Israel Set Up a Front Company to Boost Image and Fight BDS. This Is How It Failed
Meeting minutes reveal firm set up by Strategic Affairs Ministry only used 13 million shekels out of 128 million earmarked by government โ Funded activity includes evangelical Christian delegations and anti-BDS reservistsโ project
The minutes of the steering committee for a front company established by the Strategic Affairs Ministry in the fight for โmass awarenessโ against the โdelegitimizationโ of Israel show which projects were funded and the initiativeโs failure to raise the amount of donations it promised.
Among the projects that the public benefit company, Concert (formerly Kella Shlomo), funded between 2017 and 2020 were delegations of evangelical Christians, an anti-BDS group called Reservists on Duty, and seminars for Israeli backpackers ahead of their long-term trips.
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The Strategic Affairs Ministry set up this external body, in the form of a public benefit company, in 2017 to cooperate with people and groups around the world who were interested in using a third party to conceal the funding they received from Israel to promote projects aimed at improving the countryโs image.
Two and a half years ago, the cabinet approved allocating 128 million shekels ($37 million) over three years to fund the initiative, on the condition that it raised an equal amount in matching funds from private donors. The cabinet decision stated that the organization would raise these contributions from philanthropic groups or pro-Israel organizations.
The goal of establishing the company, according to the ministry, was to carry out โmass awareness activitiesโ to โimplement part of the ministryโs activities concerning the fight against the phenomenon of delegitimization and boycotts against the State of Israel.โ
A legal opinion written at the time by the ministryโs legal adviser stated that the activities to be conducted through this company would be those that โrequire an โ?outside the governmentโ discussion with the different target audiences.โ The ministry explained at the time to journalists that one of the initiativeโs purposes was to โprovide a rapid and coordinated response against the attempts to tarnish the image of Israel around the world.โ
Since its secretive creation, the project has been run in almost complete secrecy. Now, in response to a Freedom of Information Law request submitted by attorney Or Sadan from the Movement for the Freedom of Information and journalist Itamar Baz of the Seventh Eye website, Haaretz is publishing the minutes of Concertโs steering committee.
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As part of the changes made by the new leadership of the ministry, new Strategic Affairs Minister Orit Farkash-Hacohen of Kahol Lavan and the ministryโs new director general, former military spokesman Ronen Manelis, have announced that they intend on increasing the ministryโs transparency. The previous leadership of the ministry, Gilad Erdan of Likud and then Director-General Sima Vaknin-Gil โ the former chief military censor โ had a policy of maximum secrecy and even tried, unsuccessfully, to completely exempt the ministry from the Freedom of Information Law.
The documents that can now be published show that out of the 128 million shekels allocated by the government, in practice only 13 million shekels have been used. At first this was because the matching donations had not been raised in the time and amounts required, and later also because of the freeze in the government budget. Another 5 million shekels are now set aside for use by the end of this year, based on performance, for a total of 18 million shekels from the state and another 18 million from donors. Manelis told the State Control Committee similar things on Tuesday in the Knesset, when he reported to committee chairman MK Ofer Shelah of Yesh Atid-Telem that the companyโs performance โwas unsatisfactory and in the end only 18 million out of 128 million shekels were utilized.โ
The first minutes of the steering committee, from July of 2018, show that the company had cash flow problems and asked for advances from the government to get the project started. At the committeeโs second meeting in November of 2018, Concertโs representatives reported to the government that creating the โwork structure and methods of operation of Concert in the United States has turned out to be a matter of high complexity,โ and asked to hire a U.S. lawyer, whose name remains confidential, at a cost of 133,000 shekels.
This is partly because the U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act requires anyone acting in the United States on behalf of a foreign body to register with the Justice Department and provide information on its sources of funding and the use made of the money. All the materials distributed by foreign agents must declare its source, and they must also make their activities clear in every conversation with government bodies. The minutes show that many people and groups in the United States were afraid of cooperating with Concert because of this requirement.
In the third meeting, held in December 2018, the work plan for 2019 was discussed. The CEO recruited for the project, Ayelet Shiloh Tamir, explained that โbecause of the difficulty and refusal of donors to donate directly to Concert, a mechanism must be allowed through which contributions are transferred to the organization that carries out the activity and from it to Concert.โ The money would thus go directly to the organizations and not the company.
In the fifth meeting, in April of 2019, she reported on difficulties in raising donations because of the โpolitical situationโ in the U.S., and during the sixth meeting in May of 2019, she reported on the difficulty in raising money because of the โexternal influences, such as the election period, stages of setting up the company and developments on the issue of FARA.โ
The ninth meeting, which the ministry said was the last, was in January, 2020, In it, things had changed and it was Concertโs representatives who complained to the government about a lack of a budget. At this meeting, the companyโs chairman of the board, Micah Avni, expressed his dissatisfaction with the low budget for the year just beginning because of the frozen state budget.
โA much higher budget is required than the agreement the government allocated,โ he said. โWe need flexibility to operate separately from the government, from politics and budget. The company is building relationships with groups and donors who are hesitant about working with the government, something that in itself takes time, but the trust is being rebuilt and the timing is sensitive. โฆ The decision not to keep the governmentโs commitment according to the cabinet decision is devastating. From the beginning, this was small change for such a broad phenomenon and the value the government will get relative to the true budget required to deal with the phenomenon.โ
In response to a question from a government representative as to how many donors were waiting in line for matching funds from the government, Shiloh Tamir answered said there were eight plans in the works but that โit is not possible to approach a new donor because there is no matching to offer them on the part of the state.โ
Seminars on the way to Thailand
As for the millions that the government and the donors did utilize, the steering committee minutes show Concertโs representatives reporting that 26 contracts had been signed since its establishment. They focused on research and information; awareness campaigns (โdefensive and offensiveโ); the digital battlefield; public relations delegations of โinfluencersโ to Israel,and โstrengthening pro-Israeli network.โ In terms of research, a project was mentioned on the issue of โcorporate responsibilityโ at a cost of 1.09 million shekels, as well as a project dealing with the โlink between BDS organizations and terrorist organizationsโ at a cost of 2.4 million shekels.
As for โsupport for organizations in a pro-Israeli network,โ the minutes said โa maximum framework for funding was set that is made up of 20 amplification units at a cost of $200,000 each.โ Among the organizations mentioned as those who cooperated with Concert were delegations of influencers on the part of a U.S. organization called Our Soldiers Speak; delegations of evangelical clergy of Christians United for Israel; and an organization named Eagles' Wings, which Concert staff said is โviewed as more liberal in the evangelical Christian world, so it is able to reach wider audiences.
Another 2.5 million shekels funded a project by the organization Israel-is, whose goal, according to the documents, was โpreparing Israelis for their big tripโ โ providing seminars for backpackers before trips to Latin America and Thailand of the type many Israelis take after completing their military service. The programโs website says its goal is to help and strengthen Israelโs image around the world.
Other funds went to the Zionist Federation in South Africa; an organization named The Israel Allies Foundation, which describes itself as promoting political support for Israel on the basis of Judeo-Christian values; and the Reservists on Dutyโs Gideon Group project, which trains Israeli students to counter the BDS movement on campuses overseas, as well as other projects.
Because of Concertโs budgetary dead end, it seems the Strategic Affairs Ministry intends to reduce the companyโs budget in coming years and change both its content and the way it operates.
A joint statement by the Strategic Affairs Ministry and Concert said: โThe joint initiative by the State of Israel and Concert was created in 2018 following a government decision as part of the fight against the delegitimization of Israel.ย The initiative, defined as a public-benefit company, devoted its first year of activity mostly to establishing knowledge infrastructures and formulating strategies of action. In the past year and a half, against the backdrop of three election cycles, the freezing of budgets and the global coronavirus crisis, the initiativeโs goals were not fulfilled in the manner that was planned. It should be noted that a detailed working plan worth 60 million shekels, which was approved, was not implemented as a result of the transition to a continuous budget. Despite the difficulties, there has been a clear and consistent rise in the volume of the initiativeโs activity including the initiation of projects with 50 organizations, dozens of seminars andย delegations, training some 1,000 young Israelis for public diplomacy activities around the world.ย
โThe initiative has much potential to advance the State of Israelโs interests in light of the de-legitimization challenges expected for Israel,โ the statement continued. โWith her entry into the role, Strategic Affairs Minister Orit Farkash-Hacohen instructed a deep look into the projectโs activity and to draw lessons that will allow optimal utilization with the intention that Concert continues to work for the State of Israel and its goals.โ