I'm here at the AIPAC conference where Barack Obama is scheduled
to address the more than 7,000 attendees within an hour, followed
by Hillary Clinton. Obama will face somewhat of a skeptical crowd
here, and for good reason. The candidate of choice for Israel
haters from Hamas to Jimmy Carter, Obama has taken on a slew of
anti-Israel advisors and has associated himself with some of the
most prominent critics of Israel in America. (More here.)
Furthermore, his willingness to meet unconditionally with Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who has denied the Holocaust and threatened to wipe
Israel off of the map, as well as his opposition to declaring
Iran's Revolutionary Guard a terrorist group, does him no
favors.
With all that said, I think the crowd will be respectful of
Obama and greet him warmly -- and here's why. While some people
have a perception of AIPAC as the hawkish pro-Israel group, the
reality is a lot more complicated. The purpose of AIPAC is to
foster strong ties between the U.S. and Israel and keep both
Republicans and Democrats on their side, so its attitude is greatly
impacted by who is in office. During the 1990s, they were tight
with the Clinton Administration while it was pushing the Oslo peace
process with Yasser Arafat, drawing criticism from hawks. In the
post-9/11, Bush-Sharon environment, it became much more hawkish.
Since Obama now has a good chance of becoming the next president,
they want to keep him within the tent, and I'm sure most of the
crowd will receive him well. But I'm curious to talk to some
attendees after to see whether his speech actually calmed their
concerns.
topics:
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Environment, Iran, Israel