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By

Chas Newkey-Burden

Opinion

There is an Israel lobby, but it's not who you think it is

March 13, 2012 11:15
3 min read

Perceptions of Israel's supporters are often negative. We are thought to hold tremulous politicians in a vice-like grip, to be brainlessly unquestioning in our support of any Israeli policy, and to be guilty of other horrors, including Islamophobia.

In my opinion it is some of my fellow gentile supporters of Israel that have earned us these bad names. Throughout history, the flow of recriminatory traffic has generally seen gentiles unfairly blaming Jews for various ills. In this case, Jews could justifiably blame the goyim for tainting the name of a fine cause.

Take America, where a "Jewish lobby" is said to "run foreign policy" - an accusation that has been aired afresh in the wake of Obama's friendly Aipac conference speech. The perception of this imperious "lobby" dominating election years provokes resentment across the world.

Unfortunately, there is no such lobby: Jewish people constitute just 2.1 per cent of the American population and research shows Israel is seldom a key factor in their voting habits. The American Jewish Committee found that just three percent of respondents in a major survey named Israel as the most important factor in deciding how they vote.