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Is it time to end United States aid to Israel?

The optics of the US-Israel alliance are popular. But does it still reflect reality?

July 27, 2023 11:47
Israeli F-15 fighter Credit JACK GUEZ AFP via Getty Images 1152316565 (2)
An Israeli F-15 I fighter jet performs during an air show at the graduation ceremony of Israeli air force pilots at the Hatzerim Israeli Air Force base in the Negev desert, near the southern Israeli city of Beer Sheva, on December 27, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / JACK GUEZ (Photo credit should read JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Israeli president Isaac Herzog’s visit to Washington was a success for all parties. The House Democrats’ anti-Israel left enacted their “apartheid” theatrics for a larger audience than usual.

This invited the House Republicans to propose a motion denying that Israel was not, as Democratic Representative Pramila Jayapal had claimed earlier in the week, a “racist state”.

That allowed the Democrats to whip all but ten of their Representatives behind the vote, with Jayapal withdrawing her remarks and voting with the resolution.

This dispelled the impression that their party is drifting into casual hostility to Israel, and endorsed Joe Biden’s burblings about his “deep-rooted and long-lasting” love for Israel even as his diplomats strain to indulge Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

All of which helped Herzog in his effort to present Israel as a stable and reliable ally rather than a madhouse where the government is paralysed by the effects of its own recklessness. Americans don’t want to see that. They already have enough of it at home.

When politics is primarily performed for the media, “optics” are everything. Meanwhile, reality still exists, and keeps changing. There is no doubt that the optics of the US-Israel alliance are popular. But does it still reflect reality?

American politicians habitually assert that the US has always been Israel’s best friend. This goes down well with American Jews, but it is false. President Truman may have jumped to recognise the new Jewish state in 1948, but his own State Department advised against it.

The US backed Nasser’s Egypt against Israel in the Suez Crisis, a choice Eisenhower regretted.

It was the French, not the Americans, who gave Israel its nuclear capacity. Israel became a US ally in the 1960s, first under the Kennedy presidency, and then after 1967. Aid began in 1979, under the Carter presidency, to encourage Menachem Begin to make peace with Egypt.

This was Cold War politics. The Cold War ended in 1991. Three decades later, the United States is leaving the Middle East. Israel, once a weak client state, is now a regional superpower. The US government sends $4 billion a year in “military aid” to Israel. Almost all of it has to be spent on American weapons.

The aid is an indirect subsidy to the US defence industry. Every now and then, someone asks whether US aid to Israel is still an American interest. Usually, they are libertarians who object to “big government” on principle, or are on the Democrats’ “anti-Zionist” left. More recently, they are on the Republicans’ isolationist right.