Obama on Zionism and Hamas
Here is an excerpt from "The Atlantic" online mag's interview of  Obama with 
Zionist Jeffrey Goldberg:
 
Obama and I spoke over the weekend about Hamas, about Jimmy Carter, and about 
the future of Jewish settlements on the West Bank. He seemed eager to talk 
about his ties to the Jewish community, and about the influence Jews have had 
on his life. Among other things, he told me that he learned the art of moral 
anguish from Jews. We spoke as well about my Atlantic cover story on Israel’s 
future. He mentioned his interest in the opinions of the writer David Grossman, 
who is featured in the article. “I remember reading The Yellow Wind when it 
came out, and reading about Grossman now is powerful, painful stuff.” And, 
speaking in a kind of code Jews readily understand, Obama also made sure to 
mention that he was fond of the writer Leon Uris, the author of Exodus.
 
Here are excerpts from our conversation:
 
JEFFREY GOLDBERG: I’m curious to hear you talk about the Zionist idea. Do you 
believe that it has justice on its side?
 
BARACK OBAMA: You know, when I think about the Zionist idea, I think about how 
my feelings about Israel were shaped as a young man -- as a child, in fact. I 
had a camp counselor when I was in sixth grade who was Jewish-American but who 
had spent time in Israel, and during the course of this two-week camp he shared 
with me the idea of returning to a homeland and what that meant for people who 
had suffered from the Holocaust, and he talked about the idea of preserving a 
culture when a people had been uprooted with the view of eventually returning 
home. There was something so powerful and compelling for me, maybe because I 
was a kid who never entirely felt like he was rooted. That was part of my 
upbringing, to be traveling and always having a sense of values and culture but 
wanting a place. So that is my first memory of thinking about Israel.
 
And then that mixed with a great affinity for the idea of social justice that 
was embodied in the early Zionist movement and the kibbutz, and the notion that 
not only do you find a place but you also have this opportunity to start over 
and to repair the breaches of the past. I found this very appealing.
 
JG: You’ve talked about the role of Jews in the development of your thinking
 
BO: I always joke that my intellectual formation was through Jewish scholars 
and writers, even though I didn’t know it at the time. Whether it was 
theologians or Philip Roth who helped shape my sensibility, or some of the more 
popular writers like Leon Uris. So when I became more politically conscious, my 
starting point when I think about the Middle East is this enormous emotional 
attachment and sympathy for Israel, mindful of its history, mindful of the 
hardship and pain and suffering that the Jewish people have undergone, but also 
mindful of the incredible opportunity that is presented when people finally 
return to a land and are able to try to excavate their best traditions and 
their best selves. And obviously it’s something that has great resonance with 
the African-American experience.
 
One of the things that is frustrating about the recent conversations on Israel 
is the loss of what I think is the natural affinity between the 
African-American community and the Jewish community, one that was deeply 
understood by Jewish and black leaders in the early civil-rights movement but 
has been estranged for a whole host of reasons that you and I don’t need to 
elaborate.
 
JG: Do you think that justice is still on Israel’s side?
 
BO: I think that the idea of a secure Jewish state is a fundamentally just 
idea, and a necessary idea, given not only world history but the active 
existence of anti-Semitism, the potential vulnerability that the Jewish people 
could still experience. I know that that there are those who would argue that 
in some ways America has become a safe refuge for the Jewish people, but if 
you’ve gone through the Holocaust, then that does not offer the same sense of 
confidence and security as the idea that the Jewish people can take care of 
themselves no matter what happens. That makes it a fundamentally just idea.
That does not mean that I would agree with every action of the state of Israel, 
because it’s a government and it has politicians, and as a politician myself I 
am deeply mindful that we are imperfect creatures and don’t always act with 
justice uppermost on our minds. But the fundamental premise of Israel and the 
need to preserve a Jewish state that is secure is, I think, a just idea and one 
that should be supported here in the United States and around the world.
 
JG: Go to the kishke question, the gut question: the idea that if Jews know 
that you love them, then you can say whatever you want about Israel, but if we 
don’t know you –- Jim Baker, Zbigniew Brzezinski –- then everything is suspect. 
There seems to be in some quarters, in Florida and other places, a sense that 
you don’t feel Jewish worry the way a senator from New York would feel it.
 
BO: I find that really interesting. I think the idea of Israel and the reality 
of Israel is one that I find important to me personally. Because it speaks to 
my history of being uprooted, it speaks to the African-American story of 
exodus, it describes the history of overcoming great odds and a courage and a 
commitment to carving out a democracy and prosperity in the midst of 
hardscrabble land. One of the things I loved about Israel when I went there is 
that the land itself is a metaphor for rebirth, for what’s been accomplished. 
What I also love about Israel is the fact that people argue about these issues, 
and that they’re asking themselves moral questions.
 
Sometimes I’m attacked in the press for maybe being too deliberative. My staff 
teases me sometimes about anguishing over moral questions. I think I learned 
that partly from Jewish thought, that your actions have consequences and that 
they matter and that we have moral imperatives. The point is, if you look at my 
writings and my history, my commitment to Israel and the Jewish people is more 
than skin-deep and it’s more than political expediency. When it comes to the 
gut issue, I have such ardent defenders among my Jewish friends in Chicago. I 
don’t think people have noticed how fiercely they defend me, and how central 
they are to my success, because they’ve interacted with me long enough to know 
that I've got it in my gut. During the Wright episode, they didn’t flinch for a 
minute, because they know me and trust me, and they’ve seen me operate in 
difficult political situations.
 
The other irony in this whole process is that in my early political life in 
Chicago, one of the raps against me in the black community is that I was too 
close to the Jews. When I ran against Bobby Rush [for Congress], the perception 
was that I was Hyde Park, I’m University of Chicago, I’ve got all these Jewish 
friends. When I started organizing, the two fellow organizers in Chicago were 
Jews, and I was attacked for associating with them. So I’ve been in the foxhole 
with my Jewish friends, so when I find on the national level my commitment 
being questioned, it’s curious.
 
JG: Why do you think Ahmed Yousef of Hamas said what he said about you?
 
BO: My position on Hamas is indistinguishable from the position of Hillary 
Clinton or John McCain. I said they are a terrorist organization and I’ve 
repeatedly condemned them. I’ve repeatedly said, and I mean what I say: since 
they are a terrorist organization, we should not be dealing with them until 
they recognize Israel, renounce terrorism, and abide by previous agreements.
 
JG: Were you flummoxed by it?
 
BO: I wasn’t flummoxed. I think what is going on there is the same reason why 
there are some suspicions of me in the Jewish community. Look, we don’t do 
nuance well in politics and especially don’t do it well on Middle East policy. 
We look at things as black and white, and not gray. It’s conceivable that there 
are those in the Arab world who say to themselves, “This is a guy who spent 
some time in the Muslim world, has a middle name of Hussein, and appears more 
worldly and has called for talks with people, and so he’s not going to be 
engaging in the same sort of cowboy diplomacy as George Bush,” and that’s 
something they’re hopeful about. I think that’s a perfectly legitimate 
perception as long as they’re not confused about my unyielding support for 
Israel’s security.
 
When I visited Ramallah, among a group of Palestinian students, one of the 
things that I said to those students was: “Look, I am sympathetic to you and 
the need for you guys to have a country that can function, but understand this: 
if you’re waiting for America to distance itself from Israel, you are 
delusional. Because my commitment, our commitment, to Israel’s security is 
non-negotiable.” I’ve said this in front of audiences where, if there were any 
doubts about my position, that’d be a place where you’d hear it.

When Israel invaded Lebanon two summers ago, I was in South Africa, a place 
where, obviously, when you get outside the United States, you can hear much 
more critical commentary about Israel’s actions, and I was asked about this in 
a press conference, and that time, and for the entire summer, I was very 
adamant about Israel’s right to defend itself. I said that there’s not a 
nation-state on Earth that would tolerate having two of its soldiers kidnapped 
and just let it go. So I welcome the Muslim world’s accurate perception that I 
am interested in opening up dialogue and interested in moving away from the 
unilateral policies of George Bush, but nobody should mistake that for a softer 
stance when it comes to terrorism or when it comes to protecting Israel’s 
security or making sure that the alliance is strong and firm. You will not see, 
under my presidency, any slackening in commitment to Israel’s security.
 
JG: What do you make of Jimmy Carter’s suggestion that Israel resembles an 
apartheid state?
 
BO: I strongly reject the characterization. Israel is a vibrant democracy, the 
only one in the Middle East, and there’s no doubt that Israel and the 
Palestinians have tough issues to work out to get to the goal of two states 
living side by side in peace and security, but injecting a term like apartheid 
into the discussion doesn’t advance that goal. It’s emotionally loaded, 
historically inaccurate, and it’s not what I believe.
 
JG: If you become President, will you denounce settlements publicly?
 
BO: What I will say is what I’ve said previously. Settlements at this juncture 
are not helpful. Look, my interest is in solving this problem not only for 
Israel but for the United States.
 
JG: Do you think that Israel is a drag on America’s reputation overseas?
 
BO: No, no, no. But what I think is that this constant wound, that this 
constant sore, does infect all of our foreign policy. The lack of a resolution 
to this problem provides an excuse for anti-American militant jihadists to 
engage in inexcusable actions, and so we have a national-security interest in 
solving this, and I also believe that Israel has a security interest in solving 
this because I believe that the status quo is unsustainable. I am absolutely 
convinced of that, and some of the tensions that might arise between me and 
some of the more hawkish elements in the Jewish community in the United States 
might stem from the fact that I’m not going to blindly adhere to whatever the 
most hawkish position is just because that’s the safest ground politically.
 
I want to solve the problem, and so my job in being a friend to Israel is 
partly to hold up a mirror and tell the truth and say if Israel is building 
settlements without any regard to the effects that this has on the peace 
process, then we’re going to be stuck in the same status quo that we’ve been 
stuck in for decades now, and that won’t lift that existential dread that David 
Grossman described in your article.
 
The notion that a vibrant, successful society with incredible economic growth 
and incredible cultural vitality is still plagued by this notion that this 
could all end at any moment -- you know, I don’t know what that feels like, but 
I can use my imagination to understand it. I would not want to raise my 
children in those circumstances. I want to make sure that the people of Israel, 
when they kiss their kids and put them on that bus, feel at least no more 
existential dread than any parent does whenever their kids leave their sight. 
So that then becomes the question: is settlement policy conducive to relieving 
that over the long term, or is it just making the situation worse? That’s the 
question that has to be asked.
 
http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/05/obama_on_zionism_and_hamas.php
 
Permalink ::
Share This

        * More Jeffrey Goldberg: March 2009


      

Reply via email to