Israel: Strategic ally or liability?
By Stephen Sniegoski
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Jun 15, 2010, 00:21
The claim that Israel
serves as a valuable ally for the United States is made by both
pro-Zionists and much of the anti-war and anti-Zionist Left that is
influenced by Noam Chomsky. As
a result of the Gaza flotilla massacre, which has caused a worldwide uproar
against Israel, the value of Israel to the United States is being publicly questioned
in more mainstream foreign policy forums.
Writing
shortly before the massacre, the always astute Philip Giraldi critically
analyzed the claim of Israel�s
value to the United States
in �The Strategic Ally Myth,�
which focuses on a recent article by Israel Firster Mort Zuckerman entitled, �Israel Is a Key Ally and Deserves
U.S. Support.�
Zuckerman
is a real estate billionaire and editor-in-chief of U.S. News & World
Report, and his article came out in that magazine. (He is
also publisher/owner of the New York Daily News). Zuckerman�s writing
for his own publications has credentialed him for other media outlets, and he
regularly appears on MSNBC and The McLaughlin Group. Between 2001 and
2003, Zuckerman was the chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations. Giraldi underscores Zuckerman�s pro-Israel
orientation: �Zuckerman is frequently spotted on the television talking head
circuit where he dispenses analysis of international events that could have
been crafted in Tel Aviv or Herzliya, where the Israeli intelligence service
Mossad has its headquarters.� Zuckerman�s immense wealth and media influence
exemplifies why Israel has been able to gain the reputation as a valuable ally
to the United States.
Giraldi,
however, points out that the United
States is not technically an ally of
Israel�s. Giraldi writes that �to be an ally requires an agreement in
writing that spells out the conditions and reciprocity of the relationship. Israel has
never been an ally of any country because it would force it to restrain its
aggressive behavior, requiring consultation with its ally before attacking
other nations. It is also unable to define its own borders, which have been
expanding ever since it was founded in 1948. Without defined borders it is
impossible to enter into an alliance because most alliances are established so
that one country will come to the aid of another if it is attacked, which
normally means having its territorial integrity violated. Since Israel intends to continue expanding its borders
it cannot commit to an alliance with anyone and has, in fact, rebuffed several
bids by Washington
to enter into some kind of formal arrangement.�
Zuckerman
maintains that there are no drawbacks to America�s
support for Israel,
explicitly denying the allegation that American support for Israel causes
anti-American hostility in the Islamic countries. Instead, Zuckerman
maintains that the Muslims �are fighting America because they see the whole
West and its culture, values, and belief in democracy as antithetical to their
own beliefs.� Giraldi correctly points out that this is ridiculous -- a higher-IQ version of Bush�s �they hate us
for our freedom.�
It
would seem almost self-evident that support for the Arabs� fundamental enemy
would lead to the hostility of Arab states or, should a particular regime
remain friendly to the United
States, cause groups within the state to
threaten its stability. During the Cold War, US/Israeli ties caused some
Arab states to turn to the Soviet Union, especially since the Soviets were
willing to provide them with weapons, which they could not obtain from the US because of the opposition from Israel and the Israel lobby. American support
for Israel during the 1973
Yom Kippur war led to the Arab oil embargo against the United States
in 1973.
Obviously,
it has induced the Islamic terrorism during the past decade, as Osama bin Laden
has maintained. Certainly, the Gaza flotilla massacre has heightened Arab
and Islamic animosity toward the United States, which has been recognized
even by mainstream media commentators. Because of the power of the Israel
Lobby, the United States cannot offer harsh criticism of Israel and must work
to prevent any form of United Nations sanctions against it, thus complicating
its relationship with the entire Arab/Islamic world. While it must be
acknowledged that hostility to the United States
has also been accentuated by its wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, the
American military involvement has been caused in large part by the
influence of the Israel
lobby.
M.
Shahid Alam points out in his excellent book, �Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing
Logic of Zionism,� that much of the anti-Americanism in the
Middle East was initially triggered by Israel. This anti-Americanism
has in turn, enabled Israel to
present itself as America�s
only reliable friend in the Middle East. In
essence, �Israel had
manufactured the threats that would make it look like a strategic asset�
(p. 218), writes Alam. �Without Israel,� Alam maintains, �there was little
chance that any of the Arab regimes would turn away from their dependence on
the West� (p. 171).
The
realization that Israel is
not really a strategic ally of the United States
is now being expressed by individuals far more sympathetic to Israel than
Alam. Anthony H. Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, for example, makes such a argument in his article, �Israel as a Strategic Liability.�
Cordesman
served as national security assistant to the pro-Israel Senator John McCain,
though he is considered a centrist. In denying that the United States supports Israel for strategic reasons, Cordesman
writes that �the real motives behind America�s
commitment to Israel
are moral and ethical. They are a reaction to the horrors of the Holocaust, to
the entire history of Western anti-Semitism, and to the United States�
failure to help German and European Jews during the period before it entered
World War II. They are a product of the fact that Israel
is a democracy that shares virtually all of the same values as the United States.�
I
would simply point out that this belief in Israel�s moral superiority is not
some objective notion that is determined by an objective weighing of all the
evidence, but exists primarily in the United States because of the power of the
pro-Zionist media and political lobby. If somehow the wealth and power conditions of American Jews and Arab
Americans were reversed, and all mainstream media information coming to
the American public was filtered through a pro-Arab/Palestinian slant, it is
inconceivable that America
would support Israel
over the Palestinians. It
is hard to believe that someone as sharp as Cordesman does not recognize the
power of the Israel
lobby in American domestic politics, and he undoubtedly does, but he is
also keen enough to know that people
who openly express such a view do not hold cushy positions in leading think tanks. However,
so as not to go too far off track, the issue here is whether Israel is a
strategic asset to the United States, not whether the US should support Israel
for moral reasons, and, concerning the issue at hand, Cordesman comes down
against the strategic asset argument.
Jim
Lobe alludes to the career
ramifications of speaking the truth regarding Israel when he
quotes Stephen Walt, the co-author of the bombshell book, �The Israel
Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,� who states: �The fact that Cordesman would say
this publicly is a sign that attitudes and discourse are changing. . . . Lots
of people in the national security establishment -- and especially the Pentagon
and intelligence services -- have understood that Israel wasn�t an asset, but
nobody wanted to say so because they knew it might hurt their careers.�
Intriguingly,
Lobe points out that head of the Mossad, Israel�s foremost spy
agency, also recently made reference to Israel�s liability to the United
States. Mossad chief Meir Dagan told members of the Israeli parliament�s
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that �Israel is gradually turning from an
asset to the United States
to a burden.� In reality, it is highly questionable whether Israel has ever been a net asset to the United States.
Zuckerman
tries to illustrate what assistance Israel provides the US -- a good strategic
location in the Middle East, a place to stockpile American weapons, and
beneficial intelligence. Giraldi rebuts these alleged benefits,
maintaining that �the notion that Israel
is some kind of strategic asset for the United States is nonsense, a
complete fabrication.� He points out that the United States cannot utilize
Israeli territory to project its power throughout the region. �The US has numerous bases in Arab countries,�
Giraldi notes, �but is not allowed to use any military base in Israel. Washington�s own carrier groups and other forces in place
all over the Middle East, including the Red Sea,
have capabilities that far exceed those of the Israel Defense Forces.� It
should also be added, as John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt bring out in
their book, �The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy� (p. 56), that
Israel does not help the United States in its key military objective in the
Middle East: maintaining access to Gulf oil.
Giraldi
points out that the stockpiles of US
equipment in Israel are
basically for Israel.
�The supplies are, in fact, regularly looted by the Israelis, leaving largely
unusable or picked over equipment for US forces if it should ever be needed.�
Regarding
Zuckerman�s reference to the provision of �good intelligence,� Giraldi observes
that �The intelligence provided
by Israel that Zuckerman praises is generally fabricated and completely self-serving,
intended to shape a narrative about the Middle East that makes the Israelis
look good and virtually everyone else look bad.� For some specific examples of actually misleading
intelligence, it should be recalled that Israel was providing some of the
spurious intelligence on Iraq�s alleged formidable WMD during the build-up to
the 2003 US invasion (the Knesset investigated this issue) and, for the past
decade, has been issuing alarmist warnings that Iran is on the verge of
developing nuclear weaponry. In short,
the intelligence Israel provides to the United States is intended to induce it
to take actions to advance Israel�s interests, which can run counter to the
interests of the United States.
The idea of Israel as a strategic asset is
especially significant because, as mentioned earlier, it is expressed not
only by Israel Firsters but also by Noam Chomsky and his epigones, and thus is
a view that looms large in the antiwar camp. Stephen Zunes, a
prominent member of the Chomsky group, even implies that Israel is but the passive
instrument of American policymakers (See my article: �Israel-lobby denial: The bankruptcy of the mainstream Left as illustrated by Stephen Zunes�). This approach, of
course, provides psychological
satisfaction to those on the left who want to believe in the ultimate evil of Gentile
capitalism and the perpetual victimization of Jews, but is
counterproductive in actually dealing with the problem of American military
intervention in the Middle East.
Actually the case of billionaire Mort Zuckerman
should serve as an example to undermine the Chomskyist interpretation. The Chomskyist position is based on
the idea that overriding wealth determines American foreign policy; while not
strictly Marxist, it has strong similarities to Marxism. But, of course,
pro-Zionist Mort Zuckerman is an individual of great wealth, and he would seem
to have considerable clout in the media. And Zuckerman is far from being
an aberration. A huge disproportion of the super-wealthy are
Jewish. A recent analysis
determined that at least 139 of the richest 400 Americans listed by
Forbes are Jewish.
Since
many wealthy Jews publicly promote Zionism, it stands to reason that their view
should be able to shape American foreign policy especially in areas where their
interest is far greater than that of other wealthy Americans. We are frequently told that the oil interests
control American Middle East policy. But one would think that the combined
wealth of super-wealthy pro-Zionists far exceeds the wealth of the oil
barons with interests in Middle East oil. A cursory look at the list of America�s 400 wealthiest individuals showed
about 20 or so of the 400 were, at least, to some extent involved in
oil/energy. Those specializing in Middle East
oil would be somewhat fewer, I would think.
Actually
these figures provide a rough view of how wealth shapes American foreign
policy. Pro-Zionist money can sway the area where its concern is the
greatest and where that of the oil interests is less so -- the Israel/Palestine
issue. The issue of overall Middle East policy directly involving the flow
of Gulf oil, however, would be of fundamental concern to the oil industry, as
well as the wealthy as a whole, since the flow of oil affects the economies of
the entire industrial world. Thus, with respect to the current question of
whether the US should attack
Iran, hardline Zionists
would seem to identify fully with the interest of Israel to eliminate an enemy, no
matter what the impact on the global economy. However, those wealthy
individuals whose fundamental concerns involve oil and economic matters in
general are fearful of the possible negative economic effects resulting
from such an attack. This explains why the United
States has not yet attacked Iran.
Cordesman,
who eschews any mention of Zionist influence in the United States, maintains
that while the United States will defend, and presumably ought to
defend, Israel for moral reasons, it should not provide Israel a blank
check. It did �not mean that the United States should extend support
to an Israeli government when that government fails to credibly pursue peace
with its neighbors.� In short, Israel
cannot simply do anything it wants and receive the support of the United States. �It
is time Israel realized that
it has obligations to the United States,
as well as the United States
to Israel, and that it
become far more careful about the extent to which it tests the limits of U.S. patience
and exploits the support of American Jews. This does not mean taking a single
action that undercuts Israeli security, but it does mean realizing that Israel should show enough discretion to reflect
the fact that it is a tertiary U.S.
strategic interest in a complex and demanding world.� Cordesman seems to
believe that Israel
can alter its policies to establish much improved relations with the
Palestinians and its neighboring countries so that American interests
would not be harmed. In short, Cordesman does not say that Israel could
become a strategic asset, but that, by following conciliatory policies towards
its current enemies, it could become much less of a liability to the United
States.
The
problem with Cordesman�s position, however, is that the Israeli leadership, and
the Zionist establishment in the United States, really believe that Israel
has to do what it does to preserve the existence of Israel, i.e., the
exclusivist Jewish state. As an exclusivist Jewish state, Israel
is threatened by peaceful demographics as well as by terrorism and
warfare. To stave off this danger, Israel
will not allow for any significant Palestinian return to Israel or any viable
Palestinian state, which is exactly what the Palestinians and the Arab and
Islamic countries supporting them demand. In short, the positions of Israel
and the Palestinians and their backers are antithetical. The United States cannot support Israel without antagonizing the
Arab and Islamic states, and vice versa. Since it is widely recognized
that friendly relations with the oil-producing Middle Eastern states are vital
to U.S. national
security, America�s
unwavering backing of Israel
can only harm its strategic interests.
Furthermore,
unconditional support for Israel fuels terrorism against the United States,
making American citizens less safe abroad and even on American soil. And,
of course, such terrorism can lead America
into wars that would not take place if the United States were not targeted.
Finally,
automatic support for Israel completely undermines the United States� advocacy
of a world governed by international law, a goal which President Obama has
addressed on a number of occasions. As Scott Wilson writes in the article, �Obama�s agenda, Israel�s ambitions often at
odds,� in the �Washington Post� (June 5) : �Since its creation more
than six decades ago, the state of Israel has been at times a vexing ally to
the United States. But it poses a special challenge for President Obama, whose
foreign policy emphasizes the importance of international rules and
organizations that successive Israeli governments have clashed with and often
ignored.�
As
President Obama stated in his Nobel Prize acceptance speech: �I am convinced
that adhering to standards, international standards, strengthens those who do,
and isolates and weakens those who don�t.� Then, in an implicit swipe
at the Bush administration, he continued: �Furthermore, America -- in fact, no
nation -- can insist that others follow the rules of the road if we refuse to
follow them ourselves.� This admonition could also apply to America�s tacit support for Israel�s
policies.
America�s
concern about international legality did not begin with Obama -- Woodrow Wilson
was a major proponent of the League of Nations and Franklin Roosevelt
of the UN -- even though America�s unwillingness to join the League of
Nations resulted from its devotion to national sovereignty and opposition to
permanent alliances that could force the country into unwanted
wars. America�s continued support for international legality during the
interwar period (while the US was outside the League of Nations) was especially
illustrated by the involvement of American peace advocates and Secretary of
State Frank B. Kellogg in framing what became known as the Kellogg-Briand Pact
of 1928, which was a multilateral treaty outlawing war except for purpose of
self-defense. It was signed by all major countries (eventually 62
signatories), except for Soviet Russia. Although sometimes ridiculed as a
meaningless utopian gesture, the treaty served as the basis to judge the Nazi
high command at Nuremberg
in 1945-46, and was incorporated and expanded in the UN Charter.
America�s
verbal support for international law is not based simply on morality, nor does
it represent high-sounding but empty rhetoric. As a wealthy, powerful
nation the United States has a vested interest in maintaining the international
status quo in the same way as the preservation of the status quo was sought by
the victors of the Napoleonic Wars and World War I. (The Congress of Vienna, of
course, was far more effective than the Paris Peace Conference in establishing
a long-lasting peace.) International stability not only preserves America�s power
position, but also provides the optimal environment for the international
trade and investment that benefits the American economy.
Obviously,
as Obama pointed out, when the United
States seeks to use international agreements
to restrain the actions of other countries, it cannot expect other countries to
obey these rules if does not do so itself. And it acts in this manner when
it ignores, or supports, Israel�s
violations of international law and prevents UN-sponsored actions against Israel that
would be undertaken if any other country in the world engaged in comparable
activities.
In
conclusion, it is apparent that Washington�s
support for Israel
interferes with a number of the United
States� basic international goals. It
can only be said that Israel
is a liability rather than an asset.
Stephen Sniegoski is the author of The Transparent Cabal: The Neoconservative Agenda, War in the Middle
East, and the National Interest of Israel.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor