Washington | Rahm Emanuel, a potential Democratic presidential candidate and longtime defender of Israel, will denounce Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv this week and deliver a bracing message that the country's relationship with the United States is "at a crossroads." "It cannot stand or survive as it has been," Emanuel will say at Tel Aviv University on Wednesday, according to remarks obtained by The Associated Press.
"To maintain the strength of our ties, we need significant changes and a new direction." The speech, coming from a stalwart of Democrats' centrist wing, is another demonstration of how far their party has shifted away from its historic support of Israel.
About 58% of Democrats say the US is "too supportive" of the Israelis, according to a new survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, up from 45% in January 2024.
Roughly half of Democrats believe that Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians during the war in Gaza, an accusation that's been levelled by some human rights organisations and vehemently denied by Israel and the US government.
Emanuel's proposals will include sanctions on Israelis who attack Palestinian civilians and property along with companies and banks that support settlements considered illegal by most of the international community. He also wants to end US subsidies to Israel's defence budget, arguing the country "should be able to buy American arms under the same financial terms, the same restrictions, and the same requirements as every other trusted ally that abides by our laws." In addition, Emanuel will blame Netanyahu for driving Israel to a "dead end," emboldened by poor decisions from American leaders.
"For too long, American policy toward Israel operated under the assumption that the best thing Washington could do for Jerusalem was to blindly and silently stand behind your government, without conditions, without demands, and without consequences when we disagreed," he will say. "That has been our mistake. Unconditional support has produced a prime minister who has presumed that his strategic interests would incur no cost if he ignored America's concerns." There's little precedent for an American with presidential ambitions to travel to another country, much less one as fraught as Israel, to deliver such a stinging rebuke of its political leadership. Centrist figures like Emanuel have been more reluctant than Democrats' progressive base to question longtime US support for Israel in recent years.
How will Netanyahu react?
His remarks could prompt a similarly fiery response from Netanyahu, who famously once called Emanuel, who had ambitions of being the first Jewish speaker of the US House, a "self-hating Jew." Netanyahu faces his own battle for reelection in October, and the veteran leader may try to use a confrontation with Emanuel for political gain by appearing to stand strong in the face of international criticism.
But for possible Democratic presidential contenders gauging how to address the fallout from Israel's war in Gaza and Netanyahu's perceived tilt toward the Republican Party, led by President Donald Trump, the speech represents an especially frontal strategy. The war has disrupted political coalitions in both major political parties in the US, with younger voters recoiling at Israel's approach to the conflict pressing American leaders to take a tougher stand. The issue has roiled some Democratic congressional primaries this year and could continue to be a dividing line in the contest for the party's presidential nomination in 2028.
Castigating Netanyahu for doing little to advance diplomatic efforts to end the war, Emanuel will note that "support for Israel is plummeting around the world." "You've lost Europe," he will say. "Your scientists face exclusion from international research networks. Your artists and academics are shut out of exhibits and conferences."
Support for Israel wanes
While Netanyahu has forged generally strong ties with Trump and the Republican Party, Israel's support among Democrats has slipped in recent years. But in portraying Israel as increasingly isolated, Emanuel's comments have echoes of recent remarks from Vice President JD Vance, a sign of how criticism of the country is taking hold in both parties.
Speaking recently from the White House briefing room as the US worked to close a deal to end the war with Iran, Vance said Trump was "the only head of state in the entire world who is sympathetic to the nation of Israel at this moment in time." For all his tough words, Emanuel, who is Jewish and whose father was born in Jerusalem, will offer notes of sympathy and understanding. He acknowledged the toll of the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in which Hamas-led militants launched air and ground strikes on Israel, killing nearly 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages. He noted disappointments from previous rounds of peace talks with Palestinian leaders.
"But even while acknowledging that history, the path forward cannot be held hostage to a past defined exclusively by recriminations," he will say.
He will call the two-state solution "discredited" and instead push for a "23-state solution" that includes Israel, the Palestinians and the 21 other members of the Arab League in a peace deal.
"The 21 Arab nations that have exploited Palestinian rights as a slogan for decades now need to roll up their sleeves and stand up a governing authority capable of accepting the historic Jewish connection to this land," he will say.