Myths
and Facts - United States Middle East Policy
MYTH
“The creation of Israel resulted solely from U.S. pressure.”
FACT
When the UN took up the question of Palestine, President Harry Truman
explicitly said the United States should not "use threats or improper
pressure of any kind on other delegations."1 Some pressure was
nevertheless exerted and the U.S. played a key role in securing support
for the partition resolution. U.S. influence was limited, however, as
became clear when American dependents like Cuba and Greece voted against
partition, and El Salvador and Honduras abstained.
Many members of the Truman Administration opposed partition, including
Defense Secretary James Forrestal, who believed Zionist aims posed a
threat to American oil supplies and its strategic position in the
region. The Joint Chiefs of Staff worried that the Arabs might align
themselves with the Soviets if they were alienated by the West. These
internal opponents did a great deal to undermine U.S. support for the
establishment of a Jewish state.2
Although much has been written about the tactics of the supporters of
partition, the behavior of the Arab states has been largely ignored.
They were, in fact, actively engaged in arm-twisting of their own at the
UN trying to scuttle partition.3
MYTH
“The United States favored Israel over the Arabs in 1948 because of the
pressures of the Jewish lobby.”
FACT
Truman supported the Zionist movement because he believed the
international community was obligated to fulfill the promise of the
Balfour Declaration and because he believed it was the humanitarian
thing to do to ameliorate the plight of the Jewish survivors of the
Holocaust. He did not believe the rights of the Arabs should or would be
compromised. A sense of his attitude can be gleaned from a remark he
made with regard to negotiations as to the boundaries of a Jewish state:
The whole region waits to be developed, and if it were handled the way
we developed the Tennessee River basin, it could support from 20 to 30
million people more. To open the door to this kind of future would
indeed be the constructive and humanitarian thing to do, and it would
also redeem the pledges that were given at the time of World War I.4
The American public supported the President's policy. According to
public opinion polls, 65 percent of Americans supported the creation of
a Jewish state. During the third quarter of 1947 alone, 62,850
postcards, 1,100 letters and 1,400 telegrams flooded the White House,
most urging the President to use American influence at the UN.5
President Truman with David Ben-Gurion and Abba Eban
This public support was reflected in Congress where a resolution
approving the Balfour Declaration was adopted in 1922. In 1944, both
national parties called for the restoration of the Jewish Commonwealth
and, in 1945, a similar resolution was adopted by Congress.
Rather than giving in to pressure, Truman tended to react negatively to
the "Jewish lobby." He complained repeatedly about being pressured and
talked about putting propaganda from the Jews in a pile and striking a
match to it. In a letter to Rep. Claude Pepper, Truman wrote: "Had it
not been for the unwarranted interference of the Zionists, we would have
had the matter settled a year and a half ago."6 This was hardly the
attitude of a politician overly concerned with Jewish votes.
MYTH
“Most Americans oppose a close U.S. relationship with Israel.”
FACT
Support for Israel is not restricted to the Jewish community. Americans
of all ages, races and religions sympathize with Israel. This support is
also nonpartisan, with a majority of Democrats and Republicans
consistently favoring Israel by large margins over the Arabs.
The best indication of Americans' attitude toward Israel is found in the
response to the most consistently asked question about the Middle East:
“In the Middle East situation, are your sympathies more with Israel or
with the Arab nations?” The organization that has conducted the most
surveys is Gallup. Support for Israel in Gallup Polls has remained
consistently around the 50 percent mark since 1967.
In 76 Gallup polls, going back to 1967, Israel has had the support of an
average of 46 percent of the American people compared to just under 12
percent for the Arab states/Palestinians. Americans have slightly more
sympathy for the Palestinians than for the Arab states, but the results
of polls asking respondents to choose between Israel and the
Palestinians have not differed significantly from the other surveys.
Some people have the misperception that sympathy for Israel was once
much higher, but the truth is that before the Gulf War the peak had been
56 percent, reached just after the Six-Day War. In January 1991,
sympathy for Israel reached a record high of 64 percent, according to
Gallup. Meanwhile, support for the Arabs dropped to 8 percent and the
margin was a record 56 points.
The most recent poll, reported by Gallup in February 2005, found that
sympathy for Israel was 52 percent compared to only 18 percent for the
Palestinians. Despite the violence of the preceding three years, and a
steady stream of negative media coverage, this is nearly the same level
of support Israel enjoyed after the 1967 war, when many people
mistakenly believe that Israel was overwhelmingly popular. The figure
for the Palestinians is the highest ever (on a few occassions questions
asking about the "Arabs" received higher levels of support).
Polls also indicate the public views Israel as a reliable U.S. ally, a
feeling that grew stronger during the Gulf crisis. A January 1991 Harris
Poll, for example, found that 86 percent of Americans consider Israel a
“close ally” or “friendly.” This was the highest level ever recorded in
a Harris Poll. The figure in 2005 was 72 percent, ranking Israel fourth
after Great Britain, Canada, and Australia. In a 2005 ADL poll, the
figure was 71 percent, and a May 2003 survey sponsored by ARNSI, the
Alliance for Research on National Security Issues, reported that 63
percent of Americans believe Israel is “a reliable ally of the U.S. in
the fight against terrorism.”
MYTH
“U.S. policy has always been hostile toward the Arabs.”
FACT
Arabs rarely acknowledge the American role in helping the Arab states
achieve independence. President Wilson's stand for self-determination
for all nations, and the U.S. entry into World War I, helped cause the
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and stimulate the move toward
independence in the Arab world.
The Arabs have always asserted that Middle East policy must be a
zero-sum game whereby support for their enemy, Israel, necessarily puts
them at a disadvantage. Thus, Arab states have tried to force the United
States to choose between support for them or Israel. The U.S. has
usually refused to fall into this trap. The fact that the U.S. has a
close alliance with Israel while maintaining good relations with several
Arab states is proof the two are not incompatible.
The U.S. has long sought friendly relations with Arab leaders and has,
at one time or another, been on good terms with most Arab states. In the
1930s, the discovery of oil led U.S. companies to become closely
involved with the Gulf Arabs. In the 1950s, U.S. strategic objectives
stimulated an effort to form an alliance with pro-Western Arab states.
Countries like Iraq and Libya were friends of the U.S. before radical
leaders took over those governments. Egypt, which was hostile toward the
U.S. under Nasser, shifted to the pro-Western camp under Sadat.
Since World War II, the U.S. has poured economic and military assistance
into the region and today is the principal backer of nations like
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Egypt and the Gulf sheikdoms. Although
the Arab states blamed the U.S. for their defeats in wars they initiated
with Israel, the truth is most of the belligerents had either been given
or offered American assistance at some time.
On occasion, the U.S. has appeared to condone Arab aggression against
other Arabs. In 1963, for example, the U.S. recognized the puppet regime
set up by the Egyptians in Yemen. In 1991, while rolling back Saddam
Hussein's aggression in the Gulf, the Bush Administration looked the
other way while Syria completed its virtual annexation of Lebanon.
Whereas Israel has only been able to rely on the United States for
assistance, the Arab states could always count on a variety of Western
countries as well as the Soviet Union and its allies.
“The allied nations with the fullest concurrence of our government and
people are agreed that in Palestine shall be laid the foundations of a
Jewish Commonwealth.”
— President Woodrow Wilson, March 3, 1919
MYTH
“The United States has supported Israel automatically ever since 1948.”
FACT
The United States has been Israel's closest ally throughout its history;
nevertheless, the U.S. has acted against the Jewish State's wishes many
times.
The U.S. effort to balance support for Israel with placating the Arabs
began in 1948 when Truman showed signs of wavering on partition and
advocating trusteeship. After the surrounding Arab states invaded
Israel, the U.S. maintained an arms embargo that severely restricted the
Jews' ability to defend themselves.
Ever since the 1948 war, the U.S. has been unwilling to insist on
projects to resettle Arab refugees. The U.S. has also been reluctant to
challenge Arab violations of the UN Charter and resolutions. Thus, for
example, the Arabs were permitted to get away with blockading the Suez
Canal, imposing a boycott on Israel and committing acts of terrorism. In
fact, the U.S. has taken positions against Israel at the UN more often
than not, and did not use its Security Council veto to block an
anti-Israel resolution until 1972.
Perhaps the most dramatic example of American policy diverging from that
of Israel came during the Suez War when President Eisenhower took a
strong stand against Britain, France and Israel. After the war, U.S.
pressure forced Israel to withdraw from the territory it conquered.
David Ben-Gurion relied on dubious American guarantees that sowed the
seeds of the 1967 conflict.
At various other times, American Presidents have taken action against
Israel. In 1981, for example, Ronald Reagan suspended a strategic
cooperation agreement after Israel annexed the Golan Heights. On another
occasion, he held up delivery of fighter planes because of unhappiness
over an Israeli raid in Lebanon.
In 1991, President Bush held a press conference to ask for a delay in
considering Israel's request for loan guarantees to help absorb Soviet
and Ethiopian Jews because of his disagreement with Israel's settlement
policy. In staking his prestige on the delay, Bush used intemperate
language that inflamed passions and provoked concern in the Jewish
community that anti-Semitism would be aroused.
Though often described as the most pro-Israel President in history, Bill
Clinton also was critical of Israel on numerous occasions. George W.
Bush's administration has also shown no reluctance to criticize Israel
for actions it deems contrary to U.S. interests, but has generally been
more reserved in its public statements.
MYTH
“The U.S. has always given Israel arms to insure it would have a
qualitative edge over the Arabs.”
FACT
The United States provided only a limited amount of arms to Israel,
including ammunition and recoilless rifles, prior to 1962. In that year,
President Kennedy sold HAWK anti-aircraft missiles, but only after the
Soviet Union provided Egypt with long-range bombers.
By 1965, the U.S. had become Israel's main arms supplier. This was
partially necessitated by West Germany's acquiescence to Arab pressure,
which led it to stop selling tanks to Israel. Throughout most of the
Johnson Administration, however, the sale of arms to Israel was balanced
by corresponding transfers to the Arabs. Thus, the first U.S. tank sale
to Israel, in 1965, was offset by a similar sale to Jordan.7
The U.S. did not provide Israel with aircraft until 1966. Even then,
secret agreements were made to provide the same planes to Morocco and
Libya, and additional military equipment was sent to Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia and Tunisia.8
As in 1948, the U.S. imposed an arms embargo on Israel during the
Six-Day War, while the Arabs continued to receive Soviet arms. Israel's
position was further undermined by the French decision to embargo arms
transfers to the Jewish State, effectively ending their role as Israel's
only other major supplier.
It was only after it became clear that Israel had no other sources of
arms, and that the Soviet Union had no interest in limiting its sales to
the region, that President Johnson agreed to sell Israel Phantom jets
that gave the Jewish State its first qualitative advantage. "We will
henceforth become the principal arms supplier to Israel," Assistant
Secretary of Defense Paul Warnke told Israeli Ambassador Yitzhak Rabin,
"involving us even more intimately with Israel's security situation and
involving more directly the security of the United States."9
From that point on, the U.S. began to pursue a policy whereby Israel's
qualitative edge was maintained. The U.S. has also remained committed,
however, to arming Arab nations, providing sophisticated missiles, tanks
and aircraft to Jordan, Morocco, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
states. Thus, when Israel received F-15s in 1978, so did Saudi Arabia
(and Egypt received F-5Es). In 1981, Saudi Arabia, for the first time,
received a weapons system that gave it a qualitative advantage over
Israel — AWACS radar planes.
Today, Israel buys near top-of-the-line U.S. equipment, but many Arab
states also receive some of America's best tanks, planes and missiles.
The qualitative edge may be intact, but it is undoubtedly narrow.
“Our society is illuminated by the spiritual insights of the Hebrew
prophets. America and Israel have a common love of human freedom, and
they have a common faith in a democratic way of life.”
— President Lyndon Johnson, Speech to B'nai B'rith, (September 10, 1968)
MYTH
“U.S. aid in the Middle East has always been one-sided, with the Arabs
getting practically nothing.”
FACT
After Israel's victory in its War of Independence, the U.S. responded to
an appeal for economic aid to help absorb immigrants by approving a $135
million Export-Import Bank loan and the sale of surplus commodities. In
those early years of Israel's statehood (also today), U.S. aid was seen
as a means of promoting peace.
In 1951, Congress voted to help Israel cope with the economic burdens
imposed by the influx of Jewish refugees from the displaced persons
camps in Europe and from the ghettos of the Arab countries. Arabs then
complained the U.S. was neglecting them, though they had no interest in
or use for American aid then. In 1951, Syria rejected offers of U.S.
aid. Oil-rich Iraq and Saudi Arabia did not need U.S. economic
assistance, and Jordan was, until the late 1950s, the ward of Great
Britain. After 1957, when the United States assumed responsibility for
supporting Jordan and resumed economic aid to Egypt, assistance to the
Arab states soared. Also, the United States was by far the biggest
contributor of aid to the Palestinians through UNRWA, a status that
continues to the present.
Israel has received more direct aid from the United States since World
War II than any other country, but the amounts for the first half of
this period were relatively small. Between 1949 and 1973, the U.S.
provided Israel with an average of about $122 million a year, a total of
$3.1 billion (and actually more than $1 billion of that was loans for
military equipment in 1971-73) . Prior to 1971, Israel received a total
of only $277 million in military aid, all in the form of loans as credit
sales. The bulk of the economic aid was also lent to Israel. By
comparison, the Arab states received nearly three times as much aid
before 1971, $4.4 billion, or $170 million per year. Moreover, unlike
Israel, which receives nearly all its aid from the United States, Arab
nations have gotten assistance from Asia, Eastern Europe, the Soviet
Union and the European Community.
“It is my responsibility to see that our policy in Israel fits in with
our policy throughout the world; second, it is my desire to help build
in Palestine a strong, prosperous, free and independent democratic
state. It must be large enough, free enough, and strong enough to make
its people self-supporting and secure.”
— President Truman, October 28, 1948, campaign speech at Madison Square
Garden
Israel did not begin to receive large amounts of assistance until 1974,
following the 1973 war, and the sums increased dramatically after the
Camp David agreements. Altogether, since 1949, Israel has received more
than $90 billion in assistance. Though the totals are impressive, the
value of assistance to Israel has been eroded by inflation.
Arab states that have signed agreements with Israel have also been
rewarded. Since signing the peace treaty with Israel, Egypt has been the
second largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid ($2 billion in 2002, Israel
received $2.8 billion). Jordan has also been the beneficiary of higher
levels of aid since it signed a treaty with Israel (increasing from less
than $40 million to more than $225 million). The multibillion dollar
debts to the U.S. of both Arab nations were also forgiven.
After the Oslo agreements, the United States also began providing
funding to the Palestinians. It now provides $80 million in humanitarian
assistance via the U.S. Agency for International Development. It
provides no direct aid to the Palestinian Authority because it is viewed
as corrupt. President Bush specifically warned the Palestinians that
they must change their leadership and embrace reform to obtain future
assistance. "I can assure you," Bush said, "we won't be putting money
into a society which is not transparent and [is] corrupt."9a
MYTH
“The U.S. has always given Israel billions of dollars without expecting
repayment.”
FACT
U.S. economic grants to Israel ended in 1959. U.S. aid to Israel from
then until 1985 consisted largely of loans, which Israel repaid, and
surplus commodities, which Israel bought. Israel began buying arms from
the United States in 1962, but did not receive any grant military
assistance until after the 1973 Yom Kippur War. As a result, Israel had
to go deeply into debt to finance its economic development and arms
procurement. The decision to convert military aid to grants that year
was based on the prevailing view in Congress that without a strong
Israel, war in the Middle East was more likely, and that the U.S. would
face higher direct expenditures in such an eventuality.
For several years, most of Israel's economic aid went to pay off old
debts. In 1984, foreign aid legislation included the Cranston Amendment
(named after its Senate sponsor), which said the U.S. would provide
Israel with economic assistance "not less than" the amount Israel owes
the United States in annual debt service payments.
MYTH
“Israel continues to demand large amounts of economic aid even though it
is now a rich country that no longer needs help.”
FACT
Starting with fiscal year 1987, Israel annually received $1.2 billion in
all grant economic aid and $1.8 billion in all grant military
assistance. In 1998, Israel offered to voluntarily reduce its dependence
on U.S. economic aid. According to an agreement reached with the Clinton
Administration and Congress, the $1.2 billion economic aid package will
be reduced by $120 million each year so that it will be phased out over
10 years.
Half of the annual savings in economic assistance each year ($60
million) will be added to Israel's military aid package in recognition
of its increased security needs. In 2001, Israel received $840 million
in economic aid and $1.98 billion in military aid. In 2002, economic aid
was reduced to $720 million and military aid to Israel was budgeted at
$2.04 billion.
Israel made the offer because it does not have the same need for
assistance it once did. The foundation of Israel's economy today is
strong; still, Israel remains saddled with past debts to the U.S.,
which, unlike those of Jordan and Egypt, were not forgiven. In addition,
Israel still can use American help. The country still has the tremendous
financial burden of absorbing tens of thousands of immigrants from the
former Soviet Union, a very high rate of unemployment and an alarmingly
high number of people who fall below the poverty line. The situation was
further exacerbated by the violence of the last two years, which has
devastated the tourist industry and all related service sectors of the
economy. Furthermore, concessions made in peace negotiations have
required the dismantling of military bases and the loss of valuable
resources that must be replaced.
MYTH
“Israel boasts that it is the fourth strongest nation in the world, so
it certainly doesn't need U.S. military assistance.”
FACT
Israel has peace treaties with only two of its neighbors. It remains
technically at war with the rest of the Arab/Islamic world and several
countries, notably Iran and Iraq, are openly hostile. Given the
potential threats, it is a necessity that Israel continue to maintain a
strong defense. Israel is a powerful country, but as the arms balance
chart indicates, it is still outmanned and outgunned by its enemies, and
therefore must rely on its qualitative advantage to insure it can defeat
its enemies, and that can only be guaranteed by the continued purchase
of the latest weapons. New tanks, missiles and planes carry high price
tags, however, and Israel cannot afford what it needs on its own, so
continued aid from the United States is vital to its security.
Furthermore, Israel's enemies have numerous suppliers, but Israel must
rely almost entirely on the United States for its hardware.
MYTH
“U.S. military aid subsidizes Israeli defense contractors at the expense
of American industry.”
FACT
Contrary to popular wisdom, the United States does not simply write
billion dollar checks and hand them over to Israel to spend as they
like. Only about 26 percent ($555 million of $2.2 billion in 2004) of
what Israel receives in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) can be spent in
Israel for military procurement. The remaining 74 percent is spent in
the United States to generate profits and jobs. More than 1,000
companies in 46 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have
signed contracts worth billions of dollars through this program over the
last several years. The figures for 2004 are below:
MYTH
“U.S. loan guarantees provided Israel with billions of dollars from
American taxpayers that was used to build settlements in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip to house Soviet Jews.”
FACT
Since 1989, approximately one million Jews have immigrated to Israel.
The majority, roughly 80 percent, has come from the former Soviet Union.
Israel must provide these immigrants with food, shelter, employment and
training. The task is even more challenging when it comes to absorbing
Jews from relatively undeveloped countries such as Ethiopia, who often
must be taught everything from using a flush toilet to how to withdraw
money from a bank. To meet these challenges, Israel has invested
billions of dollars. In addition, the American Jewish community has
contributed hundreds of millions of dollars through vairious
philanthropies.
Still, the task was so daunting, Israel turned to the United States for
help. To put the challenge in perspective, consider that the United
States — a country of 250 million people and a multi-trillion dollar GNP
— admits roughly 125,000 refugees a year. In 1990 alone, 185,000 Jews
immigrated to Israel.
The United States led the Free World in helping secure the freedom of
Soviet Jews. Beginning in 1972, Congress appropriated funds to help
resettle Soviet Jews in Israel. Since 1992, $80 million has been
earmarked for this purpose.
After the Soviet Union opened its gates, the trickle of immigrants
became a flood, skyrocketing from fewer than 13,000 people in 1989 to
more than 185,000 in 1990. Israel then asked for a different type of
help. The United States responded in 1990 by approving $400 million in
loan guarantees to help Israel house its newcomers.
Guarantees are not grants — not one penny of U.S. government funds is
transferred to Israel. The U.S. simply cosigns loans for Israel that
give bankers confidence to lend Israel money at more favorable terms:
lower interest rates and longer repayment periods — as much as 30 years
instead of only five to seven. These loan guarantees have no effect on
domestic programs or guarantees. Moreover, they have no impact on U.S.
taxpayers unless Israel were to default on its loans, something it has
never done. In addition, much of the money Israel borrows is spent in
the United States to purchase American goods.
When it became clear the flood of refugees was even greater than
anticipated, and tens of thousands continued to arrive every month,
Israel realized it needed more help and asked the United States for an
additional $10 billion in guarantees.
In 1992, Congress authorized the President to provide guarantees of
loans to Israel as a result of Israel's extraordinary humanitarian
effort to resettle and absorb immigrants. These guarantees were made
available in annual increments of $2 billion over five years. While the
cost to the U.S. government was zero, Israel paid the United States
annual fees amounting to several hundred million dollars to cover
administrative and other costs.
Under existing guidelines, no U.S. foreign assistance to Israel can be
used beyond Israel's pre-1967 borders. Moreover, to underline
dissatisfaction with Israel’s settlement policies, the President was
authorized to reduce the annual loan guarantees by the amount equal to
the estimated value of Israeli activities in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip undertaken the previous year.
Thus, as the table indicates, the State Department determined that
Israel spent just under $1.4 billion for settlement activity from
1993-1996. The President was authorized, however, to rescind deductions
when making the funds available to Israel was in the security interests
of the United States. President Clinton used this authority in the last
three years of the program, so the actual reduction in the amount of
guarantees available to Israel was $773.8 million.
The money related to settlements also had nothing to do with the new
immigrants, none of whom were forced to live in the territories. In
fact, only a tiny percentage voluntarily chose to do so.
By all measures, the U.S. loan guarantee program was a huge success.
Israel used the borrowed funds primarily to increase the amount of
foreign currency available to the country’s business sector and to
support infrastructure projects, such as roads, bridges, sewage and
electrical plants. The guarantees also helped Israel to provide housing
and jobs for virtually all of the new immigrants.
MYTH
“Israel was never believed to have any strategic value to the United
States.”
FACT
In 1952, Gen. Omar Bradley, head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, believed
the West required 19 divisions to defend the Middle East and that Israel
could supply two. He also expected only three states to provide the West
air power in Middle Eastern defense by 1955: Great Britain, Turkey and
Israel. Bradley's analysis was rejected because the political echelon
decided it was more important for the United States to work with Egypt,
and later Iraq. It was feared that integration of Israeli forces in
Western strategy would alienate the Arabs.11
Israel's crushing victory over the combined Arab forces in 1967 caused
this view to be revised. The following year, the United States sold
Israel sophisticated planes (Phantom jets) for the first time.
Washington shifted its Middle East policy from seeking a balance of
forces to ensuring that Israel enjoyed a qualitative edge over its
enemies.
Israel proved its value in 1970 when the United States asked for help in
bolstering King Hussein's regime. Israel's willingness to aid Amman, and
movement of troops to the Jordanian border, persuaded Syria to withdraw
the tanks it had sent into Jordan to support PLO forces challenging the
King during "Black September."12
By the early 1970s it had become clear that no Arab state could or would
contribute to Western defense in the Middle East. The Baghdad Pact had
long ago expired, and the regimes friendly to the United States were
weak compared to the anti-Western forces in Egypt, Syria and Iraq. Even
after Egypt's reorientation following the signing of its peace treaty
with Israel, the United States did not count on any Arab government for
military assistance.
The Carter Administration began to implement a form of strategic
cooperation (it was not referred to as such) by making Israel eligible
to sell military equipment to the United States. The willingness to
engage in limited, joint military endeavors was viewed by President
Carter as a means of rewarding Israel for "good behavior" in peace talks
with Egypt.
Though still reluctant to formalize the relationship, strategic
cooperation became a major focus of the U.S.-Israel relationship when
Ronald Reagan entered office. Before his election, Reagan had written:
"Only by full appreciation of the critical role the State of Israel
plays in our strategic calculus can we build the foundation for
thwarting Moscow's designs on territories and resources vital to our
security and our national well-being."13
Reagan's view culminated in the November 30, 1981, signing of a
Memorandum of Understanding on "strategic cooperation." On November 29,
1983, a new agreement was signed creating the Joint Political-Military
Group (JPMG) and a group to oversee security assistance, the Joint
Security Assistance Planning Group (JSAP).
The JPMG was originally designed to discuss means of countering threats
posed by increased Soviet involvement in the Middle East. It has placed
increasing emphasis, however, on bilateral concerns about the
proliferation of chemical weapons and ballistic missiles.
The JSAP was formed in response to Israel's economic crisis in the
mid-1980s. It is a binational group that meets annually in Washington to
examine Israel's current and future military procurement requirements.
It also formulates plans for the allocation of U.S. Foreign Military
Sales credits in light of current threat assessments and U.S. budgetary
capabilities.
In 1987, Congress designated Israel as a major non-NATO ally. This law
formally established Israel as an ally, and allowed its industries to
compete equally with NATO countries and other close U.S. allies for
contracts to produce a significant number of defense items.
“Since the rebirth of the State of Israel, there has been an ironclad
bond between that democracy and this one.”
— President Ronald Reagan, September 3, 1980, address to B'nai B'rith
In April 1988, President Reagan signed another MOU encompassing all
prior agreements. This agreement institutionalized the strategic
relationship.
By the end of Reagan's term, the U.S. had prepositioned equipment in
Israel, regularly held joint training exercises, began co-development of
the Arrow Anti-Tactical Ballistic Missile and was engaged in a host of
other cooperative military endeavors.
Since then, U.S.-Israel strategic cooperation has continued to evolve.
Today, these strategic ties are stronger than ever. Israel is now a de
facto ally of the United States.
MYTH
“Israelis are able to live comfortably because of American aid, and they
see no reason to reform their country's economic system.”
FACT
Israelis are among the most highly taxed people in the world with income
taxes ranging up to 50 percent. This in a country where the average
Israeli earns $18,000.
For years Israelis saw their standard of living decline in large part
due to the government's extraordinary defense burden, which comprised
roughly one-fifth to one-fourth of the budget. The situation has
improved in recent years, thanks largely to the peace process, so
defense spending has been reduced to 16% of the budget.
When Israel gave up the oil fields it developed in the Sinai as part of
the peace agreement with Egypt, it sacrificed the opportunity to become
energy-independent. Consequently, its economy suffers from oil price
swings.
Most recently, with the influx of hundreds of thousands of immigrants
from the former Soviet Union and Ethiopia, Israelis have voluntarily
accepted even greater sacrifices to facilitate the absorption of the
newcomers.
Israelis have long recognized the need to dramatically reform their
economy. In 1985, Israel implemented a stabilization program that
included several major features: a large cut in subsidies on basic
products and services; a large currency devaluation followed by a stable
exchange rate against the dollar; wage and price controls and the
cessation of direct indexing of wages and savings to inflation; and a
monetary policy that would control the growth of credit, thus driving
interest rates upward.
The New York Times later described the sacrifices of the Israeli people,
and the message of the stabilization program, as "Everybody takes a step
backward — together."14
Israel's stabilization program worked like "a mini-miracle." Inflation
fell sharply, from triple digits to zero in 2000. The exchange rate of
the shekel stabilized, foreign-currency reserves recovered, exports
increased and the budget deficit contracted.
Today, Israel is striving to go beyond stabilization, to make the
underlying structural changes required for sustained economic growth.
The government has continued to slash subsidies on food and public
services, including health care and education, remove price controls and
reform its tax structure. The government has moved to privatize
state-run companies. Such steps are painful, but Israelis recognize the
need for such difficult measures.
Israel has welcomed the U.S. as an involved partner, and has proved to
be one of the few U.S. foreign aid recipients that has responded
positively to U.S. overtures to make major reforms in its economy.
MYTH
“Israel takes protectionist measures that create impediments to American
trade.”
FACT
Israel has one of the most open markets for U.S. goods. Much of the
growth in U.S.-Israel trade is a result of the 1985 Free Trade Agreement
(FTA). The FTA affords U.S. products the opportunity to compete equally
with European goods, which also have free access to Israel's domestic
markets. This was the first such agreement signed by the United States
with any foreign government.
Since signing the FTA, U.S. exports to Israel have grown by 234 percent,
while the total volume of trade between the two countries has risen 317
percent to nearly $20 billion. This growth has resulted in more sales
and profits for American exporters.
MYTH
“The employment of Jonathan Pollard to spy on the United States is proof
that Israel works against American interests.”
FACT
In November 1985, the FBI arrested Jonathan Pollard, a U.S. Navy
intelligence analyst, on charges of selling classified material to
Israel. Pollard was subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment. His
wife, Anne, got five years in jail for assisting her husband.
Immediately upon Pollard's arrest, Israel apologized and explained that
the operation was unauthorized. “It is Israel's policy to refrain from
any intelligence activity related to the United States,” an official
government statement declared, “in view of the close and special
relationship of friendship” between the two countries. Prime Minister
Shimon Peres stated: “Spying on the United States stands in total
contradiction to our policy.”15
The United States and Israel worked together to investigate the Pollard
affair. The Israeli inquiry revealed that Pollard was not working for
Israeli military intelligence or the Mossad. He was directed by a small,
independent scientific intelligence unit. Pollard initiated the contact
with the Israelis.
A subcommittee of the Knesset's Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee on
Intelligence and Security Services concluded: “Beyond all doubt...the
operational echelons (namely: the Scientific Liaison Unit headed by
Rafael Eitan) decided to recruit and handle Pollard without any check or
consultation with the political echelon or receiving its direct or
indirect approval.” The Knesset committee took the government to task
for not properly supervising the scientific unit.
As promised to the U.S. government, the spy unit that directed Pollard
was disbanded, his handlers punished and the stolen documents
returned.16 The last point was crucial to the U.S. Department of
Justice's case against Pollard.
Pollard denied spying “against” the United States. He said he provided
only information he believed was vital to Israeli security and was being
withheld by the Pentagon. This included data on Soviet arms shipments to
Syria, Iraqi and Syrian chemical weapons, the Pakistani atomic bomb
project and Libyan air defense systems.17 Because the information he
took is classified, we can't verify if this is true.
The United States Attorney arranged a plea-bargain with Pollard: he
would plead guilty to the one count of passing classified information to
an ally without intent to harm the United States. There would be no
trial, and no risk of classified information being disclosed in court.
In return, the government said it would not seek the maximum sentence.
The trial judge warned Pollard , however, that he could still receive a
life sentence.17a Pollard nevertheless pled guilty on June 4, 1986.
Before sentencing, and in violation of the plea agreement, Pollard and
his wife Anne gave defiant media interviews in which they defended their
spying, and attempted to rally American Jews to their cause. In a 60
Minutes interview, Anne said, “I feel my husband and I did what we were
expected to do, and what our moral obligation was as Jews, what our
moral obligation was as human beings, and I have no regrets about that.”
Also prior to sentencing, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger
submitted a 46-page classified memorandum to the judge outlining the
damage to U.S. national security done by Pollard. Contrary to some
accounts, Wolf Blitzer reported that Pollard and his attorneys were
permitted to read it and draft a response.17b Weinberger called for
severe punishment and the memo is widely cited as a major reason that
the judge ultimately sentenced Pollard to life in prison for espionage.
His life sentence was the most severe prison term ever given for spying
for an ally. It also was far greater than the average term imposed for
spying for the Soviet Union and other enemies of the United States.18
Many convicted spies, however, have been given life sentences, including
Aldrich Ames, Robert Hanssen, and John Walker.
Though initially shunned by Israel, the government of Benjamin Netanyahu
admitted that Pollard had worked for Israeli intelligence and granted
him citizenship. Netanyahu requested clemency for Pollard during Middle
East peace talks at the Wye Plantation in Maryland in 1998. Since then,
Israeli officials have made additional entreaties on Pollard's behalf.
Pollard's supporters in the United States also routinely request that he
be pardoned. President Clinton reportedly considered a pardon, but
defense and intelligence agency officials vigorously opposed the idea.
At the end of Clinton's term, the issue was again raised and Sen.
Richard Shelby (R-AL), chairman of the Senate's Select Committee on
Intelligence, along with a majority of senators argued against a pardon.
“Mr. Pollard is a convicted spy who put our national security at risk
and endangered the lives of our intelligence officers,” Shelby said.
“There not terms strong enough to express my belief that Mr. Pollard
should serve every minute of his sentence....”19
In November 2003, a federal judge rejected requests by Pollard to appeal
his life sentence and review classified government documents that
Pollard said would prove his spying was not as damaging or as extensive
as prosecutors had charged. The judge said that Pollard had waited too
long — more than a decade after it was imposed — to object to his
sentence and ruled that Pollard's attorneys offered no compelling
justification for seeing the sealed intelligence documents.19a
A U.S. federal appeals court in July 2005 rejected Pollard’s claim that
he had inadequate counsel in his original trial and denied his request
to downgrade his life sentence. The court also denied Pollard’s
attorneys access to classified information they hoped would help in
their attempt to win presidential clemency for their client. The rulings
leave Pollard with little recourse but the Supreme Court to change his
fate.19b
Pollard also petitioned the Israeli Supreme Court to be recognized as a
Prisoner of Zion in the hope that such status would win support for him
to improve his prison conditions and stimulate a campaign for his
release. The Court rejected his petition on January 16, 2006, however,
because a Prisoner of Zion is defined as someone who was imprisoned
“because of his Zionist activity in a country where such activity was
illegal.” Supreme Court President Aharon Barak said typical Zionist
activity would include teaching Hebrew and encouraging aliyah, but “it
cannot be said that an act of espionage on behalf of Israel constitutes
Zionist activity ‘in a country where Zionist activity is prohibited,’he
wrote. “The act of spying, including spying for Israel, is prohibited in
the U.S. as it is in all countries.”19c
In February 2006, Pollard asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a
federal appeals court ruling that denied his attorneys access to
classified information used in his trial. Pollard’s attorneys insist the
documents are needed to make Pollard’s case for clemency. The U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled last year that the
federal courts lack jurisdiction to review claims for access to
documents for clemency, which the court said is the “president’s sole
discretion.”
MYTH
“Israel tricked the United States into selling arms to Iran in exchange
for hostages, and helped divert the profits to the Contras.”
FACT
According to the Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating
the Iran-Contra Affair issued in November 1987, the sale of U.S. arms to
Iran through Israel began in the summer of 1985, after receiving the
approval of President Reagan. The report shows that Israel's involvement
was stimulated by separate overtures in 1985 from Iranian arms merchant
Manucher Ghorbanifar and National Security Council (NSC) consultant
Michael Ledeen, the latter working for National Security Adviser Robert
McFarlane. When Ledeen asked Prime Minister Shimon Peres for assistance,
the Israeli leader agreed to sell weapons to Iran at America's behest,
providing the sale had high-level U.S. approval.20
Before the Israelis would participate, says the report, they demanded "a
clear, express and binding consent by the U.S. Government." McFarlane
told the Congressional committee he first received President Reagan's
approval in July 1985. In August, Reagan again orally authorized the
first sale of weapons to Iran, over the objections of Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger and Secretary of State George Shultz.21 Because of
that deal, Rev. Benjamin Weir, held captive in Lebanon for 16 months,
was released.
When a shipment of HAWK missiles was proposed in November of that year,
Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin again demanded specific U.S.
approval. According to McFarlane, the President agreed.
By December 1985, the President had decided future sales to the Iranians
would come directly from U.S. supplies.
According to the committees' report, NSC aide Lt. Col. Oliver North
first used money from the Iran operation to fund the Nicaraguan
resistance in November 1985. He later testified, however, that the
diversion of funds to the Contras was proposed to him by Ghorbanifar
during a meeting in January 1986.
Saudi billionaire oil and arms trader Adnan Khashoggi said in an
interview on ABC-TV on December 11, 1986, that he advanced $1 million to
help finance the first arms shipment in the Iran-Contra arms scandal and
put up $4 million for the second shipment. According to the President's
special review board chaired by former Sen. John Tower, a foreign
official (reportedly Saudi King Fahd) donated $1 million to $2 million
monthly from July 1984 to April 1985 for covert financing for the
Contras. Saudi Arabia denied aiding the Nicaraguan rebels, but the New
York Times reported the contribution may have been part of a 1981 secret
agreement between Riyadh and Washington "to aid anti-communist
resistance groups around the sophisticated American AWACS radar planes,
according to United States officials and others familiar with the
deal."22
The Joint House-Senate Committee praised the Israeli government for
providing detailed chronologies of events based on relevant documents
and interviews with key participants in the operation. Its report also
corroborated the conclusion of the Tower Commission: "U.S.
decisionmakers made their own decisions and must bear responsibility for
the consequences."23
MYTH
“U.S. dependence on Arab oil has decreased over the years.”
FACT
In 1973, the Arab oil embargo dealt the U.S. economy a major blow. This,
combined with OPEC's subsequent price hikes and a growing American
dependence on foreign oil, triggered the recession in the early
seventies.
In 1973, foreign oil accounted for 35 percent of total U.S. oil demand.
By 2004, the figure had risen to 53 percent, and Arab OPEC countries
accounted for 26 percent of U.S. imports (with non-Arab countries
Indonesia, Venezuela, and Nigeria, the figure is 50 percent). Saudi
Arabia ranked number three and Iraq (#6), Algeria (#7) and Kuwait (#12)
were among the top 20 suppliers of petroleum products to the United
States in 2004. The Persian Gulf states alone supply 24 percent of U.S.
petroleum imports.24
The growing reliance on imported oil has also made the U.S. economy even
more vulnerable to price jumps, as occurred in 1979, 1981, 1982 and 1990
and 2000. Oil price increases have also allowed Arab oil-producers to
generate tremendous revenues at the expense of American consumers. These
profits have subsidized large weapons purchases and nonconventional
weapons programs such as Iraq's.
America's dependence on Arab oil has occasionally raised the specter of
a renewed attempt to blackmail the United States to abandon its support
for Israel. In April 2002, for example, Iraq suspended oil shipments for
a month to protest Israel's operation to root out terrorists in the West
Bank. No other Arab oil producers follow suit and the Iraqi action had
little impact on oil markets and no effect on policy.
The good news for Americans is that three of the top four suppliers of
U.S. oil today – Canada, Venezuela and Mexico – are more reliable and
better allies than the Persian Gulf nations.
MYTH
“The major American oil companies never take positions on the
Arab-Israeli conflict.”
FACT
Egypt's President Sadat persuaded the late Saudi King Faisal to threaten
to withhold oil from the West to exploit for political advantage the
growing dependence of the industrialized West on Arab oil. The tactic
was effective: Soon the major American oil companies backed the Arab
cause in public and privately worked to weaken U.S. support for
Israel.26
According to a 1974 report of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee
on Multinational Corporations, the ARAMCO consortium — Exxon, Mobil,
Texaco and SOCAL — attempted to block America's emergency airlift to
Israel during the 1973 war. The companies also cooperated closely with
Saudi Arabia to deny oil and fuel to the U.S. Navy.27
On other occasions, the major oil firms have advocated the positions of
the Arab countries, particularly Saudi Arabia. The major oil companies
vigorously lobbied Congress on behalf of the sale of F-15s in 1978 and
AWACS aircraft in 1981. Together with Saudi foreign agents, these
corporations enlisted many other American firms to lobby on the Saudis'
behalf.28 Saudi Arabia has a powerful lobby in the United States because
hundreds of America's largest corporations do billions of dollars worth
of business with the Kingdom. “And each of these corporations,” Hoag
Levins noted, “had hundreds of subcontractors and vendors equally
dependent on maintaining the good graces of Muslim leaders whose
countries now collectively represent the single richest market in the
world.”29
The Saudis often attack what they claim is the excessive influence of
Israel's supporters in the United States, but investigative journalist
Steve Emerson turned that claim upside down. After detailing many of the
ties between Saudi Arabia and U.S. businesses, universities, lobbyists
and former high-ranking government officials, he concluded:
The breadth and scope of the petrodollar impact is beyond any legal
remedy. With so many corporations, institutions, and individuals
thirsting after-and receiving-oil money, petrodollar influence is
ubiquitous in American society. The result is the appearance of
widespread, spontaneous support for the policies of Saudi Arabia and
other Arab oil producers by American institutions ranging from
universities to the Congress. The proliferation of vested ties has
allowed special interests to be confused with national interests.
Never before in American history has any foreign economic power been as
successful as Saudi Arabia in reaching and cultivating powerful
supporters all across the country. The Saudis have discovered that one
quintessential American weakness, the love of money, and the petrodollar
connection has become diffused throughout the United States.30
MYTH
“The United States and Israel have nothing in common.”
FACT
The U.S.-Israel relationship is based on the twin pillars of shared
values and mutual interests. Given this commonality of interests and
beliefs, it should not be surprising that support for Israel is one of
the most pronounced and consistent foreign policy values of the American
people.
Although Israel is geographically located in a region that is relatively
undeveloped and closer to the Third World than the West, Israel has
emerged in less than half a century as an advanced nation with the
characteristics of Western society. This is partially attributable to
the fact that a high percentage of the population came from Europe or
North America and brought with them Western political and cultural
norms. It is also a function of the common Judeo-Christian heritage.
Simultaneously, Israel is a multicultural society with people from more
than 100 nations. Today, nearly half of all Israelis are Eastern or
Oriental Jews who trace their origins to the ancient Jewish communities
of the Islamic countries of North Africa and the Middle East.
While they live in a region characterized by autocracies, Israelis have
a commitment to democracy no less passionate than that of Americans. All
citizens of Israel, regardless of race, religion or sex, are guaranteed
equality before the law and full democratic rights. Freedom of speech,
assembly and press is embodied in the country’s laws and traditions.
Israel’s independent judiciary vigorously upholds these rights.
The political system does differ from America’s — Israel’s is a
parliamentary democracy — but it is still based on free elections with
divergent parties. And though Israel does not have a formal
"constitution," it has adopted "Basic Laws" that establish similar legal
guarantees.
Americans have long viewed Israelis with admiration, at least partly
because they see much of themselves in their pioneering spirit and
struggle for independence. Like the United States, Israel is also a
nation of immigrants. Despite the burden of spending nearly one-fifth of
its budget on defense, it has had an extraordinary rate of economic
growth for most of its history. It has also succeeded in putting most of
the newcomers to work. As in America, immigrants to Israel have tried to
make better lives for themselves and their children. Some have come from
relatively undeveloped societies like Ethiopia or Yemen and arrived with
virtually no possessions, education or training and become productive
contributors to Israeli society.
Israelis also share Americans’ passion for education. Israelis are among
the most highly educated people in the world.
From the beginning, Israel had a mixed economy, combining capitalism
with socialism along the British model. The economic difficulties Israel
has experienced — created largely in the aftermath of the 1973 Yom
Kippur War by increased oil prices and the need to spend a
disproportionate share of its Gross National Product on defense — have
led to a gradual movement toward a free market system analogous to that
of the United States. America has been a partner in this evolution.
In the 1980’s, attention increasingly focused on one pillar of the
relationship — shared interests. This was done because of the threats to
the region and because the means for strategic cooperation are more
easily addressed with legislative initiatives. Despite the end of the
Cold War, Israel continues to have a role to play in joint efforts to
protect American interests, including close cooperation in the war on
terror. Strategic cooperation has progressed to the point where a de
facto alliance now exists. The hallmark of the relationship is
consistency and trust: The United States knows it can count on Israel.
It is more difficult to devise programs that capitalize on the two
nations’ shared values than their security interests; nevertheless, such
programs do exist. In fact, these Shared Value Initiatives (SVIs) cover
a broad range of areas such as the environment, energy, space,
education, occupational safety and health. Nearly 400 American
institutions in 47 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have
received funds from binational programs with Israel. Little-known
relationships like the Free Trade Agreement, the Cooperative Development
Research Program, the Middle East Regional Cooperation Program and
various memoranda of understanding with virtually every U.S.
governmental agency demonstrate the depth of the special relationship.
Even more important may be the broad ties between Israel and each of the
individual 50 states and the District of Columbia.
MYTH
“America's support of Israel is the reason that terrorists attacked the
World Trade Center and Pentagon on September 11.”
FACT
The heinous attacks against the United States were committed by Muslim
fanatics who had a variety of motivations for these and other terrorist
attacks. These Muslims have a perverted interpretation of Islam and
believe they must attack infidels, particularly Americans and Jews, who
do not share their beliefs. They oppose Western culture and democracy
and object to any U.S. presence in Muslim nations. They are particularly
angered by the existence of American military bases in Saudia Arabia and
other areas of the Persian Gulf. This would be true regardless of U.S.
policy toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Nevertheless, an added
excuse for their fanaticism is the fact that the United States is allied
with Israel. Previous attacks on American targets, such as the USS Cole
and U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, were perpetrated by suicide
bombers whose anger at the United States had little or nothing to do
with Israel.
“Osama bin Laden made his explosions and then started talking about the
Palestinians. He never talked about them before.”
— Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak31
Osama bin Laden claimed he was acting on behalf of the Palestinians, and
that his anger toward the United States was shaped by American support
for Israel. This was a new invention by bin Laden clearly intended to
attract support from the Arab public and justify his terrorist acts. The
fact is bin Laden's antipathy toward the United States has never been
related to the Arab-Israeli conflict. Though many Arabs were taken in by
bin Laden's transparent effort to drag Israel into his war, Dr. Abd
Al-Hamid Al-Ansari, dean of Shar'ia and Law at Qatar University was
critical, "In their hypocrisy, many of the [Arab] intellectuals linked
September 11 with the Palestinian problem — something that completely
contradicts seven years of Al-Qaida literature. Al-Qaida never linked
anything to Palestine."31a
Even Yasser Arafat told the Sunday Times of London that bin Laden should
stop hiding behind the Palestinian cause. Bin Laden "never helped us, he
was working in another completely different area and against our
interests," Arafat said.32b
Though Al-Qaida's agenda did not include the Palestinian cause, the
organization has begun to take a more active role in terror against
Israeli targets, starting with the November 28, 2002, suicide bombing at
an Israeli-owned hotel in Kenya that killed three Israelis and 11
Kenyans, and the attempt to shoot down an Israeli airliner with a
missile as it was taking off from Kenya that same day.32c
MYTH
“The hijacking of four airliners in one day, on September 11, was an
unprecedented act of terror.”
FACT
The scale of the massacre and destruction on September 11 was indeed
unprecedented, as was the use of civilian aircraft as bombs. The
coordinated hijackings, however, were not new.
On September 6, 1970, members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP) hijacked three jets (Swissair, TWA and Pan Am ) with
more than 400 passengers on flights to New York. A fourth plane, an El
Al flight, was also targeted, but Israeli security agents foiled the
hijacking in mid-air and killed one of the two terrorists when they
tried to storm the cockpit. On the 9th, a British BOAC jet was also
hijacked by the PFLP.32
The UN could not muster a condemnation of the hijackings. A Security
Council Resolution only went so far as to express grave concern, and did
not even bring the issue to a vote.
Instead of flying their planes into buildings, they landed them on
airfields (three in Jordan, one in Cairo). All four hijacked planes were
blown up on the ground – after the passengers were taken off the planes
— on September 12.
More than three dozen Americans were among the passengers who were then
held hostage in Jordan as the terrorists attempted to blackmail the
Western governments and Israel to swap the hostages for Palestinian
terrorists held in their jails. On Sept. 14, after releasing all but 55
hostages, the terrorists said all American hostages would be treated as
Israelis. A tense standoff ensued. Seven terrorists were ultimately set
free by Britain, Germany and Switzerland in exchange for the hostages.33
After the hijackings, shocked members of congress called for immediate
and forceful action by the United States and international community.
They insisted on quick adoption of measures aimed at preventing air
piracy, punishing the perpetrators and recognizing the responsibility of
nations that harbor them.34 Virtually nothing was done until 31 years
later.
The PFLP as an organization, and some of the individual participants
responsible for those hijackings still are alive and well, supported by
Syria, the Palestinian Authority and others. In fact, Leila Khaled, the
person who tried to hijack the El Al jet, was going to be admitted into
the territories to attend the Palestine National Council meetings in
1996, but she still refused to disavow terrorism. Today, she is said to
live in Amman.
“The largest single ‘cause’ of Islamic extremism and terrorism is not
Israel, nor U.S. policy in Iraq, but the very governments that now
purport to support the United States while counseling it to lean on
Ariel Sharon and lay off Saddam Hussein. Egypt is the leading example.
Its autocratic regime, established a half-century ago under the banner
of Arab nationalism and socialism, is politically exhausted and morally
bankrupt. Mr. Mubarak, who checked Islamic extremists in Egypt only by
torture and massacre, has no modern political program or vision of
progress to offer his people as an alternative to Osama bin Laden's
Muslim victimology. Those Egyptians who have tried to promote such a
program...are unjustly imprisoned. Instead, Mr. Mubarak props himself up
with $2 billion a year in U.S. aid, while allowing and even encouraging
state-controlled clerics and media to promote the anti-Western,
anti-modern and anti-Jewish propaganda of the Islamic extremists. The
policy serves his purpose by deflecting popular frustration with the
lack of political freedom or economic development in Egypt. It also
explains why so many of Osama bin Laden's recruits are Egyptian.”
— Washington Post35
MYTH
“Groups like Hizballah, Islamic Jihad, Hamas and the PFLP should be
excluded from the U.S. war on terrorism because they are freedom
fighters and not terrorists.”
FACT
When the United States declared a war on terrorists and the nations that
harbor them after September 11, Arab states and their sympathizers
argued that many of the organizations that engage in violent actions
against Americans and Israelis should not be targets of the new American
war because they are "freedom fighters" rather than terrorists. This has
been the mantra of the terrorists themselves, who claim that their
actions are legitimate forms of resistance to Israeli occupation.
“You can't say there are good terrorists and there are bad terrorists.”
— U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice36
This argument is deeply flawed. First, the enemies of Israel rationalize
any attacks as legitimate because of real and imagined sins committed by
Jews since the beginning of the 20th century. Consequently, the Arab
bloc and its supporters at the United Nations have succeeded in blocking
any condemnation of any terrorist attacks against Israel. Instead, they
routinely sponsor resolutions criticizing Israel when it retaliates.
Second, nowhere else in the world is the murder of innocent men, women
and children considered a "legitimate form of resistance." The long list
of heinous crimes includes snipers shooting infants, suicide bombers
blowing up pizzerias and discos, hijackers taking and killing hostages,
and infiltrators murdering Olympic athletes. Hizballah, Islamic Jihad,
Hamas, the PFLP, and a number of other groups, mostly Palestinian, have
engaged in these activities for decades and rarely been condemned or
brought to justice. All of them qualify as terrorist groups according to
the U.S. government's own definition — "Terrorism is the unlawful use of
force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a
government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in
furtherance of political or social objectives"37 — and therefore should
be targets of U.S. efforts to cut off their funding, to root out their
leaders and to bring them to justice.
In the case of the Palestinian groups, there is no mystery as to who the
leaders are, where their funding comes from and which nations harbor
them. American charitable organizations have been linked to funding some
of these groups and Saudia Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran and the
Palestinian Authority all shelter and/or financially and logistically
support them.
“...there are responsibilities that come with being the representative
of the Palestinian people. And that means to make certain that you do
everything that you can to lower the level of violence, everything that
you can to root out terrorists and arrest them, to make sure that the
security situation in the Palestinian territories — Area A, for instance
— isone from which terror cannot spring....These are responsibilities we
have asked Chairman Arafat to take, and to take seriously. We still
don't think that there has been enough in this regard....You cannot help
us with al-Qaida and hug Hizbullah. That's not acceptable. Or Hamas.”
— U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice38
MYTH
“Israel's Mossad carried out the bombing of the World Trade Center to
provoke American hatred of Arabs.”
FACT
Syrian Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass told a delegation from Great
Britain that Israel was responsible for the September 11, 2001, attacks
on the United States. He claimed the Mossad had warned thousands of
Jewish employees not to go to work that day at the World Trade Center.
He was the highest-ranking Arab public official to publicly voice a view
that was reportedly widespread in the Arab world that the attacks were
part of a Jewish conspiracy to provoke U.S. retaliation against the Arab
world and to turn American public opinion against Muslims. One poll
published in the Lebanese newspaper An Nahar, for example, found that 31
percent of the respondents believed Israel was responsible for the
hijackings while only 27 percent blamed Osama bin Laden.A Newsweek poll
found that a plurality of Egyptians believed the Jews were responsible
for the Trade Center bombings.39
The conspiracy theory is also being circulated by American Muslim
leaders. Imam Mohammed Asi of the Islamic Center of Washington said
Israeli officials decided to launch the attack after the United States
refused their request to put down the Palestinian intifada. "If we're
not going to be secure, neither are you," was the Israelis' thinking
following the U.S. response, according to Asi.40
No U.S. authority has suggested, nor has any evidence been produced, to
suggest any Israeli or Jew had any role in the terrorist attacks. These
conspiracy theories are complete nonsense and reflect the degree to
which many people in the Arab world are prepared to accept anti-Semitic
fabrications and the mythology of Jewish power. They may also reflect a
refusal to believe that Muslims could be responsible for the atrocities
and the hope that they could be blamed on the Jews.
MYTH
“Mohammad Atta, the terrorist that flew into the World Trade Center,
blew up a bus in Israel in 1986. At that time Israel arrested, tried,
convicted, and jailed Atta, but was persuaded by the United States to
release him as part of the Oslo peace accord.”
FACT
The Internet is a wonderful innovation, but one of its problematic
characteristics is that it allows false rumors to be quickly spread
around the world. The story that Atta, reputedly one of the masterminds
behind the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on the U.S., had been
released from an Israeli jail in response to American pressure and then
rewarded the U.S. by flying a plane into the World Trade Center is one
of these erroneous rumors that took on a life of its own. It is not
clear where it originated and the response was slow in coming, but we
now know the story apparently stems from confusion over someone with a
similar name.
In 1990, the United States extradited a Palestinian named Mahmoud Abed
Atta to stand trial for an April 1986 machine-gun attack on an Israeli
bus in Samaria that killed the driver. Abed Atta was linked with the Abu
Nidal terrorist group and fled to Venezuela after the murder, but he was
deported to the United States. He also held US citizenship and fought a
three-year court battle to avoid extradition. He lost and was deported
to Israel on November 2, 1990. Abed Atta was eventually freed after the
Supreme Court ruled there were faults in the extradition process. His
whereabouts today are unknown.
The terrorist suspected of the September 11 attack, Muhammad Atta, was
an Egyptian and no relation to Abed Atta.41
MYTH
“American universities should divest from companies that do business in
Israel to force an end to Israeli 'occupation' and human rights abuses.”
FACT
The word "peace" does not appear in divestment petitions, which makes
clear the intent is not to resolve the conflict but to delegitimize
Israel. Petitioners blame Israel for the lack of peace and demand that
it make unilateral concessions without requiring anything of the
Palestinians, not even the cessation of terrorism. Divestment advocates
also ignore Israel's efforts during the Oslo peace process, and at the
summit meetings with President Clinton, to reach historic compromises
with the Palestinians that would have created a Palestinian state.
The divestment campaign against South Africa was specifically directed
at companies that were using that country's racist laws to their
advantage. In Israel no such racist laws exist; moreover, companies
doing business there adhere to the same standards of equal working
rights that are applied in the United States.
Harvard University President Lawrence Summers observed that the
divestment efforts are anti-Semitic. "Profoundly anti-Israel views are
increasingly finding support in progressive intellectual communities,"
said Summers. "Serious and thoughtful people are advocating and taking
actions that are anti-Semitic in their effect, if not their intent."42
Peace in the Middle East will come only from direct negotiations between
the parties, and only after the Arab states recognize Israel's right to
exist, and the Palestinians and other Arabs cease their support of
terror. American universities cannot help through misguided divestment
campaigns that unfairly single out Israel as the source of conflict in
the region. Divestment proponents hope to tar Israel with an association
with apartheid South Africa, an offensive comparison that ignores the
fact that all Israeli citizens are equal under the law.
MYTH
“Advocates for Israel try to silence critics by labeling them
anti-Semitic.”
FACT
Criticizing Israel does not necessarily make someone anti-Semitic. The
determining factor is the intent of the commentator. Legitimate critics
accept Israel's right to exist, whereas anti-Semites do not.
Anti-Semites use double standards when they criticize Israel, for
example, denying Israelis the right to pursue their legitimate claims
while encouraging the Palestinians to do so. Anti-Semites deny Israel
the right to defend itself, and ignore Jewish victims, while blaming
Israel for pursuing their murderers. Anti-Semites rarely, if ever, make
positive statements about Israel. Anti-Semites describe Israelis using
pejorative terms and hate-speech, suggesting, for example, that they are
“racists” or “Nazis.”
Natan Sharansky has suggested a “3-D” test for differentiating
legitimate criticism of Israel from anti-Semitism. The first “D” is the
test of whether Israel or its leaders are being demonized or their
actions blown out of proportion. Equating Israel with Nazi Germany is
one example of demonization. The second “D” is the test of double
standards. An example is when Israel is singled out for condemnation at
the United Nations for perceived human rights abuses while nations that
violate human rights on a massive scale, such as Iran, Syria, and Saudi
Arabia, are not even mentioned. The third “D” is the test of
delegitimization. Questioning Israel's legitimacy, that is, its right to
exist is always anti-Semitic.43
No campaign exists to prevent people from expressing negative opinions
about Israeli policy. In fact, the most vociferous critics of Israel are
Israelis themselves who use their freedom of speech to express their
concerns every day. A glance at any Israeli newspaper will reveal a
surfeit of articles questioning particular government policies.
Anti-Semites, however, do not share Israelis' interest in improving the
society; their goal is to delegitimize the state in the short-run, and
destroy it in the long-run. There is nothing Israel could do to satisfy
these critics.
MYTH
“Arab-Americans are a powerful voting bloc that U.S. presidential
candidates must pander to for votes.”
FACT
Arab-Americans represent a tiny fraction (less than one-half of one
percent) of the U.S. population. Unlike American Jews, who are
overwhelmingly supportive of Israel, Arab-Americans are not a monolithic
group. There are approximately 1.2 million Arabs in the United States,
and they tend to reflect the general discord of the Arab world, which
has twenty-one states with competing interests.
While the Palestinian cause receives most of the media's attention,
because of the salience of the Arab-Israeli conflict and the
omnipresence of a handful of activists and vocal Palestinian
spokespersons, the reality is that only about 70,000 Palestinians (6
percent of all Arab-Americans) live in the United States. Roughly 38
percent of Arab-Americans are Lebanese, primarily Christians. In fact,
while attention has focused on the allegedly growing political strength
of Muslims in the United States, fewer than one-fourth of all
Arab-Americans are Muslims.44 Christian Arabs, especially those from
Lebanon, do not typically support the Palestinians' anti-Israel agenda,
largely because of their history of mistreatment by Palestinians and
Muslims.
Consequently, Arab-American voters do not pursue a positive agenda of
strengthening U.S.-Arab ties; instead, they focus on weakening
U.S.-Israel relations. Presidential candidates, however, and most
Americans, historically view Israel as an ally that supports American
interests, and are unwilling to support a reversal of this longstanding
policy.
The divisions were apparent in 2000 when George W. Bush was viewed with
suspicion by most Jewish voters and considered likely to be more
sympathetic to the Arab cause by Arab-Americans. In that election, 45
percent of Arab-Americans nationwide voted for George Bush, 38 percent
for Al Gore, and 13 percent for Ralph Nader (who, incidentally, is of
Lebanese descent).45
Even if Arab-Americans vote as a bloc, their influence is marginal, and
restricted to a handful of states. About half of the Arab population is
concentrated in five states — California, Florida, Michigan, New Jersey,
and New York — that are all key to the electoral college. Still, the
Arab population is dwarfed by that of the Jews in every one of these
states except Michigan.
MYTH
“The United States must be ‘engaged’ to advance the peace process.”
FACT
The European Union, Russia, and the UN all have pursued largely
one-sided policies in the Middle East detrimental to Israel, which has
disqualified them as honest brokers. The United States is the only
country that has the trust of both the Israelis and the Arabs and is
therefore the only third party that can play a constructive role in the
peace process. This has led many people to call for greater involvement
by the Bush Administration in negotiations. While the United States can
play a valuable role as a mediator; however, history shows that American
peace initiatives have never succeeded, and that it is the parties
themselves who must resolve their differences.
The Eisenhower Administration tried to ease tensions by proposing the
joint Arab-Israeli use of the Jordan River. The plan would have helped
the Arab refugees by producing more irrigated land and would have
reduced Israel’s need for more water resources. Israel cautiously
accepted the plan, the Arab League rejected it.
President Johnson outlined five principles for peace. “The first and
greatest principle,” Johnson said, “is that every nation in the area has
a fundamental right to live and to have this right respected by its
neighbors.” The Arab response came a few weeks later: “no peace with
Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with it....”
President Nixon’s Secretary of State, William Rogers, offered a plan
that sought to “balance” U.S. policy, but leaned on the Israelis to
withdraw to the pre-1967 borders, to accept many Palestinian refugees,
and to allow Jordan a role in Jerusalem. The plan was totally
unacceptable to Israel and, even though it tilted toward the Arab
position, was rejected by the Arabs as well.
President Ford’s Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, had a little more
success in his shuttle diplomacy, arranging the disengagement of forces
after the 1973 war, but he never put forward a peace plan, and failed to
move the parties beyond the cessation of hostilities to the
formalization of peace.
Jimmy Carter was the model for presidential engagement in the conflict.
He wanted an international conference at Geneva to produce a
comprehensive peace. While Carter spun his wheels trying to organize a
conference, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat decided to bypass the
Americans and go directly to the Israeli people and address the Knesset.
Despite revisionist history by Carter’s former advisers, the
Israeli-Egyptian peace agreement was negotiated largely despite Carter.
Menachem Begin and Sadat had carried on secret contacts long before Camp
David and had reached the basis for an agreement before Carter’s
intervention. Carter’s mediation helped seal the treaty, but Sadat’s
decision to go to Jerusalem was stimulated largely by his conviction
that Carter’s policies were misguided.
In 1982, President Reagan announced a surprise peace initiative that
called for allowing the Palestinians self-rule in the territories in
association with Jordan. The plan rejected both Israeli annexation and
the creation of a Palestinian state. Israel denounced the plan as
endangering Israeli security. The plan had been formulated largely to
pacify the Arab states, which had been angered by the expulsion of the
PLO from Beirut, but they also rejected the Reagan Plan.
George Bush’s Administration succeeded in convening a historic regional
conference in Madrid in 1991, but it ended without any agreements and
the multilateral tracks that were supposed to resolve some of the more
contentious issues rarely met and failed to resolve anything.
President Clinton barely had time to get his vision of peace together
when he discovered the Israelis had secretly negotiated an agreement
with the Palestinians in Oslo. The United States had nothing to do with
the breakthrough at Oslo and very little influence on the immediate
aftermath. In fact, the peace process became increasingly muddled as the
United States got more involved.
Peace with Jordan also required no real American involvement. The
Israelis and Jordanians already were agreed on the main terms of peace,
and the main obstacle had been King Hussein’s unwillingness to sign a
treaty before Israel had reached an agreement with the Palestinians.
After Oslo, he felt safe to move forward and no American plan was
needed.
In a last ditch effort to save his presidential legacy, Clinton put
forward a peace plan to establish a Palestinian state. Again, it was
Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s willingness to offer dramatic concessions
that raised the prospects for an agreement rather than the President’s
initiative. Even after Clinton was prepared to give the Palestinians a
state in virtually all the West Bank and Gaza, and to make east
Jerusalem their capital, the Palestinians rejected the deal.
President George W. Bush also offered a plan, but it was undercut by
Yasser Arafat, who obstructed the required reforms of the Palestinian
Authority, and refused to dismantle the terrorist infrastructure and
stop the violence. Bush’s plan morphed into the road map, which has
failed for the same reason.
The peace process only began to move again when Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon made his disengagement proposal, a unilateral approach the State
Department has long opposed.
The death of Arafat and the planned elections in the Palestinian
Authority present new opportunities to advance the peace process. Israel
is moving toward a possible coalition government that may allow for
historic compromises with a visionary Palestinian leader. In addition,
Egypt has been suddenly helping to build support in the Arab world for a
settlement.
History has shown that Middle East peace is not made in America. Only
the parties can decide to end the conflict, and the terms that will be
acceptable. No American plan has ever succeeded, and it is unlikely any
will ever bring peace. The end to the Arab-Israeli conflict will not be
achieved through American initiatives or intense involvement; it will be
possible only when Arab leaders have the courage to follow the examples
of Sadat and Hussein and resolve to live in peace with Israel.
Notes
1Foreign Relations of the United States 1947, (DC: GPO, 1948), pp.
1173-4, 1198-9, 1248, 1284. [Henceforth FRUS 1947.]
2Mitchell Bard, The Water's Edge And Beyond, (NJ: Transaction
Publishers, 1991), p. 132.
3FRUS 1947, p. 1313.
4Harry Truman, Years of Trial and Hope, Vol. 2, (NY: Doubleday, 1956),
p. 156.
5John Snetsinger, Truman, The Jewish Vote and the Creation of Israel,
(CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1974), pp. 9-10; David Schoenbaum, "The
United States and the Birth of Israel," Wiener Library Bulletin, (1978),
p. 144n.
6Peter Grose, Israel in the Mind of America, (NY: Alfred A. Knopf,
1983), p. 217; Michael Cohen, "Truman, The Holocaust and the
Establishment of the State of Israel," Jerusalem Quarterly, (Spring
1982), p. 85.
7Memorandum of conversation regarding Harriman-Eshkol talks, (February
25, 1965); Memorandum of conversation between Ambassador Avraham Harman
and W. Averill Harriman, Ambassador-at-Large, (March 15, 1965), LBJ
Library; Yitzhak Rabin, The Rabin Memoirs, (MA: Little Brown and
Company, 1979), pp. 65-66..
8Robert Trice, "Domestic Political Interests and American Policy in the
Middle East: Pro-Israel, Pro-Arab and Corporate Non-Governmental Actors
and the Making of American Foreign Policy, 1966-1971," (Unpublished
Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1974), pp. 226-230.
9Memorandum of conversation between Yitzhak Rabin et al., and Paul
Warnke et al., (November 4, 1968), LBJ Library.
9aJerusalem Post, (June 27, 2002).
10Israeli Ministry of Defense.
11Dore Gold, America, the Gulf, and Israel, (CO: Westview Press, 1988),
p. 84.
12Yitzhak Rabin, address to conference on "Strategy and Defense in the
Eastern Mediterranean," sponsored by the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy and Israel Military Correspondents Association, Jerusalem,
(July 9-11, 1986).
13Ronald Reagan, "Recognizing the Israeli Asset," Washington Post,
(August 15, 1979).
14New York Times, (August 9, 1987).
15Wolf Blitzer, Territory of Lies, (NY: Harper & Row, 1989), p. 201.
16New York Times, (December 2 and 21, 1985).
17Blitzer, pp. 166-171.
17aBlitzer, pp. 219-220.
17bBlitzer, p. 224.
18Alan Dershowitz, Chutzpah, (MA: Little Brown, & Co., 1991), pp.
289-312.
19Washington Post, (December 23, 2000).
19aWashington Post, (November 14, 2003).
19bMatthew E. Berger, “After court denies his appeal, Pollard left with
few legal options,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (July 24, 2005).
19cDan Izenberg, “HCJ rules Pollard not prisoner of Zion,” Jerusalem
Post, (January 16, 2006).
20Much of this information was verified by the disclosure of tapes of
conversations involving key figures in the scandal, "Nightline,"
(October 2, 1991).
21Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran-Contra
Affair, (DC: GPO, 1987), pp. 164-76.
22New York Times, (February 4, 1987).
23The Tower Commission Report, (NY: Bantam Books and Time Books, 1987),
p. 84.
24 Energy Information Administration; Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
25Al-Musawwar, (January 19, 1990).
26See Steven Emerson, “The ARAMCO Connection,” The New Republic, (May
19, 1982), pp. 11-16; Russell Howe and Sarah Trott, The Power Peddlers,
(NY: Doubleday, 1977), pp. 342-343; Anti-Defamation League, The
U.S.-Saudi Relationship, (NY: ADL, 1980), p. 6.
27Steven Emerson, The American House of Saud, (NY: Franklin Watts,
1985), pp. 36-37; Steven Spiegel, The Other Arab-Israeli Conflict:
Making America's Middle East Policy from Truman to Reagan, (IL:
University of Chicago Press, 1985), pp. 258-59; Anthony Sampson, The
Seven Sisters, (NY: Viking Press, 1975), pp. 248-50; Hoag Levins, Arab
Reach: The Secret War Against Israel, (NY: Doubleday, 1983), p. 51.
28Steven Emerson, “The Petrodollar Connection,” The New Republic,
(February 17, 1982), pp. 18-25; also Emerson, (85), pp. 177-213.
29Levins, p. 19.
30Emerson (85), p. 413.
31Newsweek, (October 29, 2001).
31aAl-Raya (Qatar), (January 6, 2002).
32Henry Kissinger, The White House Years. (MA: Little Brown & Co.,
1979), pp. 600-617.
32bWashington Post, (December 16, 2002).
32cCNN, (December 3, 2002).
33Guardian Unlimited, (January 1, 2001).
34Near East Report, (September 16, 1970).
35Washington Post editorial, (October 11, 2001).
36Jerusalem Post, (October 17, 2001).
37Washington Post, (September 13, 2001).
38Jerusalem Post, (November 9, 2001).
39Jerusalem Post, (October 19, 2001); Newsweek poll quoted in
"Protocols," The New Republic Online, (October 30, 2001).
40Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (November 2, 2001).
41Jerusalem Post, (November 8, 2001).
42Address at morning prayers, Memorial Church, Cambridge, Massachusetts,
(September 17, 2002), Office of the President, Harvard University.
43Natan Sharansky, “Antisemitism in 3-D”, Forward, (January 21, 2005),
p. 9.
44Alex Ionides, "Getting Their House Together," Egypt Today, (November
2003).
45“Poll: Bush losing Arab-American support,” Zogby International, (March
13, 2004).
46U.S. Census Bureau (2000).
From:
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/myths/mf21.html
|
|