Blinded by the Right

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Blinded by the Right

The GOP's blatantly partisan love for Bibi obscures a dangerous reality: that unwavering support for Israel actually hurts wider U.S. interests in the Middle East.

BY MICHAEL A. COHEN | MAY 24, 2011

In 2003, Democrats upset about President George W. Bush's plans to invade Iraq invited French President Jacques Chirac, an opponent of the war, to address a joint meeting of Congress. It was blatant political play, an attempt by the opposition to work with a foreign leader in offering a counterargument to the president's invasion plans and limit his ability to carry though with his decision to go to war in the Middle East. Chirac was feted across Washington by liberal think tanks and pro-French lobbying groups as American politicians and Democratic activists fell over themselves to be identified with a strong anti-war leader.

This, of course, did not happen. The idea that Congress would openly side with a foreign leader against the president of the United States seems too far-fetched to believe. Remarkably, however, something not dissimilar happened in Washington Tuesday, May 24, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to a joint meeting of Congress (a speech interrupted more than 25 times by a rapturous standing ovation). While these types of congressional addresses are rare, this particular event is even a bit more unusual: The speech's intention -- with the full assistance and backing of the Republican leadership in Congress and implicit support of Democrats -- was to give Netanyahu a public forum to offer a rebuttal to President Barack Obama's recent proposals for moving forward with the Arab-Israeli peace process.

As the New York Times reported last week, the invitation was initially requested by Netanyahu of the GOP leadership before the president's Middle East speech plans had even been formalized: It was "widely interpreted as an attempt to get out in front of Mr. Obama, by presenting an Israeli peace proposal that, while short of what the Palestinians want, would box in the president." In turn, Obama's May 19 speech was scheduled purposely so that the president could get out ahead of Bibi's remarks.

It's one thing for Republicans to oppose the president's position on Arab-Israeli peace. In the hours after Obama's Middle East speech, Republican presidential contenders like Tim Pawlenty and Mitt Romney did just that, arguing that the president had proverbially thrown Israel "under the bus." (Never mind that Obama simply reiterated long-standing U.S. policy toward the Arab-Israeli peace process.) They were joined -- in a bipartisan manner -- by prominent Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, in offering pushback on the president's words.

It is certainly appropriate for members of Congress to disagree with the president's foreign-policy agenda. But it's something else altogether to be appearing to work in concert with the leader of another country in trying to put the president on the defensive -- and seeking to score a partisan political advantage in the process. By openly siding with Netanyahu against Obama and making Arab-Israeli peace a partisan issue, Republicans in Congress are at serious risk of crossing a dangerous line and in the process undermining U.S. interests in the Middle East.

This behavior follows a concerning pattern. Last November, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, after a meeting with Netanyahu, suggested that a Republican Congress would serve as a check on the Obama administration when it came to Israel policy (a position he later sought to walk back). In the fall of 2009, Cantor criticized the Obama administration for its rebuke of the Israeli government over the eviction of Palestinian families in East Jerusalem's Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood. Most surprising of all, the attack was lodged from Jerusalem, where Cantor was heading a 25-person GOP delegation -- an unusual violation of the unspoken rule that members of Congress should refrain from criticizing the U.S. government while on foreign soil. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee took a similar position this February while traveling in Israel. He called the Obama administration's opposition to Israeli settlements (a position long held by Democratic and Republican presidents) equivalent to "racism" and "apartheid."

Last week, as Netanyahu lectured Obama at a frosty White House news conference and issued statements on what he "expected to hear" from the president about his commitment to Israeli security, Republican lawmakers barely batted an eye at behavior that by any other foreign leader would spark outrage from their caucus -- and instead aimed their attacks at Obama.

This seems at pace with the GOP's default position on Israel. This February, writing in the pages of National Review, Romney stated that "Israel must now contend with the fact that its principal backer in the world, the United States, is seeking to ingratiate itself with Arab opinion at its expense." It's a view that no doubt would have been met with astonishment in Arab capitals, where America's image remains largely negative. One can't help but wonder whether the tail isn't wagging the dog -- after all, is there a reason that the United States shouldn't seek to ingratiate itself with Arab public opinion? There is an implicit assumption here that no matter what Israel says or does the United States must continue to be blindly supportive -- an odd stance for an American politician to take, particularly when Israel's actions occasionally run counter to larger U.S. interests.

Although one cannot ignore the fact that strongly held empathy for Israel is, in part, motivating this position, there is of course a healthy dose of domestic politicking at work. Democrats have long relied on Jewish support -- both electorally and financially. Republicans, though less reliant on Jewish voters, have successfully made support for Israel a litmus test for Democrats to prove their national security mettle. Moreover, with strong backing for Israel among the party's conservative base, defending Israeli behavior has become a surefire way for Republicans to politically cater to social conservatives and evangelical voters. In fact, Israel probably enjoys more clear-cut support for its policies among social conservatives than it does among American Jews! (And Netanyahu, in particular, didn't just fall into this love fest: He has long supported and helped spearhead the alliance between the Israeli right wing and American religious conservatives.)

All this is a very far cry from George H.W. Bush's open conflict with Israel and the American Jewish community in 1991 over loan guarantees for Israeli settlements. That the perception continues to exist that Bush's aggressive stance cost him severely in the 1992 presidential election no doubt haunts the Republican Party -- and any American politician inclined to put public pressure on Israeli leaders.

But ultimately there is more than politics at stake here. At a critical moment in the political transformation of the Middle East, America's steadfast and unyielding support for Israel -- underwritten by both parties in Congress -- risks undermining America's long-term interests in the region. Last year, Gen. David Petraeus commented in congressional testimony that "Arab anger over the Palestinian question limits the strength and depth of U.S. partnerships with governments and peoples [in the region]." His statement provoked controversy in Washington, but ask any seasoned Middle East observer and you'd be hard-pressed to find one who disagrees with the general's assessment. It is not Iraq, Afghanistan, or Libya which is the greatest source of anti-American attitudes in the Arab world -- it is the continued lack of resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict and the view of many in the region that the United States has its thumb on the scale in favor of Israel.

None of this is to suggest that Washington should turn its back on the Jewish state. But this is also a time when a more evenhanded position on the conflict is desperately needed -- particularly as the United States will need to deal with a new government in Cairo that will likely be less supportive of Israel, a wave of unsteady democratic reforms spreading across the Mideast, and a U.N. General Assembly that appears ready to endorse Palestinian statehood this fall. These events will have serious repercussions not just for Israel but for U.S. policy in the region. Obama at least seems to realize this fact and has -- albeit tepidly -- challenged a recalcitrant Israel to get serious about peace. Yet Congress seems intent on restraining his leverage, effectively holding U.S. actions hostage to the whims of partisan politics -- and in the process working in concert with a foreign leader to do it. At some point, it raises the legitimate question of who is looking out not for Israel's interests, but America's.

LeeKuanYew-istan Forever

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LeeKuanYew-istan Forever

After more than 50 years of running Singapore, its octogenarian leader is stepping aside. Can the island nation stay prosperous and peaceful as democratic storms begin to blow?

BY PARAG KHANNA | MAY 24, 2011

It is impossible to write a political obituary of someone who not only hasn't yet passed away, but whose influence will assuredly live on long after he passes from the scene. This is especially the case with Lee Kuan Yew: founding father, prime minister, and until this week, "minister mentor" of the world's most admired city-state, Singapore.

Lee is finally stepping down from the cabinet position he created for himself, as is his successor Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong, who also served as a senior minister. Their departure, combined with the swearing-in of a raft of younger cabinet ministers after Lee's People's Action Party (PAP) took a severe blow in parliamentary elections this month, lowers the average age of the cabinet to a sprightly 53. But Lee, now 87, retains a seat in Parliament, not to mention the ear of his son, Lee Hsien Loong, the current prime minister.

Samuel Huntington famously praised Lee -- who has officially or unofficially ruled Singapore for more than 50 years -- as one of the most successful statesmen of the 20th century, but his influence could be even greater in the 21st. Singapore's 20th-century legacy is that of being one of the few truly successful post-colonial nations. While Arab states crumble and the rest of surrounding Indochina struggles in the second world, Singapore skyrocketed From Third World to First, to borrow the title of one volume of Lee's lengthy but instructive memoirs.

The ghosts of colonialism have long since vanished from Singapore. As we enter an urban age in which cities are agile islands of governance that often matter more than countries, Singapore is very much a 21st-century role model, unencumbered by unproductive territory or surplus mouths to feed. And at a time when big government is a four-letter word, Singapore continues to earn high praise for being run like a company (Lee purposely modeled agencies, the civil service, and incentive structures on Royal Dutch Shell). Its economic strategy reads like a business plan, and with the world's highest salaries for government workers, it is also perennially rated the world's least corrupt country.

Emerging markets around the world are searching for a new model in a post-Washington Consensus world. Some have suggested a "Beijing Consensus" of economic reform without political reform, given the Middle Kingdom's spectacular rise to superpower status.

Yet it is in fact the Singapore Consensus, not the Beijing Consensus, that is likely to win the 21st-century competition over governance models. Unlike China, whose government has resources and rights at its disposal that no other state can match, Singapore's ideology is non-ideology ; it is pragmatism. Lee himself continues to receive constant visitors from China, Kazakhstan, and other emerging markets seeking both a role model and blessings as they attempt to master globalization the way Singapore has. Rising city-states like Abu Dhabi take their cues from Singapore, copying everything from the city's farsighted urban planning to its adoption of e-government protocols. Likely none will ever achieve Singapore's near-perfect degree of efficiency: No contemporary leader has either Lee's self-discipline or his willingness to impose discipline.

Lee's Singapore, in other words, is a technocrat's dream. It is a mistake to call it a nanny state. It has a welfare system with national health insurance and low-cost education like Europe, but it does not encourage Greek-style laziness or Spanish-style profligacy. Instead, Singapore conditions good citizen behavior through incentive schemes aimed to keep people working in good times and bad. Unemployment is perennially low; almost everyone has something to do. It also encourages sustainable behavior through consumption taxes and congestion pricing for car owners. There is no better example of "nudging" than Singapore. (And yes, you are allowed to chew gum again -- just don't spit it out on the street.)

Some believe that Lee's departure will take the edge off the PAP's authority. After all, just look at the Middle East, where next-generation leaders are far softer than their fathers. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong doesn't command the fear or respect of his father. Although PAP just suffered quite an electoral blow, with even Foreign Minister George Yeo losing his seat, the prime minister wasted little time in announcing humbly that there are important lessons and takeaways from the election to learn from. Even as the country becomes more internally democratic, Singapore is still ground zero for the great debate over what constitutes good governance in the 21st century. Singapore proves that you can have accountability without Western-style democracy, a perennially incumbent government that is nonetheless responsive to citizens' concerns.

This is something the now-swaggering opposition parties must remember as they gain real influence in Parliament and policymaking. Under the slogan of "First World Parliament," they capitalized on undercurrents of frustration about access to top-tier jobs and education, but now a body with three significant parties has to make sure it doesn't come to look like the U.S. Congress. Singapore now has to achieve both democratic consensus and decisive action, and the former will only be appreciated if the latter is preserved.

Singapore also transcends orthodoxies by embodying what seems an oxymoron to free market purists: planned innovation. Like many small states, Singapore simply cannot afford to fail due to its tiny territory and rough neighborhood. It therefore uses Shell-like scenario planning to forecast global and regional trends and determine what sectors to invest most heavily in to capture future markets. On a recent visit to Singapore, I toured the Biopolis and A*Star laboratories, set up with government support over just a few years. Already they are attracting leading biologists and pharmaceutical talent from around the world to develop medicines and biomedical devices to sell into Asia's growing markets. It doesn't take Silicon Valley-style trial and error and organic experimentation to notice that China and Japan are aging rapidly and that there's money to be made in selling health-care services to them. It takes foresight, of which Singapore has plenty. It may seem paradoxical for a place to be both Eastern and Western at the same time, but that is one important characteristic that poises Singapore to capitalize on emerging power shifts.

Lee's great regret is the turbulent expulsion of Singapore from Malaysia in the first place, which he discusses in a manner similar to Vaclav Havel's disappointment over the "Velvet Divorce" that separated the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993. But his enduring concern is that his many efforts at social engineering have made a nation, but not yet a society. Ethnic Chinese continue to dominate, local Malays feel like an underclass, and Indians are squeezed in the middle. Lee has done much to force them to mingle in public places and attend mixed schools, but he cannot change their DNA. Like young Americans who have no recollection of Cold War brinksmanship and angst, young Singaporeans have no connection to the Singapore that struggled in the early decades to avoid getting embroiled in regional turbulence while building a world financial capital out of a swamp. They only know the highest standards of living and economic freedom. Spoiled? Perhaps. Because they have little direct experience with the Lee who brought them the benefits they now enjoy, they would only continue to respect Lee if he formally and symbolically stepped aside to avoid any more paternalistic aftertaste.

But as the octogenarian exits the stage, the challenge is how to inspire a new generation of public servants to advance the Singapore model rather than just materialism. Patriotism may no longer be Singapore's goal, but rather a more postmodern concept suited to the increasingly multiethnic landscapes of the world's leading cities: stakeholdership. Cosmopolitan capitals like New York, London, and Abu Dhabi don't necessarily offer citizenship or even permanent residency to their many multinational residents. Instead, the real race is to offer a sense of belonging and opportunity; a new passport is not the key to loyalty. It is this individual buy-in that will engender what scholars Daniel A. Bell and Avner de-Shalit call "civicism" in their forthcoming book The Spirit of Cities. Rather than nationalism, it is civicism, or pride in one's city, that is destined to become the dominant "ism" of the 21st century.

If the Singapore model takes root, it will not be a triumph of authoritarianism over democracy, but rather the recognition that there are aspects of public policy that can indeed be treated like a science. And it's not just a regional model: Across most of Latin America, a "New Left Consensus" has emerged in which pro-investment and pro-poor policies are pursued, irrespective of election outcomes. There is sensible continuity despite political change. It is hard to contemplate a post-Lee Kuan Yew Singapore; and certainly, now that he and his son are moving to the side, political life there will become more complicated, less predictable, and more democratic. What remains to be seen is if the virtues of democracy can deliver better results than Lee has in Singapore's first half-century. I would continue to bet on LeeKuanYew-istan.

The Little City-State That Could

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The Little City-State That Could

In Singapore's 46 years of independence, Lee Kuan Yew has proven that it's not the size of your territory that counts. It's how you use it.

MAY 24, 2011

After more than 50 years of public service, Lee Kuan Yew -- former "minister mentor" and prime minister of Singapore -- announced his retirement from politics two weeks ago. During his years in government, he transformed the sleepy tropical trading outpost into a first-world economic tiger.

Above, a view from the Singapore Flyer Ferris wheel overlooking the city skyline.

Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Singapore has been one of the world's most prominent postcolonial success stories. In 2010, Singapore had the fastest-growing economy in the world. Above, the Marina Sands casino complex.

Credit: Getty Images

Singapore has a long history as a British colonial trading outpost, and is still an important hub of global commerce. The World Bank ranks Singapore as the world's top logistics hub. Above, the Keppel container terminal port, one of the world's largest.

Credit: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images

Singapore has one of the world's lowest fertility rates, with only 1.1 children per woman, but the country encourages immigration in order to keep the population from declining.

Credit: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images

Singapore's system of law was inherited from English and British-Indian legislation, but it has departed significantly from that tradition since gaining independence: Residents of Singapore, for example, do not have freedom of assembly for political purposes. But they can fly kites.

Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images

A view from above the Singapore ArtScience Museum, designed by renowned Israeli architect Moshe Safdie. Tourism is a major part of Singapore's economy, with over 10 million visitors in 2010.

Credit: Getty Images

Above, new high-rise apartment buildings add to the skyline of central Singapore. Former workers make up 80 percent of the construction industry and up to 50 percent of the service industry in Singapore.

Credit: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images

A man walks past Singapore's Parliament building. Lee Kuan Yew's People's Action Party has won every parliamentary election since 1959, including the one held in early May of this year, though its results were muted compared to earlier elections.

Credit: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images

Voters turned out in record numbers to participate in this year's parliamentary election, the eleventh since Singapore gained independence. Above, supporters of the Workers Party cheer while waiting to hear that their party made significant gains against the ruling PAP party.

Credit: Getty Images

Approximately three-quarters of the population of Singapore are of Chinese descent, 13 percent are of Malay descent, while 10 percent are of Indian ethnicity. Above, a young Singaporean boy holds a milk pot on his head before taking part in a Hindu ceremony.

Credit: Getty Images

A devotee of Hinduism has his forehead pierced prior to taking part in a Hindu procession in Singapore.

Credit: Getty Images

Fireworks light up the Singapore skyline at midnight during the River Hongbao Festival celebrating Chinese New Year on Feb. 2, 2011.

Credit: Getty Images

A Singapore marketplace sells decorations in the run-up to Chinese New Year.

Credit: Getty Images


Cars practice for the Singapore Formula One Grand Prix at the racetrack in front of the Singapore Flyer ferris wheel.

Credit: Getty Images

Singapore has only 2 percent unemployment, and the lowest poverty levels in the region. Above, Singapore's Vivo shopping mall.

Credit: Getty Images

The Singapore skyline at night.

Credit: Getty Images