Lobbying on Iran, groups strive
to play down the Jewish angle
09 May 2006
JTA
By Chanan Tigay
NEW YORK, May 10 (JTA) — With concern mounting over Iran’s
atomic ambitions, the American Jewish community is lobbying intensively
to ensure that the threat is taken seriously by the United States,
the media and the world.
Careful to avoid giving the impression that it’s primarily
an issue of Jewish or Israeli concern, however, U.S. Jewish groups
are taking pains to highlight the greater regional and global threats
posed by a nuclear Iran and its Holocaust-denying president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
“We have to mobilize public opinion in this country and
around the word to understand the serious threat that this represents,” Malcolm
Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of President
of Major American Jewish Organizations, told JTA. Iran is “the
fulcrum of the international terrorist movement, not only though
Hezbollah and Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which they aid, but terrorist
groups around the world — including in the United States
and Europe.”
The American Jewish Committee bought ads last month in The New
York Times, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune and New
York Sun, asking, “Suppose Iran one day gives nuclear devices
to terrorists. Could anyone anywhere feel safe?”
The idea, said David Harris, the AJCommittee’s executive
director, was “to make sure that the global threat was understood,
as opposed only to the Israel dimension.”
On Tuesday, the head of Israel’s military intelligence unit,
Amos Yadlin, said that, absent sanctions, Iran would attain nuclear
weapons by 2010.
According to reports, Iran already has procured North Korean missiles
capable of carrying nuclear warheads as far as Israel and parts
of Europe. The Bush administration has said it will not tolerate
a nuclear Iran, a sentiment recently echoed by German Chancellor
Angela Merkel.
When Ahmadinejad “says that he wants to destroy Israel,
the world needs to take it seriously,” Bush said in an interview
with German weekly Bild am Sonntag. “This is a serious threat,
aimed at an ally of the United States and Germany. What Ahmadinejad
also means is that if he is ready to destroy one country, then
he would also be ready to destroy others. This is a threat that
needs to be dealt with.”
The foreign ministers of several key Security Council members
met Monday to discuss a proposed U.N. resolution to brake Iran’s
nuclear program, but did not reach consensus. Russia and China
still oppose including any mention of sanctions or possible military
intervention in the resolution, which is being sponsored by Britain
and France and backed by the United States.
Hoenlein said the Presidents Conference is deliberately taking
a quiet approach to its lobbying on Iran.
“This is an area where, I think, we do not want this to
be seen as a Jewish issue; it’s not,” he said. “This
is a danger for America, for the world. Therefore, I think the
low-visibility but intensive approach is appropriate.”
“We’re not against protests or American Jews expressing
themselves on this,” Hoenlein added, “but it shouldn’t
be exclusively Jews.”
Jewish groups have publicly backed the Iran Freedom Support Act,
a piece of legislation that has passed the U.S. House of Representatives
and is now going through the Senate. The act would impose sanctions
on companies doing business with Iran and would promote democratic
organizations there. The House bill also includes language that
urges American investors to divest from Iran.
Jewish groups have vigorously lobbied American and international
leaders, and have held meetings to educate members of the media.
During its Washington policy conference in March, members of the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee held more than 450 meetings
with members of Congress in which Iran was among the major topics
of discussion, AIPAC spokeswoman Jennifer Cannata said.
Leaders of the American Jewish Congress have held high-level talks
on the topic with the Jordanian mission to the United Nations,
and will be traveling to Jordan later this month to meet with King
Abdullah II.
AJCommittee officials raised the topic of Iran when they met Tuesday
with French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy. Last week,
the AJCommittee spoke with Merkel and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan, among others. The group also has met with Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov.
Despite differences in approach among world leaders, Harris said, “There
is a virtual unanimity of view on the threat assessment. No one
we have met takes the issue lightly or minimizes the danger.”
The World Jewish Congress has undertaken several significant programs
to lobby and educate on the Iranian threat. Coming out of the group’s
February Governing Board meeting — during which Israeli,
American and European experts addressed the group on Iran — leaders
of European Jewish communities began lobbying their governments
to speak out against Iran and declare Ahmadinejad and his colleagues
personas non gratas.
The WJC, which continues to meet with world leaders on the subject,
also has been putting out a bi-weekly publication called “Iran
Update,” a collection of relevant news on Iran and analyses
of the situation that is sent to presidents of Jewish communities
around the world, diplomats, politicians, experts and members of
the media. The WJC also has made a slide show on Iran available
on its Web site, http://www.worldjewishcongress.org.
“Iran’s nuclear program is not the only concern,” said
Pinchas Shapiro, the WJC’s director of special projects. “Their
unbridled support for international terrorism, from the Marine
barracks bombing in 1983 to the Buenos Aires Jewish community center
bombing in 1994 to their declared recruitment of tens of thousands
of suicide bombers to attack Western targets, are all matters of
grave seriousness.”
Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League,
said Iran is either No. 1 or No. 2 on the group’s agenda
in all meetings with American and foreign officials. Sometimes
the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority tops the list of talking points.
“The threat of a nuclear Iran is an irrational state which
has declared war not only on Israel and the Jewish people, but
on our values and our institutions and on everything the free world
cherishes,” Foxman said.
Referring to Ahmadinejad’s threats to annihilate Israel,
Foxman added that history has taught that “you pay attention
to what lunatics say, especially when they have the means to effectuate
their words.”
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