Steven Rosen

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Steven Rosen is a former RAND analyst and an AIPAC lobbyist who is credited with expanding the lobby group's influence from the congress to the executive branch. He was brought to AIPAC by Larry Weinberg, and influential Israel lobbyist Martin Indyk served as his deputy. In 2004, Rosen became implicated in an FBI espionage investigation on charges of passing classified information on Iran from Larry Franklin, an agent in the Pentagon, to the Israeli Embassy's political counsellor Naor Gilon. Months later he was fired by AIPAC executive director Howard Kohr (whom Rosen had earlier chosen for AIPAC leadership).[1]

A friend of Israel (Not)

Though Rosen has tried to establish himself as a champion of Israel in the United States, attacking critics, and claiming credit for convincing Republican presidents' that Israel and American interests are identical, Israel leaders have been more sceptical. According to former AIPAC official MJ Rosenberg,

[Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak] Rabin tried to get him fired; neither he nor Shimon Peres considered him remotely loyal to Israel.[2]

On Lobbying and Influence

In an interview with Jeffrey Goldberg of the New Yorker, Rosen responded to question about AIPAC's influence thus:

A half smile appeared on his face, and he pushed a napkin across the table. “You see this napkin?” he said. “In twenty-four hours, we could have the signatures of seventy senators on this napkin.”[1]

Influencing the Executive Branch

According to Jeffrey Goldberg Rosen arrived at AIPAC with the new idea

that the organization could influence the outcome of policy disputes within the executive branch—in particular, the Pentagon, the State Department, and the National Security Council.
Rosen began to court officials. He traded in gossip and speculation, and his reports to aipac’s leaders helped them track currents in Middle East policymaking before those currents coalesced into executive orders. Rosen also used his contacts to carry aipac’s agenda to the White House. An early success came in 1983, when he helped lobby for a strategic coöperation agreement between Israel and the United States, which was signed over the objections of Caspar Weinberger, the Secretary of Defense, and which led to a new level of intelligence sharing and military sales.[1]

Manufacturing a Strategic Asset

In 1982, writes Tivnan, AIPAC began publishing a series heavily footnoted of 'position papers' under Steven Rosen's editorship aimed not at its membership but at policymakers in the White House, Pentagon and State Department. They focused on Israel's strategic value to the United States. The papers had descriptive titles like Israel and the US Air Force or Israel and the US Navy, and touted the strategic assistance that Israel could supposedly offer.[3]

In an AIPAC monograph The Strategic Value of Israel Rosen argued that Israel offers the US four main advantages:

(1)its "geostrategic position" midway between Europe and the Persian Gulf gives the US an opportunity to move into three theaters of operation--the Gulf, the Mediterranean, and NATO's souther and central fronts; (2) "political stability" of a sound democracy that is not as susceptible as Arab states to a coupe or revolution; (3) "political relability"--today's Arab friends can be tomorrow's ex-rulers, whereas, explains Rosen, "Israel's strategic interests and the value of its people are permanently aligned with those of the Free World"; and (4) "Israel is the one politically and technologically advanced country in the region."[4]

Target Iran

According to Goldberg, Rosen is 'a hard-liner on only one subject—Iran—and this preoccupation helped shape AIPAC’s position: that Iran poses a greater threat to Israel than any other nation...Rosen’s main role at aipac, he once told me, was to collect evidence of “Iranian perfidy” and share it with the United States.'[1]

Iran Libya Sanctions Act

In 1996, according to Goldberg, 'Rosen and other AIPAC staff members helped write, and engineer the passage of Iran and Libya Sanctions Act which imposed sanctions on foreign oil companies doing business with those two countries.'[1]

FBI Espionage probe

Rosen was charged with receiving classified US Government documents from Larry Franklin:

Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weissman were charged in an indictment in August 2005 with conspiring to gather and disclose classified national security information to journalists and an unnamed foreign power that government officials identified as Israel. Aipac dismissed the two men in April 2005.
The indictment said the two men had disclosed classified information about a number of subjects, including American policy in Iran, terrorism in central Asia, Al Qaeda and the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers apartment in Saudi Arabia, which killed 23 Americans, mainly members of the military. Lawyers for the two men have sought to have the indictment against them dismissed.
As Aipac's director of foreign policy issues, Mr. Rosen was a well-known figure in Washington who helped the organization define its lobbying agenda on the Middle East and forged important relationships with powerful conservatives in the Bush administration.[5]

According to Goldberg, after receiving classified information from Franklin,

According to aipac sources, Rosen and Weissman asked Kohr to give the information to Elliott Abrams, the senior Middle East official on the National Security Council. Kohr didn’t get in touch with Abrams, but Rosen and Weissman made two calls. They called Gilon and told him about the threat to Israeli agents in Iraq, and then they called Glenn Kessler, a diplomatic correspondent at the Washington Post, and told him about the threat to Americans.[1]

During the espionage trial Rosen was represented by Abbe Lowell who also represented disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. He also received public support from Martin Indyk.[1]

Affiliations

Connections

Rosen Lectures

Related Articles

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Jeffrey Goldberg, Real Insiders, New Yorker, 4 July 2005
  2. MJ Rosenberg, Steve Rosen, Former Indictee on Espionage, Lectures Obama, The Huffington Post, 18 September 2009
  3. Tivnan (1987): 180
  4. Steven J. Rosen, The Strategic Value of Israel (AIPAC Papers on US-Israel Relations: 1, 1982) cited in Tivnan (1987): 180
  5. Pentagon Analyst Gets 12 Years for Disclosing Data, by David Johnston, New York Times, 20 January 2006.
  6. Press Releases, Steven J. Rosen Joins MEF as Visiting Fellow, Midddle East Forum, 2 March 2009