
those views are held by the vast majority of citizens. The
University of Maryland's Program on International Policy
Attitudes -- the premiere organization for surveying
international public opinion -- released
a new survey a couple of weeks ago regarding public opinion
on the Israel-Palestinian conflict, including opinion among
American citizens, and this is what it found:
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of 18 countries finds that
in 14 of them people mostly say their government should not
take sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Just three
countries favor taking the Palestinian side (Egypt, Iran,
and Turkey) and one is divided (India). No country favors
taking Israel's side, including the United States, where
71 percent favor taking neither side.
The worldwide consensus is crystal clear -- citizens want their
Governments to be neutral and even-handed in the
Israel-Palestinian conflict, not tilted towards either side.
And that consensus is shared not just by a majority of American
citizens, but by the overwhelming majority. Few political
views, particularly on controversial issues, attract more than
70% support among American citizens. But the proposition that
the U.S. Government should be even-handed -- rather than tilting
towards Israel -- attracts that much support. That's not an
"anti-Israeli" view -- to the contrary, it's a position that
America can and should resolve that violent, four-decades-long
dispute by being even-handed rather than one-sided.
Similarly, when asked "How well do you think Israel is doing
its part in the effort to resolve the Israel-Palestinian
conflict," citizens around the world, by a large margin, believe
that Israel is doing either "not very well" or "not well at all"
(54% -- compared to 23% that say it's doing "very well" or
"somewhat well"). And there, too, that worldwide view
corresponds to American public opinion as well. 59% of Americans
say Israel is doing either "not very well" or "not well at all"
-- compared to only 30% that say it's doing "very well" or
"somewhat well." And Palestinians don't fare much better
worldwide (38-49%) and fare worse in the U.S. (15-75%).
Yet not only is the view of "even-handedness" completely
unrepresented among mainstream political figures in the U.S.,
it's deemed political death to go anywhere near expressing that
view. Back in 2003, then-presidential-candidate Howard Dean
expressed the exact position favored by an overwhelming
majority of Americans, yet triggered an intense and even ugly
controversy by doing so:
Dean's Israel troubles began at a Sept. 3 campaign event in
Santa Fe, N.M. When it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, he said that day, "It's not our place to take
sides." Then, on Sept. 9, he told the Washington Post that
America should be "evenhanded" in its approach to the
region.
That's all Dean said. It's a view held by more than 70% of
Americans. It ought to be completely uncontroversial -- if
anything, it ought to be that view that is deemed a
political piety. But what happened? This, according to an
excellent account of that "controversy" in Salon by
Michelle Goldberg:
The media and the Democratic establishment reacted as if
Dean had called Yasser Arafat a man of peace. On Sept. 10,
34 Democratic members of Congress, including House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, wrote Dean an open letter.
"American foreign policy has been -- and must continue to be
-- based on unequivocal support for Israel's right to exist
and to be free from terror . . ." they wrote. "It is
unacceptable for the U.S. to be 'evenhanded' on these
fundamental issues . . . This is not a time to be
sending mixed messages; on the contrary, in these difficult
times we must reaffirm our unyielding commitment to Israel's
survival and raise our voices against all forms of terrorism
and incitement."
The Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz reported that Dean had
badly damaged his own campaign. "Sources in the Jewish
community say that Dean has wrecked his chances of getting
significant contributions from Jews . . ." the paper wrote.
"Many believe Dean's statement will drive more Jews toward
Lieberman and Kerry, enabling Kerry to take the lead again."
Dean was roundly attacked by the political elite for uttering
"anti-Israel" comments, notwithstanding the fact that Dean is
married to a Jewish woman, raised his children as Jews, and,
most amazingly of all, had a campaign that was managed by Steve
Grossman, a former President of AIPAC. But no matter:
Dean had uttered a Forbidden Thought -- forbidden even though it
is embraced by the vast majority of Americans -- and thus
Grossman and Dean had to subject themselves to abject Apology
Rituals:
According to the Dean campaign, the uproar involved
semantics, not substance. "Here's what I think happened,"
says Grossman, Dean's campaign co-chair. "Howard made some
comments in someone's backyard in New Mexico that were
shorthand, if you will, for some of his Middle East views.
In the course of those remarks and some others in the
subsequent days, he used some language that gave people
consternation, and it was immediately jumped on by Joe
Lieberman and John Kerry that somehow Howard Dean was
breaking faith with this 55-year tradition of the United
States' special relationship with Israel, which is patently
absurd". . . .
If Dean's Israel position really puts him far out on the
left, it proves that not showing unequivocal support for the
Jewish state remains a political poison pill -- for members
of either political party. . . .
After all, according to Grossman, the candidate
remains in sync with the goals of Bush's Israel policy. . .
. No serious candidate took a position to the left of Bush.
Indeed, it's precisely because there's no real leftist
alternative that Dean's been cast in that role. . . . .
But a campaign is always more about images and impressions
than carefully formulated positions, and that's where Dean
has blundered.
It was conventional wisdom that that Dean had committed some
grave mistake even though, as The Nation's John Nichols
highlighted at the time, Dean was expressing the
overwhelming majority view even back in 2003:
More troubling is the condemnation by Pelosi and other party
leaders of even a hint of "evenhandedness." That smacks of
the old game of positioning Democrats to the right of the
Republicans on Middle East policy -- in a perceived contest
for Jewish-American votes and contributions. The problem
with this approach, as Middle East scholar Stephen Zunes
points out, is that "this suggests you cannot be firmly
committed to Israel and question [Israel's hawkish Prime
Minister] Ariel Sharon's policies. If that's where Democrats
put themselves, they don't leave room to debate Bush on the
issue." They'll also have a tougher time appealing to
American voters -- 73 percent of whom, according to a
recent University of Maryland poll, prefer that the United
States not take sides.
It's pretty extraordinary that in a democracy, the political
elite is able to render completely off-limits a view that the
vast majority of Americans support. They actually render
majority-held views unspeakable and then remove the issue
entirely from what is debated. No matter what one's views are,
there is no denying that our policy towards Israel is immensely
consequential for our country. Yet, by virtue of the fact that
presidential candidates are required to affirm essentially the
same orthodoxies, there's very little difference in their
positions towards Israel and therefore our current policy
approach towards Israel will simply not be part of anything that
is debated, even though most Americans overwhelmingly oppose
that course.
Indeed, as soon as he secured the Democratic nomination,
Barack
Obama made a pilgrimage to AIPAC in order to avoid the
"Howard Dean mistake" and to vow that there would be no such
debate over Israel in this election:
I have been proud to be a part of a strong, bi-partisan
consensus that has stood by Israel in the face of all
threats. That is a commitment that both John McCain and I
share, because support for Israel in this country goes
beyond party. . . .
And then there are those who would lay all of the
problems of the Middle East at the doorstep of Israel and
its supporters, as if the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is
the root of all trouble in the region. These voices blame
the Middle East's only democracy for the region's extremism.
They offer the false promise that abandoning a stalwart ally
is somehow the path to strength. It is not, it never has
been, and it never will be.
Our alliance is based on shared interests and shared
values. Those who threaten Israel threaten us. Israel has
always faced these threats on the front lines. And I will
bring to the White House an unshakeable commitment to
Israel's security.
That starts with ensuring Israel's qualitative military
advantage. I will ensure that Israel can defend itself from
any threat -- from Gaza to Tehran. Defense cooperation
between the United States and Israel is a model of success,
and must be deepened. As President, I will implement a
Memorandum of Understanding that provides $30 billion in
assistance to Israel over the next decade -- investments to
Israel's security that will not be tied to any other nation.
In fairness, Obama did attack what he called the "failed status
quo"; disputed that "America's recent foreign policy has made
Israel more secure"; and pointed to "eight years of accumulated
evidence that our foreign policy is dangerously flawed."
Moreover, Obama -- to his great credit -- spent the primary
season making some important and unorthodox points about
Palestinian suffering and pointing out that the President
should not be blindly supportive of everything Israel's
right-wing does, that being "pro-Israel" doesn't mean a
refusal to oppose Israeli actions.
But by uttering such Forbidden (though quite mainstream)
thoughts, Obama was mercilessly attacked as
anti-Israel and even anti-Semitic, and with the nomination
secured, the crux of his June AIPAC speech was an affirmation of
our political establishment's mandated Israel orthodoxy: the
continuation of America's one-sided alliance with Israel, as
highlighted by commitments such as this:
Finally, let there be no doubt: I will always keep the
threat of military action on the table to defend our
security and our ally Israel. Sometimes there are no
alternatives to confrontation. . . . That is the change we
need in our foreign policy. Change that restores American
power and influence. Change accompanied by a pledge that I
will make known to allies and adversaries alike: that
America maintains an unwavering friendship with Israel, and
an unshakeable commitment to its security. . . .
As members of AIPAC, you have helped advance this
bipartisan consensus to support and defend our ally Israel.
And I am sure that today on Capitol Hill you will be meeting
with members of Congress and spreading the word. But we are
here because of more than policy. We are here because the
values we hold dear are deeply embedded in the story of
Israel.
Again, the point has nothing to do with one's views of the best
policy towards Israel. The point is that a position which the
vast majority of Americans embrace is one that, simultaneously,
is forbidden to be expressed, and the election consequently will
involve no debate over that issue.
That profoundly anti-democratic dynamic is by no means
confined to Israel. That's just an example. A
different University of Maryland poll was released in April
of this year, which surveyed public opinion in Iran and the U.S.
regarding the disputes between those two countries. The
populations of both countries have strikingly similar views with
regard to those matters, with large majorities favoring the same
deal to resolve the dispute (Iran has the right to develop
nuclear energy accompanied by IAEA inspections to prevent
weaponization), and large majorities also favor the NPT's goal
of "eliminating all nuclear weapons." More strikingly,
the citizens of both countries overwhelmingly favor the same
policies of rapproachment and cooperation, rather than the
bluster, threats, and ongoing provocative acts engaged in by
both of their governments:


Remarkably, this desire for cooperation rather than
confrontation is the view of most Americans despite the
Iraq-level misinformation and propaganda which our political
elite has disseminated about Iran:

And while Iranian President Ahmadinejad is depicted by our
political class as the Equivalent of Adolf Hitler, savagely
oppressing Iranians as some sort of insane, vicious tyrant, that
isn't how they see it:

Iranian public opinion distinguishes between the U.S. Government
and the American people -- holding favorable views towards the
latter and unfavorable views towards the former ("some portrayed
the American people, like the Muslim people, as victims of the
American government") -- and to the extent there is
"anti-Americanism" in Iran, it is based on this widespread
assessment:

That, too, is a belief widely held in many places in the world,
yet is one that no mainstream politician in the U.S. could
express.
There are all sorts of reasons why our presidential elections
center on personality-based sideshows (even Washington Post
ombudsman Deborah Howell
said as much about her own paper's coverage today). Those
gossipy matters are easier for our slothful, vapid media stars
to digest and spout. They require very few resources to cover.
The campaign consultants who run national political campaigns
are experts in P.R. strategies for packaging personalities and
indifferent to policy debates, etc. etc.
But one principal reason is that so many of the Government's
most consequential actions are concealed behind a wall of
secrecy and thus not subject to public debate. Meanwhile, those
policies which are publicly disclosed are kept off-limits from
any real debate and, even when they are debated, public opinion
is almost completely marginalized in favor of the minority elite
consensus (see, for instance, the endless Iraq war even in the
face of long-standing, overwhelming support for its end).
That remarkable dynamic of debate-suppression is most
conspicuous -- and most urgent -- when the policies favored by
the political establishment are ones that are vigorously
rejected by the citizenry. Thus we have the extraordinary fact
that a policy that has long been favored by the vast majority of
Americans -- even-handedness in the Israel-Palestinian conflict
-- is one that no mainstream American politician of any national
significance can espouse without triggering an immediate end to
their political career. That discrepancy is a rather potent
commentary on how our democracy functions.
-- Glenn Greenwald
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