NEIL ROGACHEVSKY [email protected] (January 2021)
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Israel, the Pro-Israel Lobby, American Jews and the Iran Deal
Jonathan Rynhold Israel, the Pro-Israel Lobby, American Jews and the Iran deal American Jews were deeply divided over the 2015 Iran deal. Such divisions over Israel-related issues were nothing new. But this time the argument was not only particularly vitriolic, it was also especially significant because those in favor of the deal were confronting an Israeli consensus on an issue considered to be vital to Israeli security, a commitment to which was shared in principle by the overwhelming majority of American Jews who were skeptical of the agreement’s efficacy, even as they approved of it. This paper seeks to explain the cause of these divisions over the Iran deal and their political significance for Israel’s relations with American Jewry. Contrary to the terms of the core debate about the relationship of American Jews with Israel, which centers on the extent of American Jewish attachment to Israel, it argues that the key struggle was over the power to determine the political meaning of ‘pro-Israel’ in this critical context and that the divide was primarily a part of a wider partisan divide among Americans in general. In theoretical terms, “the authority to determine the shared meanings that constitute the identities, interests and practices… is perhaps the most subtle and most effective form of power because it encapsulates the institutional power to include or exclude, to legitimize and authorize”1. Strong and resilient shared meanings function as cultural ‘containers’ that serve as an important resource for mobilizing political support. The more robust the cultural container the more the political struggle is likely to be focused on interpreting and appropriating it to advance and legitimize a political agenda, rather than seeking to challenge it head-on.2 The pro-Israel orientation in American political culture is one such shared-meaning and it is centered on the American commitment to Israeli security. -
Israel and the Alien Tort Statute
Summer 2014 No.54 JTheUSTICE magazine of the International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists In this issue The International Court of Justice Adjudicating the Arab-Israel Disputes? Boycotts, Divestment, Sanctions and the Law Israel and the Alien Tort Statute Corporations and Human Rights Zivotofsky v. Kerry - A Historical Constitutional Battle Preachers of Hate and Freedom of Expression UNRWA Panel at UN IAJLJ Activities The International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists Honorary President: Hadassa Ben-Itto, Judge (Ret.) (Israel) Life time Member: Irwin Cotler, Prof. (Canada) Honorary Vice Presidents: Joseph Roubache (France) Oreste Bisazza Terracini, Dr. (Italy) Executive Committee: Board of Governors: President: Irit Kohn (Israel) Irit Kohn (Israel) Haim Klugman (Israel) Avraham (Avi) D. Doron (Israel) Deputy President: Meir Rosenne, Dr. (Israel) Haim Klugman (Israel) Mirella M. Bamberger (Israel) Alyza D. Lewin (USA) Vice President and Treasurer: Marcos Arnoldo Grabivker, Judge (Argentina) Avraham (Avi) D. Doron (Israel) Maurizio Ruben (Italy) Alex Hertman (Israel) Vice President and Coordinator with Amos Shapira, Prof. (Israel) International Organizations: Avishai Sapir (Israel) Meir Rosenne, Dr. (Israel) David Pardes (Belgium) Dov Shefi, Brig. (Ret.) (Israel) Vice President and Secretary General: Edna Bekenstein, Judge (Ret.) (Israel) Mirella M. Bamberger (Israel) Edna Kaplan-Hagler, Judge (Ret.) Dr. (Israel) Efraim (Efi) Chalamish, Dr. (USA) Vice Presidents: Ethia Simha (Israel) Alyza D. Lewin (USA) Jeremy D. Margolis (USA) Marcos Arnoldo Grabivker, Judge (Argentina) Jimena Bronfman (Chile) Maurizio Ruben (Italy) Jonathan Lux (UK) Lipa Meir, Dr. (Israel) Academic Adviser: Mala Tabory, Dr. (Israel) Yaffa Zilbershats, Prof. (Israel) Maria Canals De-Cediel, Dr. (Switzerland) Meir Linzen (Israel) Representatives to the U.N. -
Shana Tova Umetuka הקותמו הבוט
News Reports and Commentary ב"ה שבת שלום Elul, 5779 Israel and the Jewish World 28 Published by the TORONTO ZIONIST COUNCIL פרשת יצבים September 28, 2019 Tel: 416 781-3571 e-mail: [email protected] More news: www.aftershabbat.com Founding Editor: Yossi Winter שנה טובה ומתוקה Shana Tova Umetuka Israel’s Flailing Democracy Democrats claim that Trump’s discussion with Post Election Issue constitutes an illegal solicitation of foreign assistance Caroline B. Glick US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s announcement for his 2020 campaign for reelection. Republicans Bizarro World: Neither Candidate Tuesday that she is opening an official impeachment counter that Trump was reasonably trying to Wants the President's Blessing inquiry against President Donald Trump struck many understand what happened to the DNC server in Mati Tuchfeld Israelis as yet another sign that Prime Minister 2016. The story has served as a basis for claims that Before any general election, each candidate hopes Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump are in the same his presidency is illegitimate, and continuous the president will task him or her with forming the boat. Both are hounded by legal elites who will stop investigations of his campaign. next government. Now, however, for the first time at nothing to oust them from office. Leaving aside the weight of the opposing claims, the ever, the candidates hope President Reuven Rivlin There are parallels between the two leaders. fact is that there is nothing unique about Trump’s will task their rival with the responsibility. Pelosi’s move followed the leak of a whistleblower actions. As Mark Thiessen noted in the Washington It seems the president has never had as much complaint to the US intelligence community’s Post, in 2018, three Democratic senators urged the discretion as he does presently. -
Israeli Nonprofits: an Exploration of Challenges and Opportunities , Master’S Thesis, Regis University: 2005)
Israeli NGOs and American Jewish Donors: The Structures and Dynamics of Power Sharing in a New Philanthropic Era Volume I of II A Dissertation Presented to The Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Brandeis University Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies S. Ilan Troen, Advisor In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by Eric J. Fleisch May 2014 The signed version of this form is on file in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. This dissertation, directed and approved by Eric J. Fleisch’s Committee, has been accepted and approved by the Faculty of Brandeis University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of: DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Malcolm Watson, Dean Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Dissertation Committee: S. Ilan Troen, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Jonathan D. Sarna, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Theodore Sasson, Department of International Studies, Middlebury College Copyright by Eric J. Fleisch 2014 Acknowledgements There are so many people I would like to thank for the valuable help and support they provided me during the process of writing my dissertation. I must first start with my incomparable wife, Rebecca, to whom I dedicate my dissertation. Rebecca, you have my deepest appreciation for your unending self-sacrifice and support at every turn in the process, your belief in me, your readiness to challenge me intellectually and otherwise, your flair for bringing unique perspectives to the table, and of course for your friendship and love. I would never have been able to do this without you. -
A Western Or Eastern Nation the Case of Israel
32nd ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR ISRAEL STUDIES A WESTERN OR EASTERN NATION THE CASE OF ISRAEL JUNE 20-22, 2016 JERUSALEM Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi | Menachem Begin Heritage Center With the support of the Research Insitute for Zionism and Setlement, Jewish Naional Fund (KKL) YAD IZHAK BEN-ZVI Institute for Research on Eretz Israel Association for Israel Studies - 32nd Annual Conference A WESTERN OR EASTERN NATION? THE CASE OF ISRAEL Jerusalem, June 2016 Program Committee First Term Board Members, 2015-2019: Arie Naor, Chair Dr. Yael Aronof (Michigan State University) Judith Goldstein & Michael Feige, Anthropology Dr. Oded Haklai (Queen’s University) Tamar Horowitz & Len Saxe, Communal Studies Dr. Badi Hasisi (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Yoram Peri & Oranit Klein Shagrir, Communicaion Dr. Amal Jamal (Tel Aviv University) Na’ama Shei & Rachel Harris, Film and Theatre Dr. Paula Kabalo (Sede Boqer, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev) Shula Reinharz & Sylvie Fogel-Bijaoui, Gender Studies Dr. Derek Penslar (University of Oxford) Ilana Szobel & Ranen Omer-Sherman, Hebrew Literature Dr. Joel Peters (Virginia Tech) Alon Kadish & Meir Chazan, History Dr. Sandy Kedar (University of Haifa) Galia Golan & Joel Peters, Internaional Relaions Dr. Arieh Saposnik (Sede Boqer, BGU) Gur Alroey & Theodore Sasson, Israel-Diaspora Relaions Dr. Orna Sasson-Levy (Bar-Ilan University) Pnina Lahav & Mohammed Watad, Law Dr. Mohammed Watad (Zefat Academic College) Ariel Ahram & Oren Barak, Naional Security Oded Haklai & Mustafa Abbasi, Non-Jewish Minoriies Ami Pedahzur & Assaf Meydani, Poliical Science Second Term Board Members, 2013-2017: Boaz Huss & Mordechai Inbari, Religious Studies Sammy Smooha & Russell Stone, Sociology Dr. Michael Brenner (American University and University of Alan Dowty & Tamar Hermann, The Arab-Israeli Conlict Munich) Colin Shindler & Reuven Gafni, Zionism Dr. -
Israeli Press: a Comparative Analysis of "Assafir" and "The Jerusalem Post"
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 2001 Framing and Counterframing of the Middle East Peace Process in the Arab -Israeli Press: a Comparative Analysis of "Assafir" and "The Jerusalem Post". Houda Hanna El-koussa Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation El-koussa, Houda Hanna, "Framing and Counterframing of the Middle East Peace Process in the Arab -Israeli Press: a Comparative Analysis of "Assafir" and "The eJ rusalem Post"." (2001). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 401. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/401 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. -
Diasporas and Deliberative Democracy
A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The Australian National University Diasporas and Deliberative Democracy A case study of Jewish diaspora involvement in constitutional deliberations in Israel Submitted by: Shay Keinan Revised Version, March 2018 Supervisors: Dr. Ron Levy (chair of panel); Professor Kim Rubenstein; Associate Professor Afshin Akhtar-Khavari © Copyright by Shay Keinan (2018) All Rights Reserved ii I declare that this thesis is my own original work, Shay Keinan, March 2018 Word count: 92,364 (including footnotes) iii iv Acknowledgments Many people have helped me and encouraged me during the process of writing my thesis. I wish to thank in particular my main supervisor Dr. Ron Levy for his invaluable comments, suggestions and guidance. I would also like to thank Prof. Kim Rubenstein for her insightful comments and continuing encouragement, Associate Prof. Afshin Akhtar-Khavari for his feedback and my partner Felicity Hammond for her support. This thesis is dedicated to my father, Shlomo Keinan, who always inspired me to read and to learn. v vi Abstract The boundaries of citizenship are increasingly contested. The trend among scholars is to try to expand the state’s responsibilities and duties to include non-citizens in the relevant polity. Legal, social and political theorists ask whether citizenship can or should exist beyond the nation state and a defined territory. This debate closely relates to the burgeoning research regarding diaspora communities and their connections with their countries of origin or homelands (‘kin-states’). Diaspora communities have always maintained some level of interest in the affairs of their kin- states, but globalisation and advanced communication technologies have made it easier for people in the diaspora to engage in activities that are directed at the political and social life of their kin-states. -
Why the United States Needs a National Political Warfare Center and Regional Embassies
Georgetown Security Studies Review 4:2 1 Georgetown Security Studies Review Volume 4, Number 2 June 2016 A Publication of the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service http://gssr.georgetown.edu Georgetown Security Studies Review 4:2 2 GEORGETOWN SECURITY STUDIES REVIEW Published by the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service Ashley L. Rhoades, Editor-in-Chief Devon Hill, Deputy Editor Jacob Goldstein, Associate Editor for Africa John Chen, Associate Editor for Asia Michael Sexton, Associate Editor for Cyber Security Joe Pedley, Associate Editor for Europe Brendan Kinslow, Associate Editor for the Middle East Morgan Byrne-Diakun, Associate Editor for National Security & the Military Access Georgetown Security Studies Review online at http://gssr.georgetown.edu Connect on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/GeorgetownUniversityGSSR Follow GSSR on Twitter @gssreview Contact the Editor-in-Chief at [email protected] DISCLAIMER The views expressed in Georgetown Security Studies Review do not necessarily represent those of the editors or staff of GSSR, the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, or Georgetown University. The editorial board of GSSR and our affiliated peer reviewers strive to verify the accuracy of all factual information contained in GSSR. However, the staffs of GSSR, the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, and Georgetown University make no warranties or representations regarding the completeness or accuracy -
Amdocs and the NSA =Go to NFU Pages
NewsFollowUp NewsFollowUp.com search Franklin Scandal Omaha Obama sitemap home Amdocs Amdocs and the NSA =go to NFU pages News for the 99% ...................................Refresh F5...archive home 50th Anniversary of JFK assassination "Event of a Lifetime" at the Fess Parker Double Tree Inn. JFKSantaBarbara. Mossad, 9/11 Israeli Art Students Amdocs employee bailed out an 'Israeli art student' Gerald Shea, Memorandum to 9/11 Commission NFU MOST ACTIVE PA MP3 file of Fox News, Israeli Art Students, Amdocs Story Go to Alphabetic list Academic Freedom FOX NEWS CARL CAMERON FOUR-PART Conference REPORT: Fox News Series On Israeli Spying In Obama Death List Rothschild Timeline Bush / Clinton Body Count Narus / NSA / Boeing -- John O'neil , FBI agent killed on 9/11 Warrantless data mining ? in the WTC was investigating the Israeli Art Students, Amdocs Amdocs complicity Flight 77, Pentagon, 9/11? Amdocs / Narus / NSA 9/11 WTC art students Amdocs links DEA wire tap Fox News / Carl Cameron, Amdocs DEA / Amdocs links Whitehouse Telephone System Israeli art students / Amdocs Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Corporate Espionage John O'Neil, FBI, Israeli art students Israeli art students, 9/11 DEA, Amdocs, Israeli art students Fox News / Carl Cameron Report Amdocs and the NSA PROGRESSIVE REFERENCE CONSERVATIVE* AfroCubaWeb Israel Actions in the Americas Amdocs search: Narus AntiWar News: AMDOCS Dov Baharav, CEO Ron Moskovitz , CFO Antiwar pdf file art students, Israeli spies. Suspicious Rense 2001 All US Phone Call Records Michael Blum , Division Pres of Financial Services activities involving Israeli art students at DEA And Billing Done In Israel - Part 2 Carl Thomas G. -
The Role of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
The Role of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs Summary of a joint conference of the Mitvim Institute and the Knesset Lobby for Strengthening Israel’s Foreign Affairs System The Knesset Jerusalem, Israel 28 December 2015 Under the current government, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) has been further weakened. Israel currently does not have a full-time foreign minister, and traditional responsibilities of the MFA have been passed on to other ministries. In light of this reality, Mitvim – The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies and the Knesset Lobby for Strengthening Israel`s Foreign Affairs System, Chaired by MK Dr. Nachman Shai (Zionist Union), convened on 28 December 2015 a special conference at the Israeli parliament. The conference was attended by Members of Knesset, diplomats, experts and journalists. It focused on mapping the key problems faced by the MFA, offering solutions and recommendations, and debating the importance of a strong MFA to Israel’s foreign policy and national security. This document summarizes the remarks made at the conference by: MK Isaac Herzog, MK Tzipi Livni, MK Dr. Nachman Shai, MK Dr. Michael Oren, MK Ksenia Svetlova, MK Prof. Manuel Trajtenberg, MK Eyal Ben-Reuven, MK Haim Jelin, MK Ayelet Nahmias-Verbin, Dr. Nimrod Goren (Head of the Mitvim Institute), Colette Avital (former MK and ambassador), Magali Wahaba (former MK and deputy foreign minister), Barak Ravid (Haaretz diplomatic correspondent), Victor Harel (former ambassador), Eran Etzion (former director of policy planning at the MFA), Prof. Yossi Shain (Tel Aviv University), Daniel Shek (former ambassador) and Hanan Goder (Head of the MFA worker’s union). -
Public Opinion in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
S Public Opinion in the Israeli-Palestinian RK Conflict From Geneva to Disengagement to Kadima and Hamas Jacob Shamir EW AC UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE PE Library of Congress Control Number: 2007930700 Peaceworks No. 60. First published June 2007. The views expressed in this report are those of the author alone. They do not necessarily reflect views of the United States Institute of Peace. UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE 1200 17th Street NW, Suite 200 Washington, DC 20036-3011 Phone: 202.457.1700 Fax: 202.429.6063 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.usip.org Contents Summary 1 Preface 4 1. Introduction 5 2. Over the Table and Behind the Table: A Two-Level Game 11 3. The Nature of Public Opinion as a Domestic Imperative 15 4. The Israeli and Palestinian Publics: Differences and Similarities 17 5. Public Opinion, Policy Opportunities, and Constraints: Data Analysis 27 6. Policy Implications and Recommendations 43 7. Epilogue 53 Notes About the Author About the Institute 1 Summary Israeli analysts and pundits enjoy quoting Henry Kissinger’s assertion that “Israel has no foreign policy, only domestic policy.” Kissinger’s comment, while stressed too strongly, captures well the common understanding among political scientists and international relations specialists that domestic considerations have a significant effect on foreign policy. This monograph focuses on one particular domestic imperative of utmost importance in periods of conflict and its resolution: public opinion. Intercommunal and international conflicts affect the most basic elements holding societies together: beliefs, value systems, collective memories, and identity perceptions. The disruption of these same elements—due to conflict—can heighten emotions and increase stress, a situation that often takes a costly toll on society. -
Citizens, Politics and the Political Profession" 17 December 2008 Session 3 Participants: Prof
1 The Israel Democracy Institute 17 December, session 3 The Israel Democracy Institute International Workshop on "Citizens, Politics and the Political Profession" 17 December 2008 Session 3 Participants: Prof. Tamar Hermann Prof. Yossi Shain Dr. Yehuda Ben Meir Prof. Asher Arian Prof. John Lloyd Prof. Astrid von Busekist Prof. Benjamin Gidron Prof. Wolfgang Merkel Prof. Tamar Hermann : We are on the last session for today. We have the privilege of having Dr. Yehuda Ben Meir with us. He will be the second speaker on this session. The first speaker will be Yossi Shain. Prof. Yossi Shain : Thank you so much Tami. And I want to thank Tami twice because when Tami invited me to this conference I was involved with something else. And I was thinking about the subject she was dealing with and I started to look into it and it was totally consuming. It is dedicated to you. As if I came back to graduate school. My paper today or my discussion today will be what I call the language of corruption and its cost to democracy. I will deal with the subject of political leadership and to what extent the underlining of political leadership is undermining democracy and who is in charge. Who has in fact dealt such a blow to political leadership and why this blow comes with impunity in some respects and what needs to be done. The Israeli question came to my mind and troubles me for quite some time. I went through the books, to the ancients of course and to the Roman Empire.