Israel lobby urges Biden to ramp up attacks on college activists

Demonstrators hold a banner that says Students for Justice in Palestine

Israel lobby groups are counting on the Biden administration to continue advancing their agenda to shield Israel from criticism. (Joe Catron)

Leaders of major Israel advocacy groups in the US are calling on the incoming Biden administration to further suppress Palestinian rights activism on college campuses.

In a letter, sent on 12 January, they make no mention of the events six days prior when anti-Semitic extremists, white nationalists and other Trump supporters attacked the US Capitol Building.

Rather, the heads of the Anti-Defamation League, the Jewish Federations of North America, the American Jewish Committee and others representing dozens of members of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, praise the current and two former administrations and claim that “some anti-Israel activity is simply a modern form of anti-Semitism” – pointing squarely to Palestine solidarity activism on college campuses.

For their part, some of these same organizational leaders had separately expressed their dismay and horror at the blatant anti-Semites and their ilk who took part in the 6 January attack.

Attempting to shield Israel from criticism, lobby organizations have for years shifted the blame for violent acts of anti-Semitism by white supremacists toward defenders of Palestinian rights instead.

The habitual claim that the Palestine solidarity movement, particularly at universities, is a hotbed of anti-Semitism paved the way for the executive order issued by President Donald Trump in December 2019.

Trump’s order officially adopts the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) so-called definition of anti-Semitism, which conflates criticism of Israel with anti-Jewish bigotry.

The Conference of Presidents urge the Biden White House to “maintain and build upon” the recognition by the last three Presidents that “anti-Semitism on college campuses is a serious problem.”

But the claim that rampant anti-Jewish bigotry is related to college Palestine solidarity activism bears no proof, according to the Anti-Defamation League itself.

Still, Israel lobby groups continue to use these assertions in order to advance their agenda.

The Conference of Presidents offer their help to the incoming administration to implement the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism.

Additionally, they claim that the plan to implement the IHRA definition through the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, enjoys “widespread bipartisan support” in Congress.

Though that legislation has been stalled since 2018 amid free speech concerns, the former head of the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, Israel lobbyist Kenneth Marcus, unilaterally and extra-legally adopted the IHRA as policy in order to charge Palestine rights activists with ethnic discrimination against Jewish students.

Marcus’ move was a gift to Israel lobby groups that had been pushing the US government to use the definition to shield Israel from criticism on college campuses.

Protecting Israel

On Thursday, the Democratic Majority for Israel, the US Congress’ in-house lobby, echoed the calls for the Biden administration to adopt the IHRA definition.

The lawmakers’ group claimed that critics of the IHRA definition “are simply wrong on the facts,” adding that European countries that have already adopted the definition have not become “hotbeds of anti-speech activity.”

Here, DMFI overlooks the recent policies passed in Germany and France – two countries it cites – that have openly infringed on the rights of their citizens to criticize Israel and participate in the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign for Palestinian rights.

Meanwhile, human rights defenders are rejecting this latest attempt by Israel lobby groups to police students’ speech and smear Palestine solidarity activists as anti-Semites.

Jewish Voice for Peace called the Conference of Presidents’ letter “shameful.” The group has also set up an online petition to counter-pressure Biden, urging him to reject the IHRA definition.

Admonishing the letter, Yonah Lieberman of the progressive Jewish group IfNotNow said: “Generations of Jews will look back at the failure of these men to meaningfully fight anti-Semitism.”

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Comments

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Given the full front of Israel's attacks on our free speech, I am reminded of the adage that in order to find out who controls you, look for who you may not criticize.

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Norma cites the lobby's letter as holding up the Obama ad. as appropriately repressive of pro-Palestinian and therefore anti-Semitic speech. What I recall was "the lobby" naming Obama an enemy of Israel, Bibi actively campaigning for Romney in 2012 and addressing Congress at the behest of the GOP , in defiance of Obama's demands that Israel halt settlements and unrelenting provocations sabotaging his peace initiative. I'll say it again; what Obama attempted to do was definitely a recognition that "the conflict" IS the "touchstone" foreign policy issue of our age. He just couldn't do it alone. The Dems still aren't any better on that than the GOP is at remaining loyal to their oaths and I'd argue that the Dem's moral, ethical and strategic failure, to make Israel behave like a "normal country" is not unrelated the GOP coup.

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The Israel lobby in the United States would do well to avoid citing Germany and France as nations which enforce the IHRA diktat while claiming they do nothing to prejudice the rights of dissenting groups. As the article points out through a pair of hyperlinks, both Germany and France engage in the suppression of speech on behalf of Palestinian rights, deriving that authority from a quasi-legal adoption of the IHRA "definition". And going after U.S. students who organize on-campus events critical of Israel's apartheid regime, at a time when Nazis and their confederates- some carrying Israeli flags- storm the citadel of democracy, can't help but raise troubling questions. If the Lobby sincerely wants to fight rather than instrumentalize antisemitism, they're going to have to turn their attention to organizations that genuinely hate Jews and away from those that demand Americans stop supporting racism in the Middle East.

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I submitted a post wherein I referred to Nora as Norma. If it's posted, please correct that. Thank you!

Nora Barrows-Friedman

Nora Barrows-Friedman's picture

Nora Barrows-Friedman is a staff writer and associate editor at The Electronic Intifada, and is the author of In Our Power: US Students Organize for Justice in Palestine (Just World Books, 2014).