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Alex Brummer

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

Opinion

Obama's empty legacy

February 26, 2015 13:49
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3 min read

Some years ago, as Washington correspondent of the Guardian, I found myself covering a bitterly fought Congressional race in South Dakota. It is a vast state of prairies, cornfields and grain silos. It is a state with a modest population of less than 900,000 of which 10 per cent are Native Americans. It was as far removed in culture and geography from the American-Jewish population centres of the East Coast, Chicago and Los Angeles as it is possible to be.

Imagine my surprise when I switched on my television set in the capital, Sioux City, to be bombarded with commercials urging voters in this farm state to vote against the re-election of a Republican Congressman James Abdnor who had voted against the supply of a new generation of advanced F16 fighters to Israel.

It was a sharp remainder that, even in the most remote corners of the US with virtually no Jewish population, voting against Israel was tantamount to political suicide. Abdnor lost his seat. That election, almost three decades ago, illustrated to me the reach and depth of support for Israel in America and the unbreakable bond between the two countries. So it is disturbing to find that on the eve of this year's annual conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's scheduled speech to a Republican-controlled Congress, relations are badly strained.

American presidents and Israeli prime ministers have often had their differences. George Bush briefly cut off loan guarantees to Israel in 2001 in the wake of the Iraq war. It was a temporary gesture and relations were rapidly restored. In contrast the six-year relationship between the Obama White House and Israel has remained strained. Partly this can be put down to bad chemistry between a rightist Israeli Premier and a liberal American president who has shown less interest in foreign policy and the Jewish state than his predecessors.