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New Republic has fallen back on a familiar line of defense. After
conceding that there is a lobby and that it does have a lot of
influence, he argued that "the most important basis of American
support for Israel is not the lobby but the public's overwhelming
sympathy for Israel." In other words, AIPAC et al don't really matter
that much, and all those standing ovations on Capitol Hill were really
just a genuine reflection of public opinion. He also said that John
Mearsheimer and I believe the lobby exerts "total control" over U.S.
foreign policy, and that we claim groups in the lobby were solely
responsible for the invasion of Iraq.
To deal with the last claim first, this straw-man depiction of our
argument merely confirms once again that Chait has not in fact read
our book. I don't find that surprising, because a careful reading of the
book would reveal to him that we weren't anti-Israel or anti-Semitic,
had made none of the claims he accuses us of, and had in fact
amassed considerable evidence to support the far more nuanced
arguments that we did advance. And then he'd have to ponder the fact
that virtually everything The New Republic has ever published about
us was bogus. So I can easily see why he prefers to repeat the same
falsehoods and leave it at that.
But what of his more basic claim that the "special relationship"
between the United States and Israel is really a reflection of "the
public's overwhelming sympathy?" There are at least three big
problems with this assertion.
First, even if it were true that the public had "overwhelming
sympathy" for Israel, it does not immediately follow that United
States policy would necessarily follow suit. U.S. officials frequently
do things that a majority of Americans oppose, if they believe that
doing so is in the U.S. interest. A majority of Americans oppose
fighting on in Afghanistan, for example, yet the Obama
administration chose to escalate that war instead. Similarly, numerous
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