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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

A lobby is a lobby is a lobby

The first thing I was told when I started in journalism all that time ago and in all seriousness was “don’t upset the Catholics”. But no one ever talked about the Rome Lobby, writes David Aaronovitch

January 16, 2017 11:20
Shai Masot was caught being indiscreet on camera
3 min read

Last weekend, my Times colleague Hugo Rifkind was accused on Twitter of being a colonel in Mossad. This struck me as being all too likely, given that agency's almost infernal cleverness. Hugo is outwardly the most gentle and reasonable man I know, but those who understand something of his history will know that several months in his school cadet force gave him the capacity to strip and fire a machine gun. The man is a killer. 

As for Mossad, so much for the uniquely effective “Israel lobby”. We know — because we have been told over the years — that the Israel lobby wields exceptional power. Greater than the Saudi lobby, the oil lobby, the arms lobby or even the Council for the Preservation of Rural England.

In the Mail this week, an anonymous former minister (why anonymous? After all, Hugo surely knows who he or she is) wrote that “British foreign policy is in hock to Israeli influence at the heart of our politics, and those in authority have ignored what is going on”. A former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Sudan, Sir William Patey, said: “we know there is a lobby in this country that seeks to portray in the best possible light, and seeks to isolate and denigrate critics of, Israeli policy.”

And an anonymous “senior Conservative” added: “No MP who has taken an active interest in the affairs of the Middle East, not least the central issue of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, will be unaware of the strength of the Israeli lobby. Like Israel itself, they are powerful and effective and sail pretty close to the line of what is normally acceptable.”