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U.S. Security Assistance Fuels Israel's Aggressive Stance

By Joseph Yackley and Stephen Zunes

Foreign Policy in Focus

WASHINGTON, Apr 29, 2002 -- The violence of the past year and a half
between Israelis and Palestinians has left more than 2,000 people dead,
torpedoed the peace process, and turned the streets of the West Bank and
Gaza Strip into battlefields. As the U.S. reconsiders its role in
promoting Israeli-Palestinian peace, the prospects for a final
settlement that recognizes the security needs of Israel and the
legitimate political rights of Palestinians seem worse than ever. The
Bush administration has abandoned the ambitious approach of its
predecessor by emphasizing "assistance" over "insistence."
Unfortunately, rather than focusing on the issues that have derailed the
peace process, American assistance is emerging as a disjointed policy
that urges a peaceful resolution to the conflict while boosting military
aid to Israel. This military aid has been used in the widespread
killings of civilians, destroyed large sections of the infrastructure in
Palestinian society, and hardened Arab attitudes toward Israel. 
The increases in military aid grow out of a central pillar of U.S.
policy in the Middle East: strengthening America's "strategic
cooperation" with Israel. This cooperation currently centers on two
categories of U.S. military-related assistance to Israel, Economic
Support Funds (ESF) and Foreign Military Financing (FMF). The larger of
these two, FMF, is intended to help Israel finance its acquisition of
U.S. military equipment, services, and training. FMF is scheduled to
increase by $60 million each year, for a total of $2.04 billion in
FY2002, as part of an ongoing plan to phase out ESF support by 2008.
Previous discussions about Israel's security needs following peace
agreements with Syria and the Palestinians and a withdrawal from the
Golan Heights, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip foresee an additional
$35 billion of U.S. military assistance, raising the potential total to
more than $7 billion per year over the next seven years. This is roughly
the same amount currently spent by all of the former Soviet republics
combined. Such an enormous increase is based on the confusing assumption
that peace agreements with once-hostile neighbors somehow make Israel
less secure and require a greatly expanded Israeli military. 

Already the strongest military power in the region and the largest
recipient of U.S. foreign aid, Israel does not need additional military
assistance. It has one of the most sophisticated, well-equipped, and
best-trained armies in the world, and its armed forces are growing
faster than those of its neighbors, whose military expenditures
decreased during the 1990s. Israel's annual military expenditures are
consistently two to three times as high as those of other countries
involved in previous Arab-Israeli wars combined, and Israel leads the
region in the number of heavy weapons holdings, armored infantry
vehicles, airplanes, and heavy tanks. Israel outpaces Syria, Iraq, Iran,
and Lebanon in every major category of arms spending. 

A careful review of FMF assistance reveals that this program has
actually hindered the resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict, made the
Middle East more volatile, and undermined U.S. regional interests. If
the purpose of the FMF program is to improve Israel's security, the U.S.
should reverse its increasing emphasis on military assistance and
replace outdated, one-dimensional ideas about Israel's security with a
more extensive definition. Taking into account important nonmilitary
aspects of Israel's security would enable the U.S. to complement its
current policy with a variety of alternative strategies designed to
identify and address the causes of conflict and create conditions for a
sustainable peace. 

The primary short-term threat to Israeli security stems from suicide
bombers based in Israeli-occupied territories in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip. This can best be addressed by improved surveillance and
interdiction and, more fundamentally, by ending Israel's occupation,
which has brought enormous human suffering while creating extremists
willing to wreak carnage on Israeli civilians. Little of the U.S.
security assistance helps protect Israelis from such attacks and, by
providing the military hardware for an increasingly repressive
occupation, results in the backlash that has manifested itself in the
rise of extremist groups committed to terrorism. 

The longer-term threat to Israel comes from sophisticated weaponry
procured by Arab monarchies in the Persian Gulf region, which are the
only military systems that come close to challenging Israeli military
superiority. Most of these weapons also come from the United States,
however, so this threat can best be neutralized not by providing more
arms to this overly militarized region, but through arms control.
Indeed, Israel announced its support for a moratorium on arms exports to
the Middle East in 1991, but the U.S. rejected it, raising serious
questions as to whether the U.S. really has Israel's best interests in
mind. 

Problems with Current U.S. Policy 

Key Problems 

1. By ignoring the security ramifications of its Foreign Military
Financing program, Washington is undermining both regional security and
the overall personal security of most Israelis. 
2. U.S. military assistance to Israel fails to address the causes of
conflict and subverts the peace process by both enabling and rewarding
Israeli defiance of international law. 
3. With the FMF program, the United States is spending an enormous
amount of diplomatic, political, and strategic capital on a policy that
is bearing the opposite of its intended effects. 
The violence that erupted in September 2000 highlighted some important
points about Israel's security. First, the most serious challenge for
Israel has not been protecting its existence from hostile neighbors but
rather pursuing an increasingly repressive military occupation that has
created international diplomatic isolation as well as terrorist attacks.
Second, while armed attacks against Israeli occupation forces and
settlers in the occupied territories, suicide bombing attacks against
civilians inside Israel, and widespread condemnation by Arab governments
have heightened Israeli citizens' sense of vulnerability, Israel's
neighbors have not seriously threatened Israeli territory. Finally,
Israel's clear military advantage has not made Israelis feel secure on a
personal, individual level. 
This paradox of personal insecurity in the face of overpowering military
strength stems from an important distinction within Israeli security
that Washington's FMF assistance program to Israel does not address.
Israeli security has two levels-the macro, or national, level and the
micro, or personal, level. The state of Israel is extremely secure in
this first sense. Since its declaration of statehood and overwhelming
military victory in 1948, Israel has not been attacked militarily within
its internationally recognized borders. Peace agreements with Egypt-by
far its most powerful adversary-in 1978 and with Jordan-with which it
shares its longest border-in 1994 have inordinately improved its
security. Military spending by Syria has declined dramatically, Lebanese
armed forces have never been much of a threat and Iraq's military has
been decimated as a result of the Gulf War and the subsequent sanctions
regime. In addition, cooperation with regional powers, such as Turkey,
and decades of U.S. military assistance have combined to create a secure
Israel. 
At the same time, Israeli citizens continue to be the target of
terrorist attacks and violent uprisings. Billions of dollars in U.S.
military assistance to Israel are spent each year addressing the wrong
type of security. What's worse, FMF assistance has undermined personal
security in Israel by diluting the incentives for seeking peace and by
emboldening Israel to avoid making the concessions necessary for peace.
This personal security will elude Israelis until the underlying causes
of the conflict and the current uprising are addressed. 
The current violence grows out of Palestinian frustrations with the
peace process. During years of waiting for promised benefits,
Palestinians have seen their standard of living steadily decline. In the
seven years between the signing of the Oslo Accords and the start of the
uprising in September 2000, Israeli policies-including border controls,
retention of Palestinian funds, and restrictions on trade, investment,
and access to water resources-resulted in growing trade and budget
deficits for the Palestinians. Unemployment was hovering at 50%, poverty
rates increased, health standards deteriorated, and any sense of
opportunity among Palestinian youth began to fade. The anger and despair
that ignited the 2000 uprising and the current wave of suicide bombings
stems from these policies and their effect on daily Palestinian life.
The Spring 2002 re-occupation of Palestinian cities and widespread
killings by Israeli forces using American armaments, detention and
maltreatment of unarmed civilians, and the wanton destruction of
economic and social infrastructure have only increased the Palestinian
desire for revenge. This has also strengthened popular support for
extremist groups like Hamas and Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigade, resulting in
less security for Israelis. 
For years, most Palestinians have viewed a negotiated peace as the
clearest route to achieving their aspirations for an independent state.
While they waited for the peace process to produce this result, the
Israeli government dramatically expanded its illegal settlements,
Jewish-only highways, and related infrastructure in order to establish
permanent control over large areas of Palestinian territory. These
policies were pursued in large part to make a contiguous viable
Palestinian state on the West Bank impossible and were in direct
violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention and a series United Nations
Security Council resolutions. This was possible because of the
large-scale financial, military, and diplomatic support for Israel by
the United States. As a result, many Palestinians now question the
wisdom of pursuing a peace framed and sponsored by the United States.
Many Palestinians see negotiation as empty promises and have begun
seeking other means-some violent-of obtaining a homeland. As a result, a
sense of insecurity grows within the Israeli population, fostered by the
very policies that the U.S. and Israel pursue in the name of promoting
Israeli security. 
In addition to weakening U.S. credibility as a neutral mediator, massive
increases in military assistance to Israel undermine U.S. attempts to
limit the spread of weapons of mass destruction in the region. When
Jordan downsized its military and proposed linking further military
cutbacks in the region to debt reduction in the early 90s, for example,
the U.S. resisted the suggestion and continued shipping arms to Israel
at record levels. Following the 1994 peace deal between Jordan and
Israel, other Arab states cited Jordan's relative military weakness as
the major reason for its inability to extract more concessions from
Israel. The lesson was clear: The American-Israeli military relationship
makes unilateral disarmament in the Middle East fruitless, even
counterproductive. 
Even as Washington cites Iraq's potential possession of weapons of mass
destruction and its failure to adhere to UN resolutions to justify its
severe economic sanctions on the Iraqi population and its threats to
invade the country, it continues to increase military aid to Israel, a
nuclear power that remains in violation of scores of UN resolutions. In
fact, states like Iran, Iraq, and Syria view their own efforts to
develop and acquire chemical and biological weapons as a counterbalance
to Israeli weapons acquisitions. 

Toward a New Foreign Policy 

Key Recommendations: 

1. Rather than spending billions of dollars preparing Israel for
conflict, the U.S. should focus on addressing the causes of conflict. 
2. To restore confidence in negotiated peace, Washington must suspend
military assistance to Israel as long as the Israeli government
continues to engage in violations of international human rights
standards and international law. 
3. The U.S. must emphasize regional security and work for regional arms
control. 
The U.S. must recognize that Israeli security and Palestinian rights are
not mutually exclusive, but mutually dependent. Just as the Palestinians
will not be granted their rights until Israel's legitimate security
needs are recognized, Israel will not be secure until the Palestinians
are granted their legitimate rights. The U.S. should maintain its moral
and strategic commitment to Israel to ensure its survival and its
legitimate strategic interests in defending its internationally
recognized borders. At the same time, however, the U.S. must also be
willing to apply pressure whenever the Israeli government refuses to
make the necessary compromises for peace, which requires withdrawal from
the occupied territories, removing colonists from the illegal
settlements, sharing Jerusalem, and pursuing a just resolution for
Palestinian refugees. This would require an immediate suspension of all
military assistance to Israel as long as the Israeli government
continues to engage in violations of international human rights
standards and international law. 
Such a position not only would be morally right and would be in Israel's
own security interest, but it would also end the Bush administration's
ongoing violation of the Foreign Assistance Act, which forbids security
assistance to any government that "engages in a consistent pattern of
gross violations of internationally recognized human rights" without a
waiver [22 U.S.C. Secs. 2034, 2151n]. 
Suspension of military aid to Israel must be part of a comprehensive
effort at regional arms control, including a suspension of U.S. military
aid to other Middle Eastern governments, virtually all of which engage
in a pattern of gross and systematic human rights violations. 
Despite the threat and reality of suicide bombings, Israelis are
relatively secure within their country's internationally recognized
borders compared to the soldiers and settlers in occupied Palestinian
territories seized by Israel in the 1967 War. Settlements and roads in
these areas-reserved for Jews only-not only create an apartheid-like
situation, but also make it extremely difficult for Israeli forces to
defend against a hostile population angry that foreign occupiers have
confiscated what is often its best land. Israel would be far more secure
defending a clearly defined and internationally recognized border than
this network of illegal outposts within Palestinian territory. Israel's
official borders run for about 500 miles, whereas the demarcation lines
between Israeli and Palestinian controlled areas prior to the most
recent fighting were closer to 2,000 miles. 
It is not surprising, then, that far more Israelis have died in the
occupied territories than within Israel itself. Similarly, Israel
utilizes far more of its soldiers outside the country maintaining its
occupation against the Palestinians than it does defending the country's
borders or maintaining internal security. As reiterated in the recent
Arab summit in Beirut, an Israeli withdrawal to within its
internationally recognized borders would result in the security
guarantees and fully normalized relations with Arab states Israel has
long sought. This would put both Israel and its neighbors into
compliance with UN Security Council resolutions 242 and 338, long
considered to be the basis for Arab-Israeli peace. While this would not
satisfy some Islamic extremists, an end to the occupation would
dramatically reduce their following and simultaneously increase the
ability and willingness of the Palestinian leadership to crack down on
potential terrorists. 
A more comprehensive definition of Israel's security would create
greater flexibility in the FMF assistance program, allowing the U.S. to
address the personal insecurity of Israelis. Earmarking the ongoing $60
million annual increase for desalination and waste water recycling
projects would reduce Israel's reliance on Palestinian water resources,
remove an incentive for maintaining the illegal occupation, and improve
Palestinian economic prospects. Other options for applying the
assistance include financing joint projects on a regional energy grid or
natural gas pipelines, coordinating ecological management strategies,
promoting international trade and tourism, and advancing efforts to
develop cooperative economic zones along national borders. Tying the
region together economically creates collective incentives to promote
peace while highlighting the rewards of international cooperation to
Arabs and Israelis alike. In this way, U.S. security assistance could
bolster Israeli security without increasing military transfers or
threatening Israel's neighbors. Such a broader vision of security is
necessary if the U.S. is truly interested in promoting peace and
stability for Israel and the Middle East. 
-- Joseph Yackley is a recent graduate from the University of Chicago,
with master's degrees in Middle Eastern Studies and Public Policy
Studies and currently serves as a Robert Bosch Foundation Fellow with a
focus on economic development issues in the Middle East. 

-- Stephen Zunes is Middle East editor for the Foreign Policy in Focus
Project and serves as an associate professor of Politics and chair of
the Peace & Justice Studies Program at the University of San Francisco. 

C Foreign Policy in Focus, 2002. All rights reserved. Distributed in
partnership with Globalvision News Network (www.gvnews.net). 

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