foreign affairs

There’s One Thing That Matters More Than Any Other in U.S.-Israeli Relations — and It’s Probably Not What You Think

President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: Uriel Sinai/Getty Images

The state of relations between the United States and Israel is at or near an all-time low — and it’s likely to stay that way until either Obama or Netanyahu are out of power. After that, the world will see whether the longtime allies can rekindle their “special relationship.” Michael Koplow, Middle East analyst and director of the Israel Institute, argues in an essay on his blog that the current down-cycle doesn’t have to be permanent. He also warns Israelis that their biggest concern shouldn’t be Obama or disagreements over Iran policy, but rather how average Americans perceive Israel and its government:

[The current Israeli] government and all future governments need to understand that support from the U.S. is predicated on a number of things, but first and foremost on the idea of shared democratic values. … Americans don’t care whether or not Israel is a strategic asset or liability but do care whether or not Israel is a liberal democracy. Furthermore, the erosion of support for Israel on the left and among younger voters is even more tightly tied to this (whether Israel could do anything that would be able to satisfy some of this segment is a separate question). Netanyahu’s lackluster moves toward creating a Palestinian state and his ugly election day display thus matter hugely in this regard, and all of the “yes, but” arguments that seek to mitigate these things don’t matter, even if they are true. Maybe a Palestinian negotiating partner that was more serious and responsive to Israeli concessions or an altered security environment would prompt Netanyahu to leave the West Bank, and maybe Netanyahu’s rejection of a Palestinian state on his watch really was meant to be qualified and his warning that Arabs are coming to the polls in droves wasn’t about Arabs specifically but just shorthand for leftwing voters. Even if you fervently believe these things – and, for what it’s worth, I am hugely skeptical – it doesn’t matter when it comes to the relationship with the U.S., because they both chip away at the vision in the American mind of Israel as a like-minded country that we can easily understand and with which we can sympathize. What Israeli governments need to understand is that 99% of people outside of Israel are not following the daily back and forth of Israeli politics and policy, and so the rapidly spreading perception of Israel as an increasingly illiberal country seeking to shout down minorities and keep the Palestinians in a state of perpetual occupied statelessness doesn’t have to be true in order to be damaging. Once Israel is seen as abandoning the two state solution and the peace process, the game is over and Israel becomes like any other country when it comes to U.S. foreign policy. The only priority the Israeli government should have going forward when it comes to the U.S. is preserving the possibility of an eventual two state solution, even if such an outcome is currently impossible.

Can Israel and U.S. Repair Relations?