Monday, May 09, 2011

For whom does J Street lobby? For the Palestinian Authority, apparently

Jiki Leaks

When was the last time J Street lobbied for something distinctly "pro-Israel?" Sure, it supported the foreign aid bill, but that bill contained funds for both Israel and the Palestinians. Did it lobby Congress to urge the President to veto an anti-Israel UN resolution? Just the opposite. Did it lobby to impose sanctions against Iran? In 2009 it actually opposed sanctions. Did it want members of Congress to urge the Palestinians to stop their incitement against Israel? Nope, the congressional message was deemed too pro-Israel by J Street.

Now, the supposedly "pro-Israel" lobby agreed to take on the task of lobbying for the Palestinian Authority. Click above on the arrow above or here to see a video of the PA's Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) meeting with J Street's leadership and donors. According to The New York Times today: President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority beseeched a group of visiting American Jews on Sunday to urge Congress not to cut off hundreds of millions of dollars in aid as a result of his recent unity agreement with Hamas, the Islamist group that controls Gaza.“We need your help with Congress,” Mr. Abbas told the visitors from J Street, a group that calls itself pro-Israel and pro-peace.

Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of J Street, said he would “bring back to Washington the message that this may be the last opportunity with a Palestinian leader willing to say yes to peace with Israel.” He said he would urge the White House to offer a plan to create a Palestinian state based on the 1967 lines with agreed-upon land swaps and a request of Israel to pause West Bank settlement building for two to three months.


Read that last paragraph carefully. "The last opportunity." Ben-Ami said. He has spent his week in Israel warning that Israel had better give in to Palestinian demands -- or else. It's a message he also delivered to Reuters:

If Palestinians proceed with plans to seek U.N. General Assembly endorsement for statehood in September without agreeing the new state's borders with Israel, violence may ensue once it becomes clear that the conflict hasn't really ended, Ben-Ami said.

"Frustration will be higher," Ben-Ami said. Such sentiment "leads to explosions and all you need is one match on the tinder and we're very worried about what that leads to." He said Israel may itself face a global diplomatic "tsunami" including a stepped up drive for sanctions over its continued occupation of land captured in a 1967 war.

Ben-Ami dismisses the threats inherent in the new Fatah-Hamas reconciliation and Hamas joining Abbas' government. J Street issued a statement that despite the dangers of Hamas' new agreement with Abbas, "we also believe that no one should doubt that there are still very real opportunities available that should be explored, particularly since the dangers and risks of the status quo are so significant."

Today, "exploring" the opportunities of the pro-Bin Laden Hamas-Fatah agreement means determining whether Hamas' Jihad against Israel is a one-stage or a two-stage strategy for Israel's destruction and whether Hamas has thousands of rockets aimed at Israel from Gaza or tens of thousands.

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