Region | Palestinian Territories

Israelis are in a quandary

Though newspapers and televisions here percolate with news of Senator Barack Obama's surge towards the helm of this country's most important ally, Nir Lev refuses to be swept away.

  • By Joshua Mitnick, The Christian Science Monitor
  • Published: 23:31 October 28, 2008
  • Gulf News

Occupied Jerusalem and Tel Aviv: Though newspapers and televisions here percolate with news of Senator Barack Obama's surge towards the helm of this country's most important ally, Nir Lev refuses to be swept away.

"I prefer McCain," says Lev, a landscaper, while watching football at an occupied Jerusalem bar. "But you want to know what it comes down to? We don't know who [Obama] is."

While it seems like the world is eager for a victory by Senator Obama, the Democratic contender, many Israelis remain uneasy.

This is a country where a security-first mantra often trumps all other arguments. It's a nation anxious about an Iranian attack or Hezbollah strike. It's wary about international involvement in peacemaking with Palestinians and edgy about suicide attacks from Gazan militants.

These are the types of threats that colour Israelis' worldviews and influence the type of American president they want: someone who will take a hard line when confronting any existential threat to the Jewish state.

"They look at [Senator John] McCain and they see a tough president willing to help them do what is necessary. The look at Obama and they see a liberal with big ideas. But when the time comes when Israel has to do something tough and not so beautiful, they don't know whether he'll say 'do what you have to do', " says Shmuel Rosner, an Israeli expert on US politics.

That perception has placed McCain 12 points ahead of Obama in a recent poll conducted by the TNS Teleseker polling agency. The survey, commissioned by the Rabin Centre for Israel Studies, found that 52 per cent of those polled thought McCain would do a better job of protecting Israel.

This country's preference runs counter to the likely choice among American Jews, who are expected to back Obama by at least 3 to 1, according to a recent Gallup poll. Also, the Democratic candidate's popularity is stronger among younger, more dovish Israelis.

"People stop me on the street and ask me for reassurance that Obama will not be [elected]. It's the old the 'security first' argument," says Avraham Ben Tzvi, the US affairs commentator for Israel Radio and a professor of international relations at Haifa University.

What's more, while the McCain campaign tries to distance itself from the Bush administration, Israel hopes he would carry on many of President Bush's same policies, especially regarding the Middle East.

Obama's condemnation of Hamas rocket attacks from Gaza on a visit to the Israeli border town of Sderot in July has helped allay concern that he would mark a radical shift in US allegiances.

Rosner says that initial concern among Israeli officials that Obama would take a critical line towards Israel, reminiscent of former Democratic President Jimmy Carter's comments this past year, has eased somewhat in recent months.

But Obama's thin foreign-policy record still counts as a looming question mark.

"McCain is seen as a safe bet. The gut feeling on whether the US will support Israel's need to use force is a key element," says Rosner, a former US correspondent for the Haaretz newspaper.

Israeli public opinion, along with local experts, has been used on both sides of the campaign to make inroads with American Jews.

In August, a pro-Obama Jewish group produced an Internet video purporting to show a group of ex-generals and security experts endorsing Obama. Several participants later said the producers of the film misled them into believing it was a nonpartisan production. Kory Bardash, chair of the Israel chapter of the Republicans Abroad, speculated that 70 per cent of the expat vote from the Jewish state backed Bush in 2004.

"All the Jewish papers want to know what Israelis think," says Mitchell Barak, a local pollster. "I hold that what Israelis think has absolutely no bearing on what American Jews think. Israel isn't necessarily the sole issue."

Sparse and volatile

Public opinion polls have been sparse and volatile. A mid-June poll for the right-wing Mekor Rishon newspaper put McCain's lead between 36 to 27 per cent, but an Israel Radio poll taken at the same time showed an Obama advantage.

Indeed, Israel is no red state. During the Democratic and Republican primaries, Hillary Rodham Clinton polled as the most popular candidate because of Israelis' memories of Bill Clinton's close ties with former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin before his assassination.

Israelis with more dovish political leanings tend to speak more positively about an Obama presidency. Polls suggest he's more popular with young Israelis.

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