Inside The Israel Lobby’s New $90 Million War Chest
Internal AIPAC
materials reveal huge gifts from moguls — and the strategies lobbyists used to
score the cash.
In the wake of the Oct.
7 attacks on southern Israel, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) has reaped a $90 million fundraising haul, according to confidential
internal documents reviewed by The Lever.
Large donations flowed
as the influential pro-Israel lobbying group hosted a remobilized Israeli
military official who reassured potential contributors that the country’s
military was doing everything possible to mitigate civilian casualties in
Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, according to donor-only meetings reviewed
by The Lever.
From January to
September 2023, the non-public documents show that AIPAC received an average of
around $12 million in monthly pledged donations. By contrast, in October alone,
the documents show that AIPAC received more than triple that amount — more than
$40 million in pledged donations. In the following two months, donors pledged
another nearly $50 million.
Top benefactors on a
list of 2023 donors reviewed by The Lever represent a
cross-section of the U.S. elite, including pro sports teams owners; heads of
private equity firms; real estate titans; a Maryland congressman now running
for the U.S. Senate; the former CEO of Victoria’s Secret; the co-founder of the
dance-exercise company Zumba; and the creator of Squishmallows, the beloved children's toy.
The documents and list
were provided by an internal AIPAC source. The Lever attempted
to contact more than 75 of the individuals on the list of donors. Nine people
confirmed to The Lever that they were AIPAC donors. Six
additional individuals were listed as AIPAC board members in 2013, when the
organization publicly disclosed its
board. Seven other
individuals on the list are publicly listed as being “involved in pro-Israel
political giving” on a 2022 organization
event page.
Prior to
publication, The Lever showed AIPAC the information reported
in this story. The organization responded with an emailed statement: “Much of
the information here is either misstated, misinterpreted, inaccurate or
illegitimately obtained. Since October 7, there has been a systematic effort by
Israel’s detractors to harass, intimidate and silence supporters of the Jewish
state. All detractors should know that their attacks only increase our
determination to strengthen the US-Israel relationship.”
When The Lever asked
AIPAC’s spokesperson to identify any inaccurate information, the organization
did not respond. The Lever followed up three times before
publication, but the spokesperson stopped responding.
Three individuals named
on the list denied being donors. That includes Leonid Radvinsky, the billionaire owner of OnlyFans, a hugely popular internet platform
dominated by sex workers. According to the internal documents, Radvinsky and
his wife, Katie Chudnovsky, pledged $11 million to AIPAC — the most of anyone
listed.
“I didn’t donate or
pledge $11M,” Radvinsky wrote in an email, and “this appl[ies] to me / my
foundation / my family.” When The Lever asked Radvinsky why
AIPAC had him listed as a donor, Radvinsky replied, “I don’t know.” When The
Lever asked Radvinsky to comment on internal AIPAC documentation
showing a wire transfer from his wife to AIPAC, Radvinsky stopped responding.
After 1,200 Israelis were
killed and 240 others
taken hostage in the Oct. 7 attacks, Israel launched a military offensive in
Gaza. Since then, more than 25,000
Palestinians have been
killed, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Miri Eisin, a retired
but recently-remobilized Israeli colonel and a longtime AIPAC ally, declared
during a donors-only virtual meeting in December that “Israel has done more
than any military anywhere at any time
in any war ever to try to save the
civilians.”
“We’re doing everything
right,” Eisin added. “We’re trying to save lives.”
According to military
experts cited by The New York Times, the “pace of death during Israel’s campaign has few
precedents in this century” and people are dying in Gaza faster than “even the
deadliest moments of U.S.-led attacks in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan.” While
the majority of the combatants targeted by the Israeli military are men, nearly 70 percent of
the dead are women and
children.
The internal AIPAC
information reviewed by The Lever constitutes a rare view
inside a well-funded organization that has successfully pushed the U.S.
government towards unconditional support of Israel for decades — and that is
currently using its resources to lobby against a ceasefire that proponents say
would alleviate suffering in Gaza.
AIPAC has already begun using its
war chest to influence the
2024 election.
After Rep. Betty
McCollum (D-Minn.) spoke in favor of a “negotiated regional ceasefire,” AIPAC
sponsored ads claiming McCollum was “giving Hamas a lifeline.” AIPAC is
attempting to “silence dissent by spreading lies,” McCollum said in response,
adding “facts don’t matter to AIPAC and its extremist supporters.” Progressive
groups working to oppose AIPAC believe the organization and its affiliated
entities could ultimately spend
$100 million in the 2024
cycle.
In January, Sen. Bernie
Sanders (Ind.-Vt.) proposed a resolution conditioning aid to
Israel on the
stipulation that the country would not violate human rights and international
law in its attacks on Gaza. In an AIPAC donor-only meeting reviewed by The
Lever, AIPAC President Michael Tuchin said Sanders was attempting to
“undermine Israel’s security with a resolution baselessly accusing Israel of
violating international law.” The attempt failed, garnering support from only
11 Senators.
In another donor-only
meeting reviewed by The Lever, AIPAC made its election strategy
clear. During the Nov. 29 event, an attendee asked AIPAC CEO Howard Kohr, “How
do we encourage our members of Congress to stand up to some of the wildly
inaccurate claims coming from the more pro-Hamas camp?”
“This won’t come as a
surprise to anyone,” Kohr answered. “We are going to have to continue to
demonstrate in even more dramatic ways that if you’re willing to stand with
Israel when she’s at war and she needs America… we’re willing to help [you]
politically.” As to those elected officials trying to “ensure that there’s a
weakening of Israel at this moment,” Kohr said, they will have to be “defeated
at the ballot box.”
Who Are AIPAC’s
Donors?
AIPAC is legally
designated as a 501(c)4 “social
welfare” organization. That
means contributions to AIPAC do not have to be made public under federal
disclosure laws. Traditionally, AIPAC has kept the identity of its biggest
donors a closely guarded secret.
The list of donors
that The Lever reviewed offers insight into the sources of
AIPAC’s resources. Most of the pledges on the list ranged between $100,000 to
$200,000. Around 20 were between $500,000 and $2 million.
One pledge was an
outlier at $11 million. The pledge was credited to “Mr. Anonymous Anonymous”
and Katie Chudnovsky. The pledge contained personal contact information and a
short bio that identified “Mr. Anonymous Anonymous” as Leonid Radvinsky, the “elusive” owner of the content platform OnlyFans. In the March
19, 2009, edition of the Chicago Tribune, Chudnovsky posted an
announcement of her wedding to Radvinsky, writing “we will work hard to enrich
our marriage and to live life with dignity and dedication.”
In 2018, Radvinsky, a
computer programmer and tech investor, purchased a 75 percent stake in OnlyFans
from its original founders and has since seen the platform boom in popularity, fueled in part by increased internet usage during
the Covid-19 pandemic. In the 2022 fiscal year, OnlyFans
subscribers spent $5.6 billion — and Radvinsky reportedly took in $338 million
in dividends.
OnlyFans, best known
for hosting adult content, takes a 20 percent cut of its creators’ earnings.
(Subscription fees range from $4.99 to $49.99 a month.) Many content creators
have become wealthy off their OnlyFans’ earnings but, as the Washington
Post reports, the
platform “suffers from a problem of incredible pay inequality.” In 2020,
an independent researcher cited by the Post found that
“the top 1 percent of accounts made 33 percent of the money, and that most
accounts took home less than $145 a month.”
Beyond Radvinsky, the
list of donors reviewed by The Lever was dominated by finance
and real estate professionals. According to the list, that includes:
- Daniel Sundheim, founder of the investment firm
D1 Capital Partners, pledged $2 million.
- Milton Cooper, executive chairman of the real
estate giant Kimco Realty, pledged $1 million.
- Tony Ressler, co-founder of the asset management
firm Ares and owner of the Atlanta Hawks, pledged $1 million.
- Jonathan Gray, president of Blackstone Group, the
world’s largest private
equity firm, pledged $1
million. In an internal email sent to employees of Blackstone Group days
after Oct. 7 and obtained by
eJewishPhilanthropy,
Gray and Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwartzman wrote, “We will be there for
[Israel] throughout this crisis. The Blackstone Charitable Foundation will
be making a $3 million contribution to support humanitarian relief
efforts. Additionally, we are each committing $1 million personally and
other senior partners have already generously committed approximately $2
million.” In 2021, BlackStone opened an office in Israel to tap into the country’s tech
industry. The head of the office, a former Israeli Defense Ministry
lieutenant, told The Times of Israel that “All
of a sudden Israel is ripe enough to be a relevant partner for an entity
like Blackstone.”
- Josh Harris, co-founder of the private equity
firm Apollo Global Management and co-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers, the
New Jersey Devils, and the Washington Commanders, pledged $500,000.
- Lloyd Blankfein, former CEO and current senior
chairman of the investment bank Goldman Sachs, pledged $100,000.
Aside from finance and
real estate, the list was an eclectic mix of powerful Americans.
- Julie Platt, chair of the prominent Jewish
Federations of North America and the actor Ben Platt’s mother, pledged
$500,000.
- Shlomo Rechnitz, reportedly California’s
largest nursing-home operator, pledged $260,000. Last year, Rechnitz agreed to a
settlement after being
indicted on charges of Medicare fraud.
- Judd Zebersky — founder of the toy company
Jazwares, which makes the TikTok-beloved Squishmallows and claims “putting a smile on children’s faces is at
the heart of everything we do” — pledged $250,000. In a LinkedIn
post immediately following Oct. 7, Zebersky
wrote,
“Remember that Israel is fighting for its very existence. This
is hitting close to home for many Jazmanians.”
- Mark Penn, a long-time political operative,
pledged $100,000. Penn is the CEO of the Stagwell Group, which owns the political consulting firm co-founded by President Biden’s senior adviser Anita
Dunn. As Semafor has reported, recent polling done by a
company owned by Stagwell has indicated widespread support from Americans
for Hamas. That polling has been covered by media outlets around the world
despite glaring indications that its methodology is deeply flawed.
- Leslie Wexner, former CEO of Victoria’s Secret,
pledged $100,000.
- Alberto Perlman, co-founder of Zumba, pledged
$100,000.
Reached via email, Tony
Ressler declined to confirm or deny the information, writing, “Don’t want to be
rude but please do as you wish... I don’t know you or your publication or
organization... wishing you all the best.” The other individuals named above
did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
One of the most prominent names on the list is Rep. David Trone (D-Md.), the owner of a massive liquor-store chain who is now running for a U.S. Senate seat. Trone has been an on-the-record AIPAC supporter for years. According to the list of AIPAC donors reviewed by The Lever, Trone pledged $100,000 last year. A Trone campaign spokesperson confirmed to The Lever that Trone was a “Minyan member”-level donor in 2023. “Minyan member” is AIPAC’s term for donors who pledge an annual sum of $100,000. (In Judaism, a “minyan” is the quorum of worshippers required for communal prayer.)
Trone is seeing AIPAC
support come back to him: Over the current 2024 election cycle, he’s
already received $105,600 from donors via the AIPAC PAC. (During a town
hall with voters, Trone also recently expressed impromptu support for a
ceasefire in Gaza.)
Individuals on the list
who confirmed to The Lever they were AIPAC donors mostly
explained their support for the organization in ways that mirrored AIPAC’s own
messaging.
Richard Thalheimer,
founder of home electronics company Sharper Image, pledged $100,000 in 2023.
Thalheimer told The Lever that he’s donated at Minyan level
for years “and some years have been higher.”
He added, “AIPAC is
doing an outstanding job of getting our policymakers and Congress members to
visit Israel and understand what is really going on. These educational visits
then support policy and funding decisions, which strengthen our bond with Israel”
and “ensure continuous funding and technology sharing for mutual defense. Oct.
7 motivated me, and should motivate everyone who supports democracy, to give
additional funding to AIPAC and Israel.”
Ken Alterman, former
CEO of the thrift store chain Savers, Inc., also pledged $100,000, according to
the list reviewed by The Lever. Alterman did not confirm the
size of his donation amount but did identify himself as a donor, adding “I
support the mission. Building U.S. and Israeli relations — I’m grateful that
happens.”
Jacob Klein, a New
Jersey real estate developer listed as a $100,000 donor on the list, confirmed
that he was a Minyan member, and said he donates that amount annually. AIPAC is
“a very important organization and I value their work a great deal,” he told The
Lever. He added that since Oct. 7, he’s “more motivated so I’m gonna
do more.”
Paul Burg, the
90-year-old founder of the drug ingredients manufacturer Spectrum Chemicals,
spoke more emotionally when reached for comment. Burg lived through Nazi
control in a Jewish ghetto in modern-day Ukraine during World War II. He
confirmed being an AIPAC donor, although he denied the amount ascribed to him
on the list of donors reviewed by The Lever — $150,000 — and
declined to specify the amount of his 2023 donation.
“Now is not the time to
criticize Israel,” he said. “Israel has suffered tremendous damage not only
from its enemies but also from its so-called friends. AIPAC is very important
for Israel and the Jews in general — the people who want to destroy Israel intend
to destroy the Jews from everywhere. It doesn’t stop with the Jews from
America.”
“I will give my life
for Israel,” Burg added, “and I never lived in Israel!”
How AIPAC Works
The organization that
came to be known as AIPAC was formed in the mid-1950s in the wake of an Israeli
massacre. In retaliation to a grenade attack that killed a mother and her two
children, the Israeli army killed more than 60 civilians in the West Bank village
of Qibya. I.L. Kenen, an influential political operator and the father of
AIPAC, created the organization out of his concern that Qibya would damage “our propaganda.”
In the decades since,
AIPAC has advocated for American support of Israeli governments. One of the
only exceptions came in the early nineties, during the 1993 Oslo Accords peace process between Israel and Palestine.
While AIPAC officially supported the accords, one former AIPAC analyst has said
that behind the scenes the organization worked to “cripple Oslo.”
Doug Rossinow, a
professor at Minnesota’s Metro State University and the author of the
forthcoming book, Promised Land: The Worlds of American Zionism,
says AIPAC has long managed a “balancing act.” On one hand: “Thwarting efforts
to achieve peaceful coexistence between Jews and Palestinians in the Middle
East.” On the other: “Retaining an identity as an establishment consensus
group.”
AIPAC does so largely
by funneling money and support to both Democrats and Republicans.
As a 501(c)(4) organization, AIPAC legally cannot have politics as its “primary purpose.” But it still has wide latitude to impact elections
in a variety of ways. That includes buying ads boosting or decrying candidate
(like the ones it ran attacking McCollum); cultivating pro-Israel candidates
and elected officials through its trips to the country; and informally steering
generous pro-Israel donors to
AIPAC-friendly candidates.
In the 2022 election
cycle, for the first time, AIPAC launched two other entities to expand its political operations. One was a
traditional political action committee, the AIPAC PAC, which can solicit an unlimited number of individual
donations (capped at $3,300 per donor per election) to pass on to political
candidates. The organization also established an
affiliated super PAC, the
United Democracy Project, which can spend unlimited amounts of money to support
or oppose a candidate in an election. As a super PAC, the United Democracy
Project can’t give
directly to candidates or parties — but its donors aren’t constrained by
contribution limits.
In the 2022 election
cycle, the United Democracy Project spent more than $26
million. Outside of the party
committees themselves, it was the tenth biggest outside spender. The money was largely spent on mailers and TV ads
to quash progressive
Democrats critical of the Israeli government. Of that amount, $10.5 million came from AIPAC — but federal records do not include disclosures
of the specific donors who originally contributed the money to AIPAC.
How AIPAC Talks To
Its Donors
Outside of the
organization’s high-profile annual conference, AIPAC officials seldom speak publicly. In donor-only virtual events reviewed by The
Lever, the organization’s chief executives spoke at length about the
organization’s strategies.
On Nov. 29, AIPAC
hosted a meeting, “Live From Israel: A Conversation With AIPAC Leadership,”
featuring AIPAC President Michael Tuchin and Howard Kohr, its CEO. Placed on a
glass table in front of them was an AIPAC coffee mug holding one little
American flag and one little Israeli flag.
Tuchin spoke briefly
about an incident that had occurred a few days prior: a protest at
his home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Referring to the
protestors as “pro-Hamas vandals,” Tuchin explained they were “blasting sirens,
beating drums,” and throwing “baby body bags covered with blood around our
house.”
Then, to spotlight
support that AIPAC has from the political establishment, Tuchin ticked off the
messages of support he received from prominent figures after the protest. “The
second gentleman,” Douglass Emhoff, “called. The acting governor of California.
The mayor of Los Angeles called several times. Many Senators. Members of
Congress. Ambassadors.”
Next, Kohr and Tuchin
brought up their current focus: fighting a “premature” ceasefire.
“Israelis, we believe,
will make clear that they are doing remarkable things to
minimize civilian casualties,” Kohr said. “But we have to remind members of the
Senate and the House that the very strategy of Hamas — the predicate of their
strategy — is that they have built an entire civilian infrastructure upon their
military and terror capabilities.”
“It’s not possible to
meet the objectives without some civilian casualties,” Kohr added. “This is not
going to be pretty… the line between civilian and terrorist — and it does exist
— is very difficult in Gaza.”
Tuchin suggested that
it could have been an AIPAC delegation — and, possibly, an acting U.S. lawmaker
— killed on Oct. 7.
“I’ve been to Kfar Aza
twice this year with delegations,” he said, referring to one of the sites of
the Hamas-led attacks. “With 29 members of Congress. We stood steps away from
where Hamas attackers murdered people in cold blood. It really hit home.”
In other meetings,
Tuchin underscored similar sentiments about the vulnerability of all Jewish
people. In one, he hailed the Israeli military as a great transnational
protector: it’s “for all of us around the globe that the IDF,” the Israeli
Defence Forces, “is fighting.” In another, he said that Hezbollah, the Houthis,
and other Iranian proxies have consistently confirmed “their intentions to
murder as many Israelis and Jews as possible.”
In the December meeting
where Eisin, the Israeli colonel, claimed “We’re trying to save lives,”
speakers echoed the idea that any member of the extended AIPAC network or their
families could just as likely have been the victims of the Oct. 7 attacks.
“It could have been my
parents,” Eisin said. “It could have been my children.”
The moderator, AIPAC
Educational Seminar Leader Renee Sharon, quickly interjected. “I want to say,
Miri — it could have been one of our AIEF groups.” AIEF, or the American
Israel Education Foundation, is an affiliate AIPAC
organization that leads
Congressmembers on tours of Israel. “All of the times that we’ve been down
there,” in the south of Israel near the Gaza border. “It could have been any
of us.”
In a Dec. 21 donor
meeting, the special guest was Yaakov Katz, former editor-in-chief of The Jerusalem
Post.
“A lot of people love
to play the numbers game,” he said early in the meeting. “20,000 dead.” (That
was roughly the estimated civilian casualty total at the time Katz was
speaking. It’s currently at more than 25,000.) “Well, look at the fact that we’re looking at 6,
7,000 terrorists [killed] and we’re looking at a ratio of combatant to civilian
of one to two” he noted. (Per Katz’s own numbers, the ratio would be closer to
one alleged member of Hamas killed for every three civilians.)
“One to two is actually
quite good when you think about the combat zone, the density, the urban
terrain,” Katz added. “While it does look like there’s a lot of devastation and
destruction inside the Gaza Strip, [the Israeli military] is operating with a lot
of precision.”
Then he switched gears,
to talk about how the Israeli military “in the last sixty days or so has really
reclaimed its glory of being an aggressive and effective ground force.”
On Jan. 18, Sen.
Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) joined a donors-only
meeting, “From The Frontlines To Capitol Hill.” When asked to explain why Sen.
Sanders and other Congressmembers have criticized Israel’s war tactics, Gillibrand
credited bad intelligence.
As a member of the
Intelligence and Armed Services Committees, Gillibrand explained, she receives
regular briefings on Israeli military strategy that include “how many innocent
civilians they’re willing to accept in their targeting” which has convinced her
that Israel follows “all of the humanitarian agreements” in a “thoughtful,
methodical way.” Meanwhile, her colleagues don’t have “access to that
information, and so they’re left with misinformation from their constituents.”
As to the source of misinformation, she identified “TikTok and China and Russia
and our other adversaries.”
“We’re losing the
communications war,” she added, to “absolutely horrific rhetoric against
Israel, accusing [the country] of genocide, accusing them of occupation,
accusing them of white supremacy. It’s beyond recognition. There is no truth in
those narratives.”
Addressing widespread
calls for a ceasefire, Gillibrand conceded that some of the people calling for
one are doing so “because they want innocent lives to be protected,” then added
“but they may not understand that if you call for a ceasefire, you can’t get
the hostages back.”
Since Oct. 7, the
Israeli military has rescued one hostage and accidentally killed at least three others. During a seven-day pause in
the fighting in November, more
than 100 hostages were released. Gadi Eiskenot, a member of Israel’s five-man
war cabinet, recently told Israel’s
Channel 12, “it is impossible to
bring the hostages back alive in the near future without a deal” and that those
who suggest otherwise are “feeding lies to the public.” Negotiations are currently ongoing for a deal in which the remaining hostages will
be released partially in exchange for a two-month ceasefire.
At the close of the
January AIPAC meeting, Cornyn was asked what his personal message was to
Israel. “Don’t give up hope,” he said. “We are there with you. We are
inseparable. And Israel’s future is really the United State’s future.”
“You’re All
Mobilized, Too”
While AIPAC has told
its donors that Israel is minimizing civilian casualties, critics of the
country’s military argue such claims are not credible. Paul Rogers is a
Professor of Peace Studies at Bradford University. “One percent of all Gazans
have been killed in the space of three months,” he said. “That is an incredible
intensity of death.”
In January, the
International Court of Justice ordered Israel to “take all measures within its power to
prevent the commission” of genocide. The ruling came as a result of a petition
brought by South Africa accusing Israel of genocide.
Adila Hassim, the
lawyer representing South Africa, argued that the “level of Israel’s killing is so extensive
that nowhere is safe in Gaza.” Civilians “have been killed if they failed to
evacuate, in the places to which they have fled, and even while they attempted
to flee along Israeli-declared safe routes,” she added. Beyond the military
tactics, she noted that civilians are now dying by “starvation, dehydration,
and disease.”
According to the Israeli
human-rights organization B’Tselem,
Israel is overseeing the creation of a famine by refusing to allow necessary
food supplies to enter Gaza via aid trucks in the wake of the widespread
destruction of fields, factories, and warehouses. In what may be a drastic undercount, the World Health Organization is estimating that
there are more than 400,000 cases of infectious diseases in Gaza.
Eva Borgwardt, the
spokesperson for the American Jewish anti-occupation group IfNotNow, hopes that
AIPAC’s support of Israel in the wake of the Gaza crisis will create an
inflection point in the lobbying group’s relationship with the Democratic
Party. “AIPAC’s dangerous aim is to convince people that their basic values —
equality, freedom, the value of human life — should not apply to the
Palestinian people,” she said.
Democrats, Borgwardt
argues, have a chance now “to renounce AIPAC, uphold the value that all human
life is precious, and say that no more U.S. weapons should go to this Israeli
government’s horrific assault on Palestinian life.”
But so far, outside of
pushback from a minority, the Democratic Party has remained as stalwart as the
GOP in its support of Israel. And for AIPAC, whose mission it is to bolster
American support for Israel, these are boom times. In the face of the ongoing
military assault on Gaza, AIPAC has a compelling narrative to push on its
donors.
During the December
donor-only meeting, before signing off, Col. Miri Eisin was asked one more
question. “What can we do to help Israel now? What does Israel need from us?”
“You’re listening,
you’re engaged, you’re calling, you’re doing what you’re doing in the United
States,” Eisin said. “That’s what we need. We need that backing. We can’t be
alone. This shouldn’t be Israel alone and it isn’t — because of you.”
She added that after
Oct. 7, she was mobilized by the Israeli military, as was her husband and all
three of her children. Just that day, the five of them were altogether, all
back in their military uniforms, and took photos to commemorate the moment.
And through their
support for AIPAC, Eisin told the donors, “You’re all mobilized, too.”
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