Truth be told, treaties between American and Israel are not always worth the
paper they are printed on. America has screwed Israel on more than one
occasion which should have been covered by treaty. America was supposed to
give Israel intelligence reports about Saddam's weapons buildup and America
kept the information hidden. It took an Israeli spy to fulfill the treaty
and let Israel know that Saddam was stocking up on gas so that when the gulf
war hit, Israel had gas masks for everyone.

The spy in question has gotten the longest and harshest sentence of ANY spy
in history, even after a plea bargain and other deals (all of which were
ignored after they were accepted). Enemy spies are let out faster than this
guy and don't think that American spies caught by Israel mean anything.
They're shipped back here instantly. America doesn't like getting caught
lying on their sworn word.

Bottom line is that when it comes time to fulfill a treaty, expect America
to decide what its going to do at that point, not what it is required to do.
If Israel is attacked (as it has been again and again), America will not be
there immediatly to back them up. And if there's a nuclear exchange, don't
expect American nukes to be flying anywhere soon.

It is ours. Since the late 50's there have been several treaties and other
> agreements that states that if there's a nuclear attack on Israel, the US
> will nuke the perpetrator, on the same basis as if Israel was a member of
> NATO. So yes it would be our business.
>


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