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Soc (2014) 51:513523DOI 10.1007/s12115-014-9817-7
SYMPOSIUM: AMERICA IN THE WORLD
The Role of Arab American Advocacy Groups in Shaping American Foreign Policy
Lanouar Ben Hafsa
Published online: 13 September 2014# Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014
Abstract This paper aims to offer some insights into the ways in which Arab-Americans experience the United States and adjust to its political institutions. It stresses how such a community still finds it difficult to consolidate its efforts and exert pressure on the decision making process. But to gain national visibility and recognition, they need first to voice its concerns throughout mainstream advocacy groups. In this regard, the term Arab lobby is a misnomer as very often it is used as a shorthand word for the loose coalition of organizations that seek to improve Arabs conditions in the U.S. and to influence American foreign policy in the Middle East. Notwithstanding, this study is meant to highlight the difference between what some termed the informal Arab lobby, sponsored by rich oil countries, and the formal Arab American lobby, represented today by the Arab American Institute (AAI) and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) and headquartered in Washington D.C. However, while the different components of the pro-Arab lobby cannot represent the Arabs as a united political group, they have been able to share a common concern: Palestine. In effect, not only the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has always been a top priority and a principal focus of the Arab lobby as a whole, but it has also been viewed as a tool to measure its political efficacy. Last but not least, despite the very limited success achieved by the Arab lobby in its attempts to shape American foreign policy (compared to its pro-Israel counterpart), this study demonstrates that the members of the Arab and Jewish communities in the United States share common grounds on almost every issue central to Arab-Israel peace and U.S. policy in the Middle East, on top of them the two-state solution (Zogby International, 2007).
Keywords U.S. foreign policy . Middle East conflict . Arab lobby . pro-Israel lobby . 2008 and 2012 U.S. elections
Studying American foreign policy poses an interesting challenge. The topic is highly complex and requires analysis of the interplay of many forces: political, economic, military, and ideological....