February 10, 2026

Israel Lobby Groups Hatch Plan to Divide the Left

071719-07-Israel-Palestine-Politics
Israel Lobby Groups Hatch Plan to Divide the Left

Israel Lobby Groups Hatch Plan to Divide the Left
Israel and its lobby see solidarity between Palestinians and other oppressed groups, especially Black people in the US, as a major threat. (Photo: Johnny Silvercloud/flickr/cc)

Israel and its lobby see the strengthening solidarity between Palestinians and other oppressed groups as a major threat.


Israel Lobby Groups Hatch Plan to Divide the Left

By Ali Abunimah


Influential Israel lobby groups are offering โ€œrulesโ€ for how Jewish communal organizations can divide the left and break up emerging intersectional coalitions.

They also advocate for โ€œdelegitimizingโ€ Jews deemed too supportive of Palestinian rights.

Israel and its lobby see the strengthening solidarity between Palestinians and other oppressed groups, especially Black people in the United States, as a major threat and they are determined to fight back.

Indeed, last year, Al Jazeeraโ€™s leaked undercover documentary The Lobbyโ€“USA revealed how the Israeli government and its lobby worked to disrupt the Black Lives Matter movement in retaliation for Black solidarity with Palestine.

The term intersectionality was coined by scholar Kimberlรฉ Crenshaw in 1989 to describe a feminist perspective that explains how individuals or communities experience overlapping systems of oppression based on gender, race, ethnicity and other socioeconomic factors.

In recent years, intersectionality has become a guiding principle for organizers to build more powerful cross-community coalitions to fight white supremacy, mass incarceration, police violence, economic inequality and anti-immigrant policies.

But in a new report, Israelโ€™s Reut Institute and the US-based Jewish Council for Public Affairs warn that intersectionality โ€œundermines Jewish communitiesโ€™ agendas, including support for the State of Israel.โ€

The report points with dismay at how Israelโ€™s 2014 assault on Gaza that killed more than 2,200 Palestinians, including 550 children, coincided with the uprising in Ferguson, Missouri, after the police killing of Black teenager Michael Brown.

This generated strong expressions of solidarity symbolized by the hashtag #Palestine2Ferguson.

It also brought renewed attention to parallels, including concrete connections such as joint training, between Israeli forces that routinely kill Palestinians and US police that perpetrate killings of Black people.

Activist coalitions have won notable victories, including the decision by the North Carolina city of Durham to ban the training of its police by foreign militaries.

The 2014 Ferguson uprising was, according to the report, โ€œa strategic benchmark in the evolution of anti-Israel agendas within intersectional spaces.โ€

Blaming โ€œCorbynizationโ€

The โ€œchallenge of intersectionality,โ€ the report states, is compounded by a number of political developments including what it calls โ€œCorbynizationโ€ โ€“ the mainstreaming of a โ€œnew anti-Semitismโ€ as is allegedly happening in Britainโ€™s Labour Party.

This โ€œnew anti-Semitismโ€ is explicitly equated by the reportโ€™s authors with anti-Zionism.

Zionism, Israelโ€™s state ideology, is racist because it grants superior rights to Jews enshrined in dozens of Israeli laws and holds that Palestinians expelled and exiled from their homeland should not be allowed to return to it solely and exclusively because they are not Jews.

Anti-Zionism, therefore, is not prejudice against Jews as Israel and its lobby groups claim.

Anti-Zionism, based in universal human rights principles, is anti-racism.

However, muddying the waters with false equivalencies is a central strategy of the Israel lobby, including the years-long campaign of fabrications that Labour, led by lifelong Palestine solidarity campaigner Jeremy Corbyn, is institutionally anti-Semitic.

The report claims that โ€œโ€‰โ€˜Corbynizationโ€™ is spreading through segments of the political leftโ€ and that โ€œUK-based anti-Israel groups have been inspiring liberal and progressive elite circles worldwide.โ€

This underlines why Israel and its lobby view discrediting and removing Corbyn as a paramount priority.

โ€œCorbynizationโ€ apparently affects the US Democratic Party, where the reportโ€™s authors lament the long-observed โ€œgreat declineโ€ of support for Israel.

The debate over the Democratic Partyโ€™s stance on Israel, pushed by progressives, constitutes a โ€œthreat to the future of the traditional US bipartisan support for Israel,โ€ the report notes.

Israel and the far-right

Other headwinds faced by pro-Israel advocates include, according to the report, โ€œthe growing identification between Israel and the political rightโ€ exemplified by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuโ€™s alliances with white supremacist and anti-Semitic leaders such as US President Donald Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

These alliances โ€œhave driven liberals and young millennials to question whether traditional ties to Israel are deserved or beneficial,โ€ the report concedes.

These affinities were highlighted over the weekend by Trumpโ€™s racist attacks on four members of Congress โ€“ Alexandria Ocasio-CortezIlhan OmarRashida Tlaib and Ayanna S. Pressley.

Trump demanded that the elected women of color โ€œgo backโ€ to their own countries, casting them as foreigners, rather than Americans.

He claimed that the four progressive newcomers in Congress โ€œhate Israel with a true and unbridled passion,โ€ an accusation that will do little to endear Israel to the vast numbers of people expressing disgust at his attacks and solidarity with the women he is targeting.

The Israel lobby groupsโ€™ report, like Trump, accuses โ€œfreshly elected โ€˜social Democratic progressivesโ€™โ€‰โ€ of promoting โ€œanti-Israel agendas,โ€ and doing so โ€œas a fashionable mode of breaking taboos.โ€

โ€œDelegitimizeโ€ Jews

The reportโ€™s diagnosis includes an intense focus on how political and social trends among American Jews are eroding support for Israel, Zionism and establishment Jewish communal groups that support Israel.

It includes a โ€œtypologyโ€ of Jews โ€“ dividing them into โ€œfour tribesโ€ ranging from unquestioning supporters of Israel and โ€œmoderateโ€ critics of its policies, to โ€œharsh criticsโ€ and โ€œradicals.โ€

The report acknowledges another long-term trend: younger Jews espousing universalist and liberal politics identify with Israel less and less. It concedes that many young Jews โ€œfeel deceived because Jewish organizations provided them only a simplistic view of the conflictโ€ with Palestinians.

The report is realistic about the difficulty of winning young Jews back, and aims at mere damage control.

For example, it recommends that efforts to engage โ€œharsh criticsโ€ should โ€œnot seek to transform them into Israel advocates, but to make them less susceptible to anti-Israel influence.โ€

But the velvet glove comes off when it comes to dealing with โ€œradicalsโ€ โ€“ Jews who reject the racist ideology of Zionism and support nonviolent campaigns for Palestinian rights, especially boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS).

โ€œThe goal of the Jewish community should be to delegitimize Jewish Radicals anti-Zionists [sic] in mainstream progressive circles,โ€ the report asserts.

Doubling down on failed strategies

The report urges Jewish communal groups to form their own โ€œintersectional alliancesโ€ in an effort to co-opt progressive Jewish and non-Jewish communities to the Israel lobbyโ€™s anti-Palestinian cause.

It recommends so-called โ€œniche organizationsโ€ like the pinkwashing group A Wider Bridge as tools that can be used in co-optation strategies.

Israel advocates are also told to try to โ€œDrive a wedge between ideological adversaries and their solidarity supporters.โ€

The report urges efforts to โ€œdevelop a counter-intellectual narrative, by partnering with key intersectional theorists to break the focus on Israel and restore the concept to its original meaning.โ€

Apparently this โ€œoriginal meaningโ€ does not involve supporting human rights for Palestinians and there is no hint at what a persuasive โ€œcounter-intellectual narrativeโ€ to opposing the oppression of Palestinians might look like.

Indeed thereโ€™s nothing in the report that suggests Israel lobby groups have any fundamentally new approaches.

A decade ago, the Reut Institute recommended similar strategies to try to sabotage โ€œdelegitimizersโ€ of Israel, including efforts to divide the solidarity movement and co-opt progressives and soft critics of Israel.

Yet a secret report by Reut and the Anti-Defamation League leaked to The Electronic Intifada in 2017 acknowledged that the Israel lobbyโ€™s intensive efforts and massive spending had failed to counter the โ€œimpressive growthโ€ of the Palestine solidarity movement.

And like the previous Reut reports, the latest one views opposition to Israel merely as a problem of perception that can be changed with clever enough โ€œengagementโ€ strategies.

But as long as Israel and its lobby refuse to address the real problem: Israelโ€™s violent denial of basic rights to millions of Palestinians inside and outside their homeland just because they are not Jewish, nothing they do is likely to stem the loss of support.


Published by Common Dreams, 07.17.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.