Obama rebuffs Soros on AIPAC

New York Sun - March 21, 2007 http://www.nysun.com/article/50846

Obama Rebuffs Soros Billionaire’s Comments on Aipac Are Scored

BY ELI LAKE - Staff Reporter of the Sun

WASHINGTON - Leading Democrats, including Senator Obama of Illinois,
are distancing themselves from an essay published this week by one of
their party’s leading financiers that called for the Democratic Party
to “liberate” itself from the influence of the pro-Israel lobby.

The article, by George Soros, published in the New York Review of
Books, asserts that America should pressure Israel to negotiate with
the Hamas-led unity government in the Palestinian territories
regardless of whether Hamas recognizes the right of the Jewish state
to exist. Mr. Soros goes on to say that one reason America has not
embraced this policy is because of the influence of the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Yesterday, Mr. Obama’s presidential campaign issued a dissent from
the Hungarian-born billionaire’s assessment. “Mr.Soros is entitled to
his opinions,” a campaign spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, said. “But on this
issue he and Senator Obamadisagree. The U.S. and our allies are right
to insist that Hamas - a terrorist organization dedicated to Israel’s
destruction - meet very basic conditions before being treated as a
legitimate actor. AIPAC is one of many voices that share this view.”

The Soros article puts Democrats in the awkward position of choosing
between Mr. Soros, a major funder of their causes, and the pro-Israel
lobby, whose members are also active in campaign fund-raising.
Pressed by The New York Sun, some Democrats aired their differences
with Mr. Soros.

Rep. Robert Wexler, a Democrat of Florida who sent out an e-mail to
Jewish supporters in his home state last week vouching for Mr.
Obama’s pro-Israel bona fides, said he too rejected Mr. Soros’s
comments. “Senator Obama says until the Palestinian government
fulfills all three of the quartet requirements, the United States
should not and would not recognize the Palestinian government.
Senator Obama is clear, Mr. Soros appears to have a different
position,” Mr. Wexler said. “I agree with Senator Obama and have felt
that way for a long time.”

Mr. Wexler also took issue with Mr. Soros’s view that Aipac was a
major reason why the Bush administration would not recognize the new
Palestinian unity government. “I have never met him, he’s a very
substantial figure in the country,” Mr.Wexler said of Mr. Soros. “I
think his views are obviously the views of a prominent man. I
respectfully disagree with him.”

A Democratic congressman from New York who has endorsed Senator
Clinton, a Democrat from New York, yesterday was tougher in his
assessment of the new Soros article. “He is obviously very self
absorbed. I am trying to be kind, but he doesn’t leave any room for
kindness,” Rep. Eliot Engel said in a phone interview Monday.

Regarding Mr. Soros’s claim that Aipac drives American foreign
policy, Mr. Engel said, “It’s a myth and lie about Aipac’s supposed
stranglehold on the Congress, it’s just nonsense. He went on to say,
“I don’t think Mr. Soros will sway the Democratic Party one iota.”

Other prominent Democrats yesterday also differed with Mr. Soros. A
vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Susan Turnbull,
said in an phone interview, “My view is the problem here is George
Bush, Mr. Soros has made that clear and at that point I agree with
him. I am not going to say that the problem is Aipac. I don’t
necessarily agree with him on that.” She added, “There are a lot of
reasons why we are in the state we are in. I don’t think that blaming
it on one lobbying organization, which is one aspect of the Jewish
community, is the be-all or end-all to the problem. The problem is
not with Aipac, but with President Bush.”

A spokesman for the Democratic National Committee, Amaya Smith,
declined to comment.

At one point in his essay, in a section discussing how the pro-Israel
lobby “has been remarkably successful in suppressing criticism,” Mr.
Soros recalls the fate of Howard Dean’s campaign for the presidency.
“When Howard Dean called for an evenhanded policy toward Israel in
2004, his chances of getting the nomination were badly damaged
(although it was his attempt, after his defeat in Iowa, to shout
above the crowd that sealed his fate),” Mr. Soros wrote. Dr. Dean is
now chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

The chairman of the Dean campaign, Steve Grossman, yesterday
respectfully disagreed. “While Howard’s public statements about
Israel certainly cost him support in the pro-Israel community, I
believe his anti-war positions continued to attract a broad cross
section of support from the Jewish community. No one that I know
ascribes Howard’s defeat in 2004 to his public statements about
Israel, even though I’ll acknowledge that he lost support among some
pro-Israel activists as a result.”

Mr. Grossman, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee
and past president of Aipac, said he recognized and respected Mr.
Soros’ commitment to “progressive American values,” and his
“investment in political change inAmerica.” But Mr. Grossman also
said, “I reject out of hand Soros’s charges directed toward Aipac.”

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