The influence of the so-called 'Israel Lobby', a diverse coalition of American
organizations that aim to affect pro-Israel policy, has been hotly-debated for several
decades, and descriptions of the lobby's importance to US foreign policy range from
'irrelevant' to 'axiomatic'. In an effort to understand the current debate, this project
examines the relationship between the Israel Lobby and US foreign policy in three
cases: the decision to invade Iraq in 2003, the legacy of the Arab Spring in postMubarak
Egypt, and US-Israeli efforts to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Throughout the paper, I draw on primary and secondary historical resources and
international relations theory in order to explore the US-Israel relationship through
changing domestic and international circumstances and to better understand the
implications of this relationship for the prospects of a more peaceful dynamic in the
Middle East. I conclude that, while still a significant factor in American foreign policy, the
influence of the Israel Lobby is transforming and, in some cases, stagnating as the
United States moves toward a narrower, more pragmatic and therefore less ideological
strategy in the Middle East.