It’s the kind of brisk Washington morning where the air feels heavy with history, the sort of day when policy decisions made behind closed doors ripple out to every corner of the globe. In one of those polished offices, Ilan Goldenberg, a man with a formidable resume and set of opinions, steps into his new role as Kamala Harris’s Jewish community liaison.To those who don’t follow Middle East policy closely, his name might not ring any bells. But for those of us who do, his appointment is a warning – a sign that the Biden administration might be ready to gamble with the security of Israel and, by extension, the stability of the entire region.As specified at depth and length by The Jerusalem Post’s diaspora correspondent Michael Starr on Friday, Goldenberg’s career has been built on a specific ideological foundation: a deep, almost dogmatic, belief in the power of diplomacy, even with the most duplicitous of regimes, and a marked skepticism toward any show of strength by Israel. He’s the kind of man who, when faced with a roaring fire, would argue for a drop of water rather than a fire hose, fearing that the latter might cause too much of a splash.
Take, for instance, his unwavering defense of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), better known as the Iran nuclear deal. To Goldenberg, this agreement was a masterpiece of diplomacy – a carefully crafted shield against the specter of a nuclear-armed Iran. “The deal would deter Iran from ever pursuing a bomb because it knows that if it started to dash, it would be caught quickly and attacked,” he once argued with the confidence of someone who has never had to face the terrifying consequences of being wrong.But the reality is far less rosy. The JCPOA did not dismantle Iran’s nuclear capabilities; it merely pressed pause on them. Worse, it unfroze billions of dollars that Iran swiftly funneled to its network of proxies – terrorist groups that have spilled Israeli blood and sown chaos across the Middle East. Goldenberg’s belief that the deal was the “best of bad options” reveals a fatal flaw in his thinking: he is willing to settle for a temporary Band-Aid rather than pursue a more complex, but ultimately more effective, cure.Goldberg's criticism extends to some of the most significant decisions in recent US-Israel relations
Goldenberg’s criticism extends to some of the boldest and most symbolically significant decisions in recent US-Israel relations. He opposed former president Trump’s bipartisan decision to move the US embassy to Jerusalem, arguing that it “threatened to stir the pot by not acknowledging Palestinian claims and inciting religious tensions.” In saying this, Goldenberg revealed a troubling tendency to prioritize the feelings of Israel’s adversaries over the rights and realities of the Jewish people.Jerusalem is, and always has been, the heart of Jewish identity. Recognizing it as Israel’s capital was not only the right thing to do; it was a necessary correction of a longstanding wrong. So many presidential candidates from both parties have promised to move the US embassy, only that it so happened that the president who did, came from Goldenberg’s opposing party.But perhaps the most disturbing aspect of Goldenberg’s ideology is his defense of the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the face of overwhelming evidence that it continues to fund terrorism. He was a vocal critic of the Taylor Force Act, legislation designed to stop US economic aid to the PA until it ceased paying stipends to terrorists. Goldenberg likened the act to a “sledgehammer” and argued that it would destabilize the PA, pushing it toward collapse. But let’s be clear: the PA has long used American taxpayer dollars to reward those who murder Israeli civilians. If the PA’s survival depends on its ability to continue this “abominable practice,” as Starr underlined, then perhaps it’s time to question whether it deserves to survive at all.Goldenberg’s broader vision for the Middle East is no less flawed. Starr quoted his views, which called for a decreased American footprint in the region and which argued that the US can achieve its goals without relying on military force. This might sound appealing to those weary of endless wars, but it’s dangerously naive. The Middle East is not a region where power vacuums remain empty for long. If the US steps back, Iran, Russia, and extremist groups will rush in with catastrophic consequences for Israel and American interests alike.