Will Gen Z change America’s foreign policy towards Israel?
Not just the protests, but myriad polls show a
dramatic shift away from unconditional support
MAY 27, 2024
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/young-americans-israel/
That Gen Z
Americans have unique
foreign policy views isn’t news, but the recent student-led protests over the
Israel-Hamas war has highlighted the generational differences in this country
and may portend a future political distancing of the U.S. from its long-time
client in Tel Aviv.
Some of the indicators may be concerning. Aside from
displaying more support for ceasefire than their older cohorts, a majority of
18-24 year-olds in a December Harvard/Harris
poll — 67% — said
they believe Jews “as a class” are oppressors, and that the 10/7 attack was
justified by Palestinians’ grievances (60%). But then, the poll also found 78%
of Americans aged 18-34 believe Israel has a right to exist. The majority of
this cohort also called what Hamas did on Oct. 7 terrorism and said
anti-Semitism is on the rise on college campuses.
Meanwhile, an April POLITICO-Morning
Consult poll found
only “15 percent of Gen Zers said they’re more sympathetic toward the Israelis,
compared to 4o percent of Baby Boomers,” and 24% of Gen Zers said it was a top
issue that would affect their vote vs. 11% for over-65 voters. Some 20% of Gen
Zers support providing weapons to the Palestinians vs. 2% of over-65 voters.
And in April, Pew Research reported, “A third of adults under 30 say their
sympathies lie either entirely or mostly with the Palestinian people, while 14%
say their sympathies lie entirely or mostly with the Israeli people” and “older
Americans, by comparison, are more likely to sympathize with Israelis than
Palestinians.”
In November, the Brookings
Institution reported,
“Even before the Hamas invasion, there were distinct generational differences
in Americans’ attitudes towards Israel,” adding, “only 41% of those aged 18-29
had a favorable view of Israel, compared to 69% of those aged 65 or older.”
To say this generation was primed for a shift is an
understatement. New media has certainly taken advantage and is, at the same
time, being fueled by these young voices and their consumption habits. Israel
can no longer control the flow of information and messages. Networked
tribalism, according to
John Robb at City Journal, “bypasses traditional media by directly delivering
information and moral framing to people using social networks.”. On TikTok,
#freepalestine has 31 billion posts compared to 590 million for
#standwithisrael, which led The New Arab to claim, “Palestinian solidarity won the
internet.”
By the way, the U.S. has the most TikTok users — 116.5 million; a Pew survey late last year
reported that about one-third of young Americans get their news from TikTok.
Recently, Senator Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Secretary
of State Tony Blinken commiserated over the negative effect of social media on the sustainability of the
pro-Israel narrative. Romney volunteered that was the reason Congress voted
to ban TikTok.
They don’t like that 50% of young Americans trust news
from social media nearly as much as they do legacy media, and that
more student protesters are relying on foreign media like Al
Jazeera, which
had been covering the conditions on the ground in graphic and persistent
measure until Israel banned the
network from
operating there in early May.
Gen Z cannot be seen as a monolith but put the polling
together and it would seem that younger Americnas are more questioning about
why there is an unconditional relationship with Israel. Growing up in the
shadow of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars they may be more skeptical about the prospect of another counterinsurgency
at the expense of civilians, or collateral damage, which became the term of art
during the years of the Global War on Terror.
Young Americans are rightly dubious when they see
retired military officers — the same guys who led to the failures of Iraq and
Afghanistan — on television supporting $175 billion to Ukraine for its role as a U.S. proxy in the
NATO-Russia war, and over $300
billion to Israel —
money that young Americans may think should be spent on “nation building here
at home.”
And given the availability of information today, young
Americans cannot be ignorant of the fact that far from being an underdog with
persistent vulnerabilities in the region, Israel has nuclear
weapons, is the most modern
military in the region, and
gets carte blanche from Washington via nearly $4 billion in military aid
each year.
Add this to their social and economic challenges at
home: Gen Z suffers from high levels of depression and anxiety. They sense their job prospects are limited, and that the American Dream is out of reach.
But there’s more grim news: America is almost $35 Trillion in debt, over $100,000 per citizen; its bond rating was recently cut to AA+; borrowing costs are
climbing and interest costs on debt have nearly doubled to $659 billion over the course of two years. In
addition, Social Security has an unfunded
liability of almost
$66 trillion and is approaching insolvency, probably depleting its reserves by 2033. Things are
looking bleak for the U.S. economy as a whole.
Then there’s student loan
debt of $1.75
trillion (including federal and private loans), $28,950 owed per borrower on
average.
Both Republicans and Democrats would be wise to
rethink their unconditional support for Israel as this demographic's support
for it is no longer a given. Much of it too is the obvious gap between Israel’s
professed ideals and the “facts on the ground.” According to Columbia
University’s Rashid Khalidi, many of the students feel a “moral imperative” to
support Palestinians and they may not easily be deterred. And their left flank
is protected as more American Jews are protesting and calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
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