By James Jones and Peter
Oborne
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
By James Jones and Peter
Oborne
In 2007 two US
academics, John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, published a study of
what they called the US Israel lobby, exploring in particular the connection
between the domestic power of the lobby in the United
States and US foreign policy. The book caused
controversy in the United States
and even in Britain.
No comparable study has ever been made in this country.
Indeed the pro-Israel lobby is an almost completely unexplored topic. In 2002 The New Statesman ran a cover story “A Kosher Conspiracy?” in which Dennis Sewell examined the groups and individuals which comprise the pro-Israel lobby. Sewell cited instances of journalists being pressured and even being accused of antisemitism, but concluded: " the truth is that the "Zionist lobby does exist, but is a clueless bunch." The very mild piece involved little investigation and, if anything, played down the influence of the groups. There was a very strong reaction to the story and to the front cover depicting a gold Star of David piercing a British flag. The magazine was denounced as being guilty of the “new anti-Semitism”. A group of activists calling themselves Action Against Anti-Semitism marched into the magazine's offices demanding it print an apology.
Indeed the pro-Israel lobby is an almost completely unexplored topic. In 2002 The New Statesman ran a cover story “A Kosher Conspiracy?” in which Dennis Sewell examined the groups and individuals which comprise the pro-Israel lobby. Sewell cited instances of journalists being pressured and even being accused of antisemitism, but concluded: " the truth is that the "Zionist lobby does exist, but is a clueless bunch." The very mild piece involved little investigation and, if anything, played down the influence of the groups. There was a very strong reaction to the story and to the front cover depicting a gold Star of David piercing a British flag. The magazine was denounced as being guilty of the “new anti-Semitism”. A group of activists calling themselves Action Against Anti-Semitism marched into the magazine's offices demanding it print an apology.
This year’s event took
place in June, with the main speech by Tory leader David Cameron and shadow
foreign secretary William Hague in attendance. The dominant event of the previous
twelve months had been the Israeli invasion of Gaza at the start of the year. So I examined
Cameron’s speech with curiosity to see how he would handle that recent
catastrophe.
I was shocked to see that
Cameron made no reference at all to the invasion of Gaza,
the massive destruction it caused, or the 1,3701 deaths that had resulted.
Indeed, Cameron went out of his way to praise Israel because it “strives to protect
innocent life”.
I found it impossible to
reconcile the remarks made by the young Conservative leader
with the numerous reports of human rights abuses in Gaza. Afterwards I said as much to some Tory MPs.
They looked at me as if I was distressingly naive, drawing my attention to the
very large number of Tory donors in the audience.
But it cannot be forgotten
that so many people died in Gaza
at the start of this year. To allow this terrible subject to pass by without
comment suggested a failure of common humanity and decency on the part of a man
most people regard as the next prime minister. To praise Israel at the same time for protecting human
life showed not merely a fundamental failure of respect for the truth but also
it gives the perception, rightly or wrongly, of support for the wretched events
which took place in Gaza.
That is not to condone or
excuse the abhorrent actions of Hamas, but to overlook Israel’s
culpability is undoubtedly partisan.
It is impossible to imagine
any British political leader showing such equanimity and
tolerance if British troops had committed even a fraction
of the human rights abuses and war crimes of which Israel has been accused. So that
weekend, in my weekly Daily Mail political column, I criticized Cameron’s speech
to the CFI, drawing attention to his failure to mention Gaza and his speaking
of Israeli respect for the sanctity of human life. Soon I received a letter
from Stuart Polak, the longstanding CFI director: “Peter, the snapshot of our
lunch concentrating on the businessmen and David’s alleged comments was really
unhelpful.” The CFI political director, Robert Halfon, wrote saying that my
letter was ‘astonishing’ and accusing me of making a ‘moral equivalence’
between Israel and Iran. I wrote
back to them citing a number of reports by international organizations such as
Amnesty International highlighting breaches of codes by the Israeli army.
I resolved then to ask the
question: what led David Cameron to behave in the way he did
at the CFI lunch at the Dorchester Hotel last June? What are the rules of
British political behaviour which cause the Tory Party leader and his mass of
MPs and parliamentary candidates to flock to the Friends of Israel lunch in the
year of the Gaza
invasion? And what are the rules of media discourse that ensure that such an
event passes without notice?
On a personal note I should
say that I have known both Stuart Polak and Robert Halfon for many years and
always found them fair-minded and straightforward to deal with. Indeed in the summer
of 2007 I went on a CFI trip to Israel
led by Stuart Polak. No pressure was put on me, at the time or later, to write anything
in favour of Israel.
The trip, which was paid for by the CFI, certainly enabled me to understand
much better the Israeli point of view. But we were presented with a very full
spectrum of Israeli intellectual and political life, ranging from disturbingly far
right pro-settler MPs to liberal intellectuals consumed with doubt about the
morality of the Zionist state. The trip was also balanced to a certain extent
by a meeting with a leading Palestinian businessman and with the British consul
in East Jerusalem.
Nevertheless, the job of a
political journalist is to try and explain how politics works.
Ten years ago I exposed, in an article for The Spectator headlined “The man who owns the
Tory Party”, the fact that
the controversial offshore financier Michael Ashcroft was
personally responsible for the financial survival of William Hague’s
Conservatives. I asked howlegitimate Michael Ashcroft’s
contribution was, how much he spent, and did my best to
investigate how he used his influence.
Now I want to ask a
question that has never been seriously addressed in the mainstream
press: is there a Pro-Israel lobby in Britain, what does it do and what
influence does it wield?
The pro-Israel lobby, in
common with other lobbies, has every right to operate in Britain. But it
needs to be far more open about how it is funded and what it does. This is
partly because the present obscurity surrounding the funding arrangements and
activities of organisations such as BICOM and the CFI can
paradoxically give rise to conspiracy theories that have no basis in fact. But
it is mainly because politics in a democracy should never take place behind
closed doors. It should be out in the open and there for all to see.lby, felt
the need to apologise: "We (or more precisely, I) got it wrong...[we] used
images and words in such a way as to create unwittingly the impression that the
New Statesman was following an antisemitic tradition that sees the Jews as a conspiracy piercing the
heart of the nation." Since this time no national publication has
attempted to investigate the pro-Israel lobby head-on.
Making criticisms of Israel
can give rise to accusations of
antisemitism - a charge
which any decent or reasonable person would assiduously seek to avoid.
Furthermore most British newspaper groups – for example News International,
Telegraph newspapers and the Express Group - have tended to take a pro-Israel
line and have not always been an hospitable environment for those taking a
critical look at Israeli foreign policy and influence. Finally, media critics
of Israeli foreign policy – as we will vividly demonstrate in this pamphlet –
can open themselves up to coordinated campaigns and denunciation.
Whether as a result of
these pressures or for some other reason, mainstream political publishing in Britain tends
simply to ignore Israeli influence. Andrew Marr’s Ruling Britannia: The Failure and Future
of British Democracy contains not a single
mention at all of either Israel
or the Israel
lobby. Nor does the Alan Clark’s The Tories, or
Robert Blake’s The Conservative
Party from Peel to Major.
Similarly the presence of
an Israel
lobby as a factor in British public life is systematically
ignored in British reporting. For example, a search of the newspaper database
Lexis Nexis showed there have been only 154 mentions of the Conservative Friends
of Israel in the British press, the first of which was apparently on 22
September 1985. By contrast The Tobacco Manufacturers Association enjoyed 1,083
citations during the same period, and the Scotch Whisky Association no fewer
than 2,895. The Conservative Party donor Michael Ashcroft has been the subject
of 2,239 articles over the comparable time period, and the 1922 Committee of
Tory backbenchers got over 3,000.
The purpose of this
pamphlet is to enquire whether this paucity of public coverage is indeed a
reflection of the real influence of the pro-Israel lobby in British government.
In our voyage of discovery we have interviewed MPs, leading Jewish intellectuals
and academics, diplomats, newspaper editors and others.
However, many people just
don’t want to speak out about the Israel lobby. So making our film at
times felt like an impossible task. Privately we would be met with great
enthusiasm and support. Everyone had a story to tell, it seemed. Once the subject
of doing an interview was raised the tone changed; “Anything at all I can do to
help…” quickly became “Well, obviously I couldn’t.” or “It wouldn’t
be appropriate for me to.”
Many people who privately
voiced concerns about the influence of the lobby simply felt they had too much
to lose by confronting it. One national newspaper editor told us, “that’s one
lobby I’ve never dared to take on.” From MPs, to senior BBC journalists and
representatives of Britain’s
largest charities, the pattern became depressingly familiar. Material would
come flooding out on the phone or in a meeting, but then days later an email
would arrive to say that they would not be able to take part. Either after
consultation with colleagues or consideration of the potential consequences,
people pulled out. Some had more reason than others. Jonathan Dimbleby had boldly
expressed criticism in a powerfully argued article for Index on Censorship of the pressure from pro-Israel groups on the
BBC, which led to the BBC Trust’s report on Jeremy Bowen, and had initially
been keen to be involved. Suddenly his interest evaporated. There simply wasn’t
the time, he said. At first we felt baffled and let down. But in due course we discovered
that his comments had brought a complaint from the very same lawyer, Jonathan
Turner of the Zionist Federation, that had complained about Jeremy Bowen.
Dimbleby is now going through the exact same complaints process that he criticized.
Turner is arguing that Dimbleby’s comments make him unfit to host the BBC’s Any
Questions. The Dimbleby experience serves as a cautionary tale for anyone
approaching this subject. Others, such as Sir John Tusa, who had opposed the BBC’s
refusal to broadcast the Disasters Emergency Committee Gaza appeal, were
overcome with modesty, feeling that they simply didn’t have the expertise to
tackle the subject.
Indeed we found it almost
impossible to get anyone to come on the record when we tried
to investigate the BBC’s decision not to launch the Gaza humanitarian appeal. Here is a list of
the organisations which told us that to speak publicly about the BBC’s refusal
to screen the DEC Gaza appeal would be too sensitive: the Disasters Emergency
Committee, Amnesty, Oxfam, Christian Aid, Save the Children Fund and the
Catholic agency CAFOD. Only one of the organisations involved in lobbying on
behalf of Israel,
the Britain Israel Research and Communications Centre (BICOM), were willing to
put forward an interviewee.
It was equally hard to find
a publisher for this pamphlet. One potential publisher told us: “I don’t think
that our donors would like this very much.” Another fretted that his charitable status would be compromised.
One MP taunted the authors that we would never “have the guts” to make a
television programme about the pro-Israel lobby. It was, he told us, “the most
powerful lobby by far in parliament. It’s a big story. If you have any balls you’ll
make a programme about it.” When we returned to the MP later on to ask if he
would talk to us on the record, he felt unable to come forward and do so. One
front bench Conservative MP was so paranoid he insisted we remove the battery
from our mobile phones to ensure our privacy during the conversation.
It was only senior MPs
whose careers are winding down that felt able to voice what
many MPs told us in private. One of them, Michael Mates, a member of the
Intelligence and Security Committee and former Northern Ireland minister, told us
on the record that “the pro-Israel lobby in our body politic is the most powerful
political lobby. There’s nothing to touch them.” Mates added: “I think their
lobbying is done very discreetly, in very high places, which may be why it is
so effective.”
Some journalists we spoke
to had been accused of antisemitism, and felt inevitably it had done some
damage to their careers. Others, like
the BBC’s Orla Guerin, against whom this very serious and damaging charge has
repeatedly been made by the Israeli government, wouldn’t even talk to us off
the record. It is easy enough to see why. Guerin is a brave, honest and
compassionate reporter. Yet the Israeli government has repeatedly complained to
the BBC that Guerin is “antisemitic” and showed “total identification with the
goals and methods of Palestinian terror groups.” On one occasion, in an
appalling charge, they linked her reporting from the Middle East to the rise of
antisemitic incidents in Britain.5 When Guerin was based in
the Middle East in 2004, she filed a report about a sixteen year-old
Palestinian would-be suicide bomber. Guerin said in the report that “this is a
picture that Israel
wants the world to see”, implying the Israelis were exploiting the boy for propaganda
purposes. Natan Sharansky, a cabinet minister at the time, wrote a formal
letter to the BBC accusing her of “such a gross double standards to the Jewish
state, it is difficult to see Ms Guerin's report as anything but antisemitic”.
The following year, when Guerin was awarded with an MBE for her reporting, Sharansky
said: "It is very sad that something as important as antisemitism is not
taken into consideration when issuing this award, especially in Britain where
the incidents of anti-Semitism are on the rise." 6 Officially sanctioned smears like this show why so many people shy
away from confronting the influence of the Israel lobby.
The former Conservative
Party chairman and shadow foreign secretary, Michael Ancram, who is standing
down as an MP at the next general election, did have the courage to talk to us.
He told us that he had been accused of antisemitism “because I’ve been talking
to Hamas and Hezbollah. I just take that with a pinch of salt.” The accusation
of antisemitism even touches the least likely of people. Antony Lerman, a man
steeped in Jewish culture and history, who has worked for much of his career combating
antisemitism, was labelled “a nasty anti-Semite” on a website designed to
expose antisemitism on The Guardian’s website,
for an article he wrote during the making of the film. He told us: “I think
there are people who are deliberately manipulating the use of the term
antisemitism because they do see that it’s useful in defending Israel.”
We strongly believe the
culture of silence that surrounds this issue allows sinister
conspiracy theories and, by extension, genuine antisemitism to thrive. In
making the lobbying transparent and an acceptable topic of conversation, we
hope debate will be more open, and there will be less space for genuine
antisemites to hide in the shadows.
CHAPTER TWO: THE PRO-ISRAEL
LOBBY AT
WESTMINSTER
The senior Tory MP David
Amess recently put down a question in the House of Commons to enquire what the
British government was doing to improve British relations with Israel.
The reply came from Ivan
Lewis, foreign office minister with special responsibility for the Middle East:
“Israel is a close ally of
the United Kingdom
and we have regular warm and productive exchanges at all levels… We shall continue
to foster a close relationship with Israel.”
This conversation was not
quite the simple public exchange that it seemed. Neither
politician mentioned that both of them had very close links to
pro-Israel organizations. David Amess is the secretary of the Conservative
Friends of Israel, which has been described by the famous Conservative Party
politician and historian Robert Rhodes James as “the largest organization in Western
Europe dedicated to the cause of the people of Israel.”
Meanwhile Ivan Lewis is a
former vice-chairman of the Labour Friends of Israel. The connections of both
men to the pro-Israel lobby were not
declared on the parliamentary record.
While neither acted
inappropriately, their links would only have been evident only to the most
well-informed parliamentarian, and entirely invisible to the average voter.
Many of the most sensitive
foreign affairs, defence and intelligence posts in the House of Commons are
occupied by Labour or Conservative
Friends of Israel.
Mike Gapes, chairman of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, is a former
deputy chairman of the LFI. Kim Howells, the chair of the Intelligence and
Security Committee (and another former Middle East
minister) used to chair Labour Friends of Israel. James Arbuthnot, chairman of
the powerful Commons Defence Select Committee, is also the serving
parliamentary chairman of the CFI. There is no prohibition on parliamentarians
having membership of such groups, but how many voters are aware of these links.
If a Conservative
government wins the forthcoming general election the influence of
the pro-Israel lobby is likely to increase. We believe that at least half, if
not more, of the members of the shadow cabinet are members of the Conservative Friends of Israel.
Let’s try a thought
experiment for a moment. Let’s suppose that over half of the members of the
shadow cabinet were not Conservative Friends of Israel but Conservative Friends
of Belgium, and that once a year an enormous dinner was held in central London attended by the
majority of Conservative MPs.
Speculation would naturally
ensue about the relationship between the Conservative Party and Belgium. Indeed
the friendship between Belgium
and the Conservative Party would become a matter of notoriety. Every trip made
to Belgium
by a Conservative would be a matter of prurient curiosity for the tabloid
press. It is doubtful the Conservative Party would be able to sustain such a
relationship for long.
And yet Belgium is not nearly as controversial a country
as Israel.
It does not illegally occupy large sections of neighbouring territory. Its
soldiers are not accused of war crimes by human rights organizations. There is
no question, therefore, that the connection between mainstream British
political parties and the state of Israel is a matter of legitimate inquiry. We will now turn our intention to the lobby groups which act as advocates
for Israel at Westminster.
Conservative Friends of Israel
The Conservative Prime
Minister Harold MacMillan once remarked that “there are three bodies no
sensible man ever directly challenges: the Roman Catholic Church, the Brigade
of Guards and the National Union of Mineworkers.” It is tempting to speculate
that today he might have added the Conservative Friends of Israel to that list.
The Conservative Friends of
Israel is beyond doubt the best connected, and probably the
best funded, of all Westminster lobbying groups. Eighty
percent of Conservative MPs are members.11 The leader of the
Conservative Party is often expected to appear at their events, while the
shadow foreign secretary and his team are
subjected to persistent pressure by theCFI.
CFI’s director, Stuart
Polak, is a familiar face in Westminster and well-known to everyone
in the Tory establishment. Robert Halfon, the CFI’s political director and Tory
candidate for Harlow, is sometimes regarded as
the brains of the operation.
Both are well-liked by Tory
MPs.
One Tory MP has told us
that, before he stood in the 2005 election, he met Stuart Polak, who put Israel’s case
to him strongly at a social event. Towards the end of the meal, Stuart Polak
asked if his campaign needed more money. Sure enough, weeks later two cheques
arrived in the post at the Conservative office in the constituency. Both came
from businessmen closely connected to the CFI who the Tory MP says he had never
met before and who had never, so far as he knew, ever stepped inside his
constituency.
Another parliamentary
candidate fighting a marginal seat told us that he had gone to see
Stuart Polak, where he was tested on his views on Israel. Within a fortnight a cheque
from a businessman he had never met arrived in his constituency office.
On studying donations to
Conservative Constituency offices before the 2005 election a
pattern emerges. A group of donors, all with strong connections to pro-Israel
groups, (almost all are on the board of the CFI) made donations of between
£2,000 and £5,000 either personally or through their companies to the constituency
offices of certain Conservative candidates. The donors involved include Trevor
Pears, a property magnate, who has sat on the BICOM board, used to sit on the
CFI board, and has donated to Cameron in the past; Lord Steinberg, vice-Conservative
Friends of Israel president of Conservative
Friends of Israel and sponsor of Stuart Polak in parliament; Michael Lewis, a
South African businessman and deputy chairman of BICOM who was formerly on the
Board of CFI; three or four other prominent members of the CFI.
The method of donation –
medium-sized sums to constituency offices often through companies rather than
personal names – means that connections to the CFI or other pro-Israel group
are by no means obvious. These donors may never have met the candidates, nor
stepped foot, let alone actually live, in the constituency, but were happy to
make donations. All candidates in these constituencies either won the seat or
came close. Interestingly, in constituencies where the Conservative candidate
stood little chance, the CFI made the £2,000 donation themselves.
The Tory MPs fighting
parliamentary seats in 2005 whose campaigns were funded by these donors
included Ed Vaizey, shadow minister for culture, media and sport; Greg Hands, shadow
treasury minister; Michael Gove, shadow education secretary; Brooks Newmark,
opposition foreign affairs whip; Shailesh Vara, shadow deputy leader of the Commons;
Grant Shapps, shadow minister for housing; Adam Holloway MP. Many of them then
went on a CFI trip to Israel
in 2006, although Michael Gove - whose polemic Celsius 7/7 comes free with CFI membership - has never been
to Israel.
Most have been supportive of Israel
in speeches to parliament and none have been overtly critical.
There is also a suggestion
that some members of the CFI target MPs who are critical of Israel. For
instance Karen Buck, the Labour MP for Regent’s Park and Kensington North, has
been an outspoken critic. Her Conservative opponent Joanne Cash, who works for
the think tank Policy Exchange, has received cheques cumulatively worth at
least £20,000.
It cannot be stressed too
strongly that this pattern of donations is entirely legal. However, it is at
least arguable that it contravenes one of the seven principles of public life,
concerning integrity, as set out by the Committee on Standards in Public Life: Holders
of public office should not place themselves under any financial or other
obligation to outside individuals or organizations that might seek to influence
them in the performance of their official duties.
Over the past three years
the CFI has flown over thirty Conservative parliamentary candidates to Israel on free
trips. Sometimes MPs can take their
wives on these superbly organized events. Excellent access is granted to senior
members of the Israeli political and security establishments, though the trips
are balanced by a meeting with a Palestinian businessman or politician.
For a junior or a
prospective MP to be taken on such a trip and granted access to which they are
not accustomed can be a powerful and persuasive experience MP. The CFI will
often include pro-Israeli quotations from many of the Conservative candidates
in its newsletter. The impression given, normally far from inaccurate, is that
they have new loyal supporters.
In the months following one
trip in November 2007, ten candidates received small donations to their
constituencies from prominent CFI sponsors. The recipients included
high-profile candidates such as Margot James, vice-chairman of the Conservative
Party, who has not yet declared the trip. Another, Andrew Griffiths, who had
spoken about the difficulties of negotiating with people “trying to blow up your
friends, family and people you care about”, received three donations, including
one from CFI chairman Richard Harrington. Often these donations are carefully
targeted. In the months after William Hague was appointed shadow foreign
secretary, he accepted personal donations from CFI board members totaling tens
of thousands of pounds.17 However, Conservative MPs are extremely
unwilling to talk publicly about CFI funding and influence inside the Party.
Michael Mates told us that “no one will talk to you before the election.”
Conservative support for
the Zionist cause dates back at least as far as the famous meeting between then
Conservative Prime Minister AJ Balfour and the great Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann
in 1905, when Weizmann convinced Balfour of the case for the state of Israel.
Weizmann also converted to the cause the future Conservative statesman Winston
Churchill, then a Liberal candidate, at around the same time. Indeed one of Churchill’s
most ferocious attacks on the Chamberlain government came in May 1939, when it
announced its decision to cut back on Jewish immigration into Palestine. Churchill told MPs that “this
pledge of a home of refuge, of an asylum, was not made to the Jews in Palestine but to the Jews outside Palestine, to that vast, unhappy, mass of
scattered, persecuted, wandering Jews whose intense, unchanging, unconquerable desire
has been for a National Home.”
The Conservative Friends of
Israel was founded in 1974 by the Conservative MP Michael Fidler.18 Since then it has emerged as a powerful lobby group. By 1984, the
Conservative prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, had been prevailed on to become
chairman of the CFI branch at her local Finchley constituency, a development
which elicited the following denunciation on state controlled television in the
strongly anti-Israel Soviet Union: “The Conservative Friends of Israel group essentially
plays the role of a powerful pro-Zionist lobby within the Conservative Party.”
No other lobbying
organization – least of all one that acts in
the interests of a foreign
country – can virtually guarantee that the leader of the Conservative Party,
his or her most senior colleagues, and scores of Tory MPs will attend such a
grand annual celebratory lunch with such regularity. Most of today’s shadow
cabinet are members, including the leader of the opposition, shadow foreign
secretary and shadow defence secretary. As we have seen, many of the key
back-bench positions are held by CFI supporters. Nevertheless, it is extremely
difficult to demonstrate how much influence the CFI actually wields within the
policy-making apparatus of the Conservative Party. For
example the former Conservative Party chairman and shadow foreign secretary,
Michael Ancram, has long been a member of the CFI. This has not prevented him being
a severe critic of Israeli foreign policy – he was seen rolling his eyes when
David Cameron praised Israel
for the preservation of innocent life at it’s the CFI’s Dorchester
lunch last June – and an advocate of direct negotiation with Hamas. Richard Spring
is another senior Conservative MP who has made trips to Israel as a
guest of the CFI. Yet he is also a regular visitor to Israel’s opponent Syria
and often urges the return of the Golan Heights
as prelude to a peace settlement. William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary,
is also a member of the CFI, but that has not stopped him from being an
occasional critic of Israeli foreign policy.
Hague is an important case
study. He accepted donations from Conservative Friends of Israel board members
after becoming Shadow Foreign Secretary, but within months William Hague had
fallen out with the CFI.20 Hague was on the receiving end of an
ear-bashing, was targeted in a critical letter to The Spectator, and subject to threats to withdraw funding from
Lord Kalms, a major Tory donor and member of the CFI, after he used the word
“disproportionate” about Israel’s 2006 attack on Lebanon. At the same time,
rumours swirled around Westminster
that Hague had been influenced by his Bosnian Muslim adviser, Arminka Helic.
In the wake of this
fall-out, we understand from Tory sources that Stuart Polak was able
to secure a meeting with DavidCameron in which the Tory leader gave what was
understood as an undertaking not to use the word “disproportionate” again.
Nevertheless, any effort to
portray either William Hague or David Cameron merely as a passive instrument of
the pro-Israel lobby is wide of the mark.
More recently, Tory sources
say that the CFI played an influential role in stiffening the Conservative
Party’s opposition to the UN resolution based on the Goldstone Report into the Israeli
attack on Gaza.
According to our sources, Hague was persuaded to sit down with David Cameron
and Andrew Feldman, an influential supporter of the CFI, and produced the
following quotation for the CFI newsletter setting out their opposition to the
resolution: “Unless the draft resolution is redrafted to reflect the role that
Hamas played in starting the conflict, we would recommend that the British
Government vote to reject the resolution.” Hague had decided to take the American
line of rejecting the UN resolution, unlike the Labour government, which, in
effect, abstained.
To assess the influence of
the CFI within the Conservative Party, it is useful to compare it to the
Conservative Middle East Council (CMEC), which focuses on the wider Middle East in the Conservative Party and works hard to
balance the CFI’s influence. According to its website, every year CMEC seeks to
take “a series of delegations to Iran,
the Arab states and Israel.”
It claims that just over half of all Conservative MPs are members. Chaired by
the former shadow cabinet minister Hugo Swire, CMEC has yet to establish itself
as a potent serious rival to the CFI.
For the thirty-five years
the CFI has existed, the Conservative Party, both in government and opposition,
has taken a strongly pro-Israel stance. The CFI alone cannot take the credit
for this.
Indeed other factors –
above all, British subordination to US foreign policy – are
considerably more significant. Nevertheless,
no political lobby inside the Conservative Party – and certainly no longer the
Brigade of Guards – carries comparable weight.
Labour Friends of Israel (LFI)
Whereas the CFI has the
luxury of working with the grain of the Conservative Party, the Labour Friends
of Israel has tended to face a considerably tougher job. There is a much
stronger Labour tradition of supporting Palestinian causes since the 1967 war,
where Conservatives are more likely to instinctively assume that Israel is in
the right. The visceral anti-Americanism of many Labour MPs also plays a role
here.
The LFI was founded in 1957
at a public rally at that year’s Labour Party Conference. It describes itself
as “a Westminster
based lobby group working within the British Labour Party to promote the State
of Israel”22.
It has very close ties with the Israeli Labor Party, and British Labour Party
figures like Philip Gould have given training to Israeli politicians in
electoral strategy. For that reason the LFI is perhaps less unquestioning in its
support of the Israeli government than the CFI. The two lobby groups both work
closely with the Israeli embassy and even share supporters, such as the
businessmen Victor Blank and Trevor Chinn, but they work independently within
their respective parties.
Labour Friends of Israel has
taken more MPs on trips than any other group. Only the CFI comes close. Since
2001, the LFI has arranged more than sixty free trips for MPs. LFI and CFI
trips combined account for over 13% of all funded trips for MPs and candidates.
That’s more trips to Israel,
a country with a population smaller than London’s,
than to Europe, America or Africa. Even in America,
where the pro-Israel lobby is extremely influential, trips to Israel account
for only ten percent of all politicians’ foreign trips.
The group is similarly well
connected within the party, and has regular meetings with David Miliband and
his Foreign Office team to make Israel’s
case. Labour MPs told us that young, ambitious MPs see a role at LFI as a good
way to get ahead.
Chairs of the LFI very often go
on to become ministers. James Purnell and Jim Murphy, the Secretary of State
for Scotland,
are two recent chairmen. Ivan Lewis, the foreign office minister with
responsibility for the Middle East, is a
former vice-chair.
One of Tony Blair’s first
acts on becoming an MP in 1983 was to join Labour Friends of Israel. He
remained close to the group throughout his career, regularly appearing at their
events.
Speaking in 2007, Jon Mendelsohn,
a former chairman of the LFI, and now Gordon Brown’s chief election fundraiser,
speaking in 2007, described Tony Blair’s achievement in transforming the Labour
Party’s position on Israel.
"Blair attacked the anti-Israelism that had existed in the Labour Party.
Old Labour was cowboys-and-Indians
politics, picking underdogs to support, but the milieu has changed. Zionism is pervasive
in New Labour. It is automatic that Blair will come to Labour Friends of Israel
meetings."
Blair succeeded in making
the Labour party more attractive to donors connected with the Labour Friends of
Israel. The key figure in building these relationships was, of course, Michael Levy.
Blair met Levy in 1994 at a
dinner party thrown by Gideon Meir, number two at the Israeli Embassy. Blair
was just back from a trip to Israel
with the LFI.
The two men quickly
recognised the mutual benefits offered by the relationship. By early 1995,
Blair was leader of the opposition and he dropped in on his new friend for a
swim and a game of tennis almost every weekend. Levy had been collecting donations
to a blind trust, known as the Labour Leader’s Office Fund, raising nearly two
million pounds, a sum “previously unimaginable for a Labour leader. Blair maintained that he was unaware of the sources of these
donations despite being in almost constant contact with Levy and even meeting
some of the donors. We now know that the secret donors included funders of pro - Israel groups such as Trevor Chinn and Emmanuel Kaye.
Levy had played a crucial
role in persuading donors that Labour had changed. Blair told Levy, “I am
absolutely determined that we must not go into the next election financially
dependent on the trade unions.”26 Instead, Blair became financially dependent on large
donors, some of whom had very strong views on Israel. According to Levy, the
subject of Israel
was second only to fundraising in his conversations with Tony Blair. Levy is
estimated to have raised over fifteen million pounds for Blair before the “cash
for peerages” affair brought Levy’s fundraising to an end in the summer of
2006.
CHAPTER THREE: THE
PRO-ISRAEL LOBBY IN THE
MEDIA
Many supporters of Israel have come to believe that they are a beleaguered
minority in Britain.
They are convinced that press and politicians alike are ranged against them and
that the media routinely distorts the actions and intentions of the Jewish
state. This belief is sincerely held, but it is difficult to support on closer
examination.
Most of the mainstream
British media takes a pro-Israel line. Rupert Murdoch, whose News International
media empire controls between 30-40% of the British newspaper press, makes no
secret of his pro-Israeli sympathies. Indeed one wellregarded Times correspondent, Sam Kiley, took the extraordinary step of actually
resigning from the paper because of interference with his work on the Middle East.
In addition to the Murdoch
press, the Telegraph Media Group and Express Newspapers have tended to support Israel.
So has Associated Newspapers, though to a less obvious extent. There are,
however, two important media organisations, which have consistently sought to
report fairly from the Middle East and present
the Palestinian point of view with equal force to the pro-Israeli government
line. These are The Guardian and the BBC.
These two organisations have
been subjected to ceaseless pressure and at times
harassment both from the Israeli government itself and from pressure groups.
This chapter will document
some of this pressure by chronicling some of the campaigns mounted by the
pro-Israel lobby against The Guardian and the
BBC. We will then turn our attention to the pro-Israel
media lobby groups, of which the Britain Israel Communications and Research
Centre (BICOM) is by some distance the most important.
The Guardian
The Guardian was more closely involved in the creation of Israel than any
other British newspaper. Its editor C.P. Scott was instrumental in the Balfour
Declaration of 1917, introducing Chaim Weizmann, the leader of the Zionist
movement and later the first President of the state of Israel, to leading members of the
British government.
However, the paper now
finds itself at the centre of an international campaign accusing it of
anti-Zionism and even antisemitism. Through much of the last decade, the
Guardian has been in dispute with the Israeli government and in particularthe
combative Israeli Government press office director, Danny Seaman. In 2002,
Seaman publicly boasted that he had forced The Guardian to move
correspondent Suzanne Goldenberg after she had been transferred to Washington. "We
simply boycotted them,” claimed Seaman, “the editorial boards got the message and
replaced their people.”
Seaman is well known for
using tactics such as denying or delaying visas to obstruct correspondents he
sees as hostile to Israel.
One reporter familiar with Seaman described him as a “bully” who was “at the
forefront of the general harassment. Rusbridger wrote to Seaman insisting he
withdraw his comments, only to be told by Seaman: “I will happily withdraw my
comments about Ms. Goldenberg when your newspaper withdraws the biased,
sometimes malicious and often incorrect reports which were filed by her during
her unpleasant stay here.” Rusbridger insists he had total faith in
Goldenberg’s reporting, for which she received numerous awards, and that “only
the Israelis would see a move to Washington
as a demotion.”
In 2006 the Guardian was
caught up in another row after publishing a controversial article by
correspondent Chris McGreal comparing Israel
to apartheid South Africa.
The episode reveals the workings of the pro-Israel lobby with the Israeli
embassy coordinating the offensive. An emergency meeting was called at the
Israeli ambassador’s residence with BICOM chairman Poju Zabludowicz, board of
deputies president Henry Grunwald, community security trust chairman Gerald
Ronson and Lord Janner of Labour Friends of Israel to plan the response.
Ronson and Grunwald were
dispatched to visit Alan Rusbridger in his office to convey their feelings.
According to Rusbridger, Ronson didn’t even take his coat off: “He began by
saying, I think his phrase was ‘I’ve always said opinions are like arseholes,
everyone’s got one’, and then he effectively said ‘I’m in favour of free speech
but there is a line which can’t be crossed and, as far as I’m concerned, you’ve
crossed it, and you must stop this’.” Ronson accused The Guardian of being responsible for antisemitic attacks, a
claim Rusbridger refused to accept: “I mean I didn’t want to get in a great row
with Gerald Ronson, I just said I’d be interested in the evidence, I’m not sure
how you make that causal connection between someone reading an article that is
critical of the foreign policy of Israel and then thinking why don’t I go out
and mug Jews on the streets of London. I just can’t believe that happens.”
The Committee for Accuracy
in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), a pro-Israel media watchdog, made
a complaint to the Press Complaints Commission, arguing that McGreal’s article was
“based on materially false accusations”. The complaint was not upheld. Alan
Rusbridger’s decision to run the Chris McGreal article was vindicated.
The Guardian is not the only newspaper to come under pressure
and, according to Rusbridger, it works. He told us that “there are a lot of
newspaper and broadcasting editors who have told me that they just don’t think
it’s worth the hassle to challenge the Israeli line. They’ve had enough.”
The BBC AND THE
PRO-ISRAEL LOBBY
The case of the BBC is
extraordinary. The organisation has become a hate figure for pro-Israel groups,
who resent its global reach and supposed sympathy for the Palestinians. We have
spoken to BBC journalists and recently departed staff who say that rarely a
week goes by without having to deal with complaints about their coverage of the
Middle East. This year has been
particularly difficult for the Corporation.
The BBC refused to screen
an aid appeal from Britain’s
top charities for the people of Gaza,
resulting in millions of pounds less money being raised. It reacted to pressure
from pro-Israel pressure groups by publishing a report, which criticised its
own Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen. Finally,
it refused to disclose a report by Malcolm Balen into its Middle
East coverage which cost of hundreds of thousands of pounds to the
licence fee payer. Through a Freedom of Information request we discovered the
BBC had spent over a quarter of a million pounds on legal fees relating to the
case.
It is no surprise that at
the start of the year the culture secretary, Ben Bradshaw, himself a former BBC
reporter, remarked that “I’m afraid the BBC has to stand up to the Israeli
authorities occasionally. Israelhas a long reputation of bullying the BBC.” Bradshaw added that “I’m
afraid the BBC has been cowed by this relentless and persistent pressure from
the Israeli government and they should stand up against it.”
1. The Balen Report.
This report has its origins
in the spring of 2003, when the BBC’s relationship with Israel
completely broke down. The Israeli government imposed visa restrictions on BBC
journalists and refused access to Israeli government figures after a documentary
about its nuclear weapons entitled “Israel’s Secret Weapon” was shown
on BBC World. The Israeli Government press officer, Danny Seaman, compared it
to “the worst of Nazi propaganda”.
For a time Israel joined a small band of countries,
including North Korea, Zimbabwe and Turkmenistan, which refused the BBC
free access. When Ariel Sharon visited London
in July 2003, BBC journalists were in the ludicrous position of being banned
from attending the press conference.35 By the autumn, pressure on
the BBC from pro-Israel groups and the Israeli government was so great that the
head of BBC news Richard Sambrook felt obliged to act.
Sambrook employed Malcolm
Balen, a former head of ITV News and senior BBC executive, to write the now
infamous Balen Report on the BBC’s Middle East
coverage during the previous four years. In October, the High Court finally
ruled that the BBC does not have to publish the report, which has become an
obsession for Israel's
supporters, who hold this up as the BBC trying to hide its anti-Israel bias.
This is dubious. We have
spoken to one of the very few people who have read the report. He says that far
from concluding the BBC’s coverage was biased against Israel, it simply
finds examples where more context should have been given. If anything, our
source claims, the impression given is that the BBC is sympathetic to Israel.
2. Punishing Jeremy Bowen.
In April this year, in an
important success for the pro-Israel lobby, the BBC’s Middle
East editor, Jeremy Bowen, was criticized by the BBC Trust for
breaching their rules of accuracy and impartiality in an online piece, and
their rules of accuracy in a radio piece. Bowen’s critics have seized on his
humiliation, demanding that he be sacked and insisting that the episode proved
the BBC’s “chronically biased reporting”. The real story behind the BBC Trust’s
criticism of Bowen reports is rather different: it demonstrates the
pusillanimity of the BBC Trust and the energy and opportunism of the pro-Israel
lobby.
The story begins with an
essay written by Bowen to mark the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War for the BBC website.
Though many people viewed
Bowen’s essay as a fair and balanced account, erring if anything on the side of
conventional wisdom, this was not the reaction of two passionate members of the
Pro-Israel lobby, Jonathan Turner of the Zionist Federation and Gilead Ini, who
lobbies CAMERA, an American pro-Israel media watchdog organization..Turner and
Ini subjected Bowen’s article to line by line scrutiny, alleging some 24
instances of bias in his online article and a further four in a later report by
Bowen from a controversial Israeli settlement called Har Homa.
Turner and Ini’s complaints
were rejected by the BBC’s editorial complaints unit, so they duly appealed to
the BBC Trust. The meeting was chaired by David Liddiment who, to quote
Jonathan Dimbleby, “is admired as a TV entertainment wizard and former director
of programmes at ITV but whose experience of the dilemmas posed by news and
current affairs, especially in relation to the bitterly contested complexities
of the Middle East is, perforce, limited.” The BBC Trust found that Bowen had
breached three accuracy and one impartiality guideline in his online report,
and one accuracy guideline in his radio piece. This was a massive boost for the
organizations to which Turner and Ini were attached. The Zionist Federation at
once called for Bowen to be sacked, calling his position “untenable”, while
adding that what they called his “biased coverage of Israel”
had been a “significant contributor to the recent rise in antisemitic incidents
in the UK
to record levels.” Meanwhile, CAMERA claimed that the BBC Trust had
exposed Bowen’s “unethical” approach to his work and insisted the BBC must now
take “concrete steps” to combat its “chronically biased reporting” of the
Middle East.
These powerful attacks
might have been justified if the BBC Trust had found Bowen
guilty of egregious bias. In fact he was condemned for what were at best
matters of opinion. In a majority of the cases, the complaints were found to
have no merit, and where changes were made they changed the meaning very
little. As Dimbleby concluded, “You don’t have to search far on the web to find
Zionist publications, lobby groups and bloggers all over the world using
distorted versions of the report to justify their ill-founded prejudice that
the BBC has a deep-seated and long-standing bias against the state of Israel.
Conversely, millions of Palestinians, other Arabs and Muslims will by now have
been confirmed in their — equally false — belief that the BBC is yet again
running scared of Israeli propaganda…“Not only has Bowen’s hard-won reputation
been sullied, but the BBC’s international status as the best source of
trustworthy news in the world has been gratuitously — if unintentionally — undermined.”
The Trust’s ruling was met
with dismay in BBC newsrooms. A former BBC News editor,
Charlie Beckett, told us “the BBC investigated Jeremy Bowen
because they were under such extraordinary pressure... it struck a chill
through the actual BBC newsroom because it signaled to them that they were
under assault.” We can reveal that Jeremy Bowen had an article “Israel still bears
a disastrous legacy” (31 May 2007) published a week earlier than his BBC piece
(4 June 2007) in The Jewish Chronicle
containing most of the
contentious sentences.
Indeed, even the
problematic lines that led the BBC Trust to conclude there had been a breach of
accuracy and impartiality, such as “Zionism’s innate instinct to push out the frontier” and “The Israeli generals,
mainly hugely self-confident sabras in their late 30s and early 40s, had been
training to finish the unfinished business of 1948 for most of their careers” are still in Bowen’s article on The Jewish Chronicle’s website. Perhaps the BBC Trust’s
interpretation of due impartiality is different to that of Britain’s
Jewish community.
The Gaza Humanitarian appeal
The BBC has a long
tradition of showing humanitarian appeals, including those that are seen as
politically sensitive, such as the Lebanon appeal in 1982, and has helped raise
tens of millions of pounds for people in need around the world. But in January 2009,
Mark Thompson, director general of the BBC, took the unprecedented decision of
breaking away from other broadcasters and refusing to broadcast the Disasters
Emergency Appeal for Gaza,
claiming it would compromise the BBC’s impartiality. ITV and Channel 4 screened
the Gaza
appeal, but Sky joined the BBC in refusing.
The BBC’s decision had an
undeniable impact. Brendan Gormley, Chief Executive of the DEC, told us that
the appeal raised about half of the
expected total: £7.5 million. In the first 48 hours of the appeal phone calls
were down by 17,000 on the average.
Thompson also cast doubt on
the charities’ ability to deliver aid on the ground despite assurances from the
DEC and his own charitable appeals advisers that this was not the case. We
asked Charlie Beckett why the BBC had refused. He replied: “If there was no
pro-Israeli lobby in this country then don’t think [screening the appeal] would
have been seen as politically problematic. I don’t think it would be a serious political
issue and concern for them if they didn’t have that pressure from an
extraordinarily active, sophisticated, and persuasive lobby sticking up for the
Israeli viewpoint.”
THE RISE OF BICOM BICOM,
the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre, is Britain’s major pro-Israel lobby.
Founded in 2001 as an equivalent to America’s hugely influential AIPAC,
it is bankrolled by its Chairman Poju Zabludowicz, a Finnish billionaire and
former arms dealer. Over the past three years Zabludowicz has given over two
million pounds in donations.
This year, they sent thirty
representatives to the AIPAC conference in America, a sign of BICOM’s growing
ambition. Incredibly, almost no one we interviewed for the film had even heard
of Zabludowicz, a key player at the heart of the pro-Israel lobby in Britain. Our
questions continually met with blank expressions from senior politicians and
people in the Jewish community. Zabludowicz fiercely guards his privacy and
does so with great success despite his wife being a renowned art collector, and
counting Madonna and other A-list celebrities among close personal friends.
Zabludowicz’s father,
Shlomo Zabludowicz, made his money through Israeli arms
manufacturers Soltam Systems, a company, which continues to thrive and recently
provided the IDF with artillery for its Gaza
campaign. Poju Zabludowicz also ran Soltam, but has since moved his money from
arms into property. He is now estimated to own around forty percent of downtown
Las Vegas.
Far more significantly, we
have discovered that he owns property in the illegal settlements in the West Bank. He has a stake in a shopping centre in Ma’ale
Adumim, a settlement which is seen as
strategically crucial in ensuring Jerusalem
remains in Israeli hands. So much so that Netanyahu launched his election
campaign in the settlement in 2005. "Starting my campaign here is not
coincidental [it is] because Jerusalem
is in danger."
Zabludowicz believes Israel
suffers unfairly from an image problem with Palestinian
propaganda swallowed too readily by European liberals. He hoped to create one
lobby that oversaw media and politics in the style of AIPAC, but met with resistance
from the parliamentary Friends of Israel groups, guarding their patch. He does,
however, play a role at Conservative Friends of Israel as a significant donor.
He has also established a relationship with David Cameron, the man almost
certain to be Britain’s
next prime minister. In September 2005 when Cameron was planning his Conservative
leadership election campaign he met Zabludowicz for a coffee. Zabludowicz was
suitably impressed with what he heard, and Cameron received £15,000 from
Zabludowicz over the course of his election campaign.45 To ensure that the donations complied with election law, he made
the donations through his British subsidiary Tamares Real Estate Investments.
Despite the CFI and BICOM
not formally merging there is a huge amount of co-ordination. Many of BICOM’s
key figures also play roles in the CFI: Trevor Pears, Michael Lewis and Poju
Zabludowicz are driving forces behind both lobbies. David Cameron also accepted
£20,000 from Trevor Pears in his leadership election.
BICOM performs a similar
role to the parliamentary groups: building relationships with key journalists
and editors, taking them on paid-for trips to Israel, and setting up high level meetings in Israel and the UK. They also provide journalists with
daily briefings and suggest stories and angles to friendly contacts. During key
periods, like Operation Cast Lead, BICOM goes into overdrive.
In its early days, BICOM
received criticism from some in the Jewish community for not
doing enough and in 2006 they replaced Daniel Shek, a smooth Israeli diplomat,
now ambassador in France, with Lorna Fitzsimons, a former Labour MP in
Rochdale. The appointment surprised some as Fitzsimons is not Jewish and has no
obvious connection to Israel,
but she is combative and, of course, had good contacts with the current government.
She leads a team of bright
PR professionals who make Israel’s
case in a sophisticated way, not resorting to accusations of anti-Semitism and
simplistic explanations, instead focusing on shared values and the threat from Israel’s
neighbours.
There is a question too of
whether journalists should accept free trips from an organisation representing
only one side in such a controversial conflict. And if they do so, then surely
they should make clear in any resulting article that the trip has been funded by
a pro-Israel lobby? Of the dozens of journalists that make the trips each year,
only very few seem to make any reference to BICOM, giving the impression they
were on a neutral factfinding mission by default, whereas in fact it was a
carefully coordinated trip. That is not to say such trips can never be useful for
a journalist, just that they should declare them in the same way as MPs so
their readers can take an informed view.
Two months after the end of
Operation Cast Lead in Gaza,
BICOM sent half a dozen journalists on a free trip to Tel Aviv to talk to Israeli defence
analysts. The message BICOM wanted to get across was that they should pay more
attention to Iran
than to the Palestinians.
The Sunday Times wrote a piece about how the world looks from the point of view of Israel’s top
generals. The News of the World
contained a brief piece
about Iran’s
nuclear ambitions: “Psycho Doomsday is Nigh”. The Mirror’s
security correspondent wrote two
pieces from Israel,
detailing their list of meetings. Only The Sunday Times made any reference to BICOM, acknowledging it had arranged the
trip half-way through the piece. The News of the World and The Mirror made no reference to BICOM arranging and funding
the visit.
In a response to our
questions, Poju Zabludowicz wrote: “BICOM is a British not-for-profit
organization which produces information and provides activities that seek to
explain the complexities of the issues facing Israel
and the Middle East, while promoting the
policy of a two-state solution with the Palestinians… There are countless
numbers of journalists (broadcast and print), politicians (Labour, Conservative
and Liberal Democrat), as well as academics and analysts with whom BICOM maintains
regular contact.”
CHAPTER FOUR: CONCLUSION
AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
A Short Summary of Recent
Relations Between Britain and Israel Since 1997 there has sometimes appeared to
be an assumption at the highest levels of British government that the interests
of Israel and Britain are
identical. For example, during Israel’s
catastrophic invasion of the Lebanon
in the summer of 2006, the Blair government failed even to call for a
ceasefire.
The idea that British and
Israeli foreign policy interests should be the same is, however, relatively
new. While Britain
played a famous role in the creation of the Israeli state, for a long time
after World War Two it was never afraid to criticise Israeli foreign policy.
For example, the
Conservative foreign secretary (and former prime minister) Sir Alec Douglas Home
called at Harrogate in October 1970 for the implementation of UN Security
Council Resolution 242 and for Israel
to abandon the territories occupied in the aftermath of the Six Day War in June
1967. This firm sense that Britain
could confidently challenge Israeli foreign policy persisted for some time
afterwards.
Margaret Thatcher was an
instinctive and long-standing supporter of Israel. Through connections with
the large Jewish community in her Finchley constituency she was a member of the
Anglo-Israel Friendship League and a founder member of the Conservative Friends
of Israel. Thatcher visited Israel
twice before becoming PM, and became the first serving British prime minister
to visit in 1986.
However, when events
warranted, she was ready to criticize Israel, far more strongly than more recent prime
ministers. After Israel’s
bombing of the Iraqi nuclear plant at Osirak in 1981, Thatcher described the
actions as “a grave breach of
international law” and a “matter
of great grief”. These were words that no government minister would use today,
and certainly stand in stark contrast to William Hague’s mild comments in the
summer of 2006, condemning Israeli actions as “disproportionate”, which
provoked such outrage among the pro-Israel lobby at the time.
After the Lebanon war in 1982 Thatcher took an unprecedented
stand by joining other European countries in imposing an arms embargo on Israel, which
lasted twelve years until it was ended in 1994. Again this action contrasts
with the reaction to the Lebanon
war of 2006. Afterwards, British arms exports to Israel increased.
The election of Tony
Blair’s New Labour government in 1997 marked the turning point in
British-Israeli relations. Tony Blair soon brought Britain into line with the American
position, which was significantly more supportive of Israeli policies. This change
of approach can be measured by the use of Britain’s vote as a permanent
member of the UN Security Council.
The United States has used its veto at the UN
Security Council forty times since 1972 over resolutions concerning Israel. The
resolutions have focused on the settlements, the status of Jerusalem, and Israeli military action. On Israel and Palestine, there has historically been a gap between US policy, being strongly supportive of Israel, and the
other members of the Security Council. Between 1972 and 1997 inclusive, the UK and France
voted the same way as China
and the Soviet Union/Russia, and the opposite way to the US, on almost 80% of Middle
East resolutions.
The Labour government has
subtly changed Britain’s
approach. Since 2003, France
has continued to vote the same way as China
and Russia, but the UK has abstained on every Middle East
resolution, which the US
has vetoed. This suggests a growing reluctance to be seen to be contradicting
US and by extension Israeli policy.
Growing Importance of the
Pro-Israel Lobby Sir Richard Dalton, former British ambassador in Tehran and consul in Jerusalem,
told us that when he was a young diplomat in the 1970s, Britain felt
able to act purely in its own interests.
Throughout his career he
has seen that change as the influence of the pro-Israel lobby has grown. “One
of the frustrations is that my colleagues and I are not pro-Palestinian,
pro-Arab, pro-Israel, pro-anything. We want what is best for Britain.
“But there is a pro-Israel
lobby and it’s active in trying to define the debate in order to limit the
options that British politicians can choose to options that would be acceptable
to that lobby.” He told us that increasingly politicians are afraid to express publicly
what they may say in private. That means Israel is not subjected to the same
public scrutiny as other countries. He cited
the Lebanon war as an
example: “The Israel
lobbies appear to want to censor British politicians from saying that elements
of the Israeli action were disproportionate and they appear to be willing to
use financial pressures as a way of enforcing that decision.” Even more
significantly this senior diplomat felt that his own actions when serving as
Consul General in Jerusalem in the late 1990s
were limited by the influence of the lobby at home in Britain.
This influence works in a
variety of ways: the unceasing cultivation of British MPs; political donations;
availability of research briefs; brilliant presentation of the case for Israel.
The Israel
lobby has enjoyed superb contacts at the very top of British politics, and
never hesitated to use them. As we have shown in this pamphlet, it has used
them at key moments; for instance the Israeli invasion of the Lebanon three years ago and the publication of
the Goldstone Report into alleged war crimes during the invasion of Gaza earlier this year.
Beyond these specific
examples of influence, there is also a wider presence. The Friends
of Israel groups in the House of Commons have firmly
established themselves in the interstices of British political life. Their
heavy presence at party conferences is taken for granted, their lunches and
dinners an ingrained part of the Westminster
social scene, the donations a vital part of the political financing. An
environment now exists where MPs and ministers feel cautious about criticizing
the foreign policy of the Israeli state, wary of opening themselves to criticism
on the home front.
Meanwhile, public discourse
on Israel,
as we have shown, is heavily policed. This
policing takes two forms. First, critics of the Israel
government policy – The Guardian and the BBC are the two most prominent examples
– come under heavy and incessant attack from pro-Israel media monitoring
groups. Second, journalists from key media outlets are assiduously cultivated.
The Need for Openness
The pro-Israel lobby does
nothing wrong, or illegal. It is not sinister and it is not unusual. It cannot
be too much stressed that British public life is populated by all kinds of
interest groups, many of them extremely active at Westminster.
While this pro-Israel
lobbying is lawful, it is emphatically not transparent. We have shown in this pamphlet
that journalists very rarely declare their BICOM funded trips to Israel. We have
also shown how patterns of donations from CFI members to Tory candidates are
sometimes opaque.
Indeed, the financial
structure of the CFI as a whole is obscure. It does not declare its funding,
the identity of its donors, or its annual turnover. Despite being composed
almost entirely of MPs and Conservative party members it is registered not as a
members’ association, a lobby, a company, or a charity, but as an unincorporated
association. This means it does not exist as an organization, but merely as a
collection of individuals.
This allows its donors to
give money without being identified. This means that some of
these donors could be foreign nationals, who under British electoral rules
should not be allowed to fund political parties or members of parliament. For a
foreign donor wanting to fund a British politician or political party,
unincorporated associations offer that opportunity. This anonymity is not
acceptable for any political pressure group of whatever persuasion in 21st century British politics.
A similar observation
applies to other pro-Israel pressure groups. While BICOM’s work is entirely
legitimate, it is by no means transparent. They never declare, for example,
which journalists go on trips and who they meet. In the United States, AIPAC
must register as a lobby and declare its activities. Over here, BICOM is simply
a company registered at Companies House, and doesn’t make its work public.
The pro-Israel lobby and
British-Jewry There is one final set of questions to be asked. Who does the pro-Israel
lobby represent? Is it mainstream British-Jewish opinionor the state of Israel or
neither? More likely, it exerts pressure for a particular set of interests
within Israeli politics.
Globalisation has led to a
wide and welcome recognition that we all have multiple legitimate interests and
identities. There are countless good reasons for the interests of Israel to
have a place in UK politics and vice versa, not only because of interests of State,
but also because there are many British subjects who have direct legitimate
interests and concerns for what happens in Israel and vice versa. The reason we
need to ask who or what is represented by the UK's pro-Israel lobby is
precisely so that we can understand what effect UK policy does actually have in
Israeli politics and whether these legitimate interests are effectively being
promoted.
Of course, this question is
especially difficult to answer because the main pro-Israel lobbying
organizations do not have a transparent financial structure. It is impossible
to state with confidence that they receive all their money from British sources.
Indeed we have discovered that the biggest funder for BICOM is not a British citizen,
but a Finnish business tycoon with a commercial interest in a shopping centre
in Ma’ale Adumim, a West Bank town regarded in
international law as an illegal settlement.
One of the enduring
paradoxes of the discussion of Israeli foreign policy is that it is much more
contested and debated inside Israel
than outside. Some Jewish interviewees told us that they were felt that the
main pro-Israel organizations in Britain were less critical of
Israeli foreign policy than mainstream British Jewish opinion. David Newman
(who was appointed by Israel’s
ministry of foreign affairs to fight the proposed academic boycott of Israel in the UK):
“There is clearly a debate, and it’s not just a debate it’s a huge debate
inside Israel, whether Israel should or should not continue to control
the West Bank, whether settlements are legal or
illegal, moral or immoral.
And what you often find is
that the groups such as AIPAC or BICOM outside Israel tend to
close down that sort of debate, they tend to say you have
to be totally supportive of Israel
full stop, whatever Israel
does.”
Newman added that: “The
fact that someone, if as you say, has a major investment in Ma’ale Adumim [and]
is the major investor also of BICOM, that would tend to indicate in what
direction BICOM is going. It’s going to be more supportive of settlements or
less critical of settlements than if someone on the left was investing their money
in BICOM.”
One of the reasons for the
stale debate in the UK and Europe around Israel and Palestine has little to do
with the politics of the lobbies but stems from our own hang-ups and history:
we resist being anti-Israeli because of the difficulty of confronting the
reality of European antisemitism; and yet we resist being anti-Palestinian
because of the difficulty in confronting the reality of the European colonial
past. So partly the UK (and Europe
more widely) needs to be prepared to confront the issues of Israel and Palestine
themselves, and not the issues of its own fraught history towards them if it
wants to have a mature debate and any significant influence in the region.
The UK's pro-Israel lobby is able to take advantage
of this stale debate in order to project and promote a specific view of Israel's interests, one that is hotly debated
within Israel.
It is in the interest of our own democracy, and our effectiveness in promoting
the legitimate interests of Israel
within the British state to have more transparency here.
Summary and Conclusion Israel
is a wonderful and extraordinary country with a rich and flourishing democratic
history. Founded in terrible circumstances in the immediate aftermath of the
Holocaust and World War Two, it has a profound right to exist. But this moral legitimacy
does not mean that the foreign and internal policies of Israel should
be exempt from the same kind of probing criticism that any independent state
must expect. Nor does it mean that the rights of Palestinians to their own
state can be ignored.
The pro-Israel lobby, in
common with other lobbies, has every right to operate in Britain. But it
needs to be far more open about how it is funded and what it does. This is
partly because the present obscurity surrounding the funding arrangements and
activities of organisations such as BICOM and the CFI can
paradoxically give rise to conspiracy theories that have no basis in fact. But
it is mainly because politics in a democracy should never take place behind
closed doors. It should be out in the open and there for all to see.
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