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August 3, 2000
Israel & America: Bound at the Hip
That the United States identified itself almost completely with Israel's
position at the recent Camp David talks should not have come as a surprise.
Israel today is an integral part of American global strategy. The Palestinians,
on the other hand, are of importance only in so far as a number of Arab states
continue to take an interest in their plight. Should the Caspian Sea replace
the Persian Gulf as primary energy source for the United States � as our elites
want � then the views of the Palestinians' Arab patrons will count for almost
nothing.

Since the end of the Cold War, the United States has sought to maintain its
hegemony over Europe by arguing that NATO is all that separates the continent
from chaos. In the Middle East, the argument was a little different. There the
United States claimed that an American presence was necessary to counter the so-
called "rogue states" � now known as "states of concern" � and their weapons of
mass destruction. Washington assigned to Israel the task of being its chief
adjutant in the region. The United States and Israel set about creating an anti-
missile defense system. As a result, Israel obtained access to the most up-to-
date US antimissile technology. And it deployed the Arrow antimissile system.

Last November, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak exulted over the US-Israeli
strategic partnership: "The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, the
nuclear programs of extremist regimes and the spread of state-sponsored
terrorism are threats directed at Israel, at the United States, indeed at all
democracies around the world. It is therefore the responsibility of the
international community to develop effective security cooperation to confront
these threats together. There is no finer example than the close strategic ties
and intelligence cooperation that flourishes between the United States and
Israel. The Arrow was developed by our two countries to counter the ground-to-
ground missiles that are in the hands of rogue and extremist regimes. Our
friends in Washington know that support for Israel is in the American national
interest. Ours is a partnership united by a common understanding of the
existing threats and dangers to our way of life."

Contrary to the claims of Israel's ardent champions, the Arrow system was never
a joint American-Israeli project. Though the official story holds that the
United States underwrote two-thirds of the estimated $1.6 billion cost while
Israel picked up the tab for the remainder, the truth is the Arrow-2 missile
defense project was, from start to finish, a US-financed venture. The Arrow
project began in 1988 when the Israeli government signed a memorandum of
agreement with the United States Strategic Defense Initiative Organization,
renamed the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization in 1993. According to a 1993
General Accounting Office (GAO) report, the United States had paid $553.4
million of the Arrow project's $579.5 million cost as of the end of fiscal year
1995 � a sum considerably in excess of two-thirds. What is often overlooked is
that the US "share" comes directly from the Pentagon budget, while $97.9
million of Israel's $124 million "share" comes from Israel's annual $1.8
billion military aid grant from the United States. Thus as of 1995 Israel had
only put in $26.1 million of its own money, or five percent of the cost. In
effect, the Arrow system has been turned over to Israel virtually for free.
Israel is the only country in the world with a deployed Arrow system. The
United States has no plans of its own to deploy Arrow. US taxpayers have thus
funded a military program that the United States has no intention of using.

To be sure, the Arrow system may well turn out to be a dud. Decoys and counter-
measures can easily confuse missile defenses. Moreover, nuclear, chemical and
biological warheads are capable of causing enormous damage even if they are
destroyed high in the atmosphere. Warheads can easily be made to disintegrate
into innumerable small warheads. A Missile defense system like Arrow can be
overwhelmed with a barrage of cheap, unsophisticated Scud-class missiles.
More important, however, is the overt American-Israeli strategic partnership.
Following the 1998 meeting at Wye, President Clinton and Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu signed a memorandum of agreement "on the potential threat to
Israel posed by the proliferation of ballistic missiles and weapons of mass
destruction in the region." The agreement includes a "new mechanism for
enhancing cooperation in dealing with this potential threat." The agreement
reaffirmed the "long term commitment of the US to maintain Israel's qualitative
edge" and committed the United States to strengthening Israel's "defensive and
deterrent capabilities." When, some months later, a reporter asked Netanyahu
about the supposedly poor relations between Tel Aviv and Washington that marked
his years in power, Netanyahu countered: "For the first time, the United States
committed itself to assist Israel in finding answers to ballistic and other
dangers that threaten us. Also, the United States is committed to enhancing
Israel's deterrence. That was never said in the past." Netanyahu's comment was
revealing. The United States was now on board helping to develop Israel's
deterrent capability � in effect its nuclear program. The United States in the
past has turned a blind eye to Israel's nuclear program. Now, for the first
time ever, the United States is committing itself to modernizing Israel's
strategic deterrent.

In addition to developing Israel's strategic deterrence capabilities, the
United States has been busy promoting something called the Cooperative Defense
Initiative (CDI) � a region-wide early-warning system against missile threats
based on a rapid exchange of information between the countries of the Persian
Gulf and the Pentagon. The CDI includes the members of the Gulf Cooperation
Council � Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and
Oman � in addition to Egypt and Jordan. Recently, Washington managed to
persuade a reluctant Egypt to buy two improved Patriot batteries to defend
itself against incoming missiles. "Shared early warning, the development of
active and passive defenses to deal with chemical and biological weapons, and
methods for dealing with the potential consequences of a chemical or biological
attack, are all very important parts of the Cooperative Defense Initiative,"
Defense Secretary Cohen explained following a visit to the Persian Gulf last
November.

The Cooperative Defense Initiative involves the creation of a seamless network
of surveillance systems, from the Gulf through the Middle East to Turkey,
supervised by the United States, against Iran and Iraq and anyone else who will
not tow the US line. The CDI depends on shared early warning among the
countries in the region and the use of common weapon platforms for a
coordinated response in a crisis. It is said to have five pillars: active
defense, passive defense, shared early warning, consequence management and
medical countermeasures.

Shared early warning involves multilateral cooperation. The United States is
setting up a system to warn of a missile launch. This requires an interoperable
communications network. Active defense means intercepting and destroying
missiles. Israel has the Arrow. Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have the
Patriot. Passive defense includes the provision of protective gear and medical
stockpiles. It also entails making sure that armed forces are prepared to work
in a contaminated environment, and determining how a contaminated environment
would be cleaned up. US and regional medical experts have been meeting to
discuss the problems associated with an attack by a weapon of mass destruction.
Consequence management happens once a weapon explodes or an accident occurs.
The Pentagon has already been helping to train first responders in 120 US
cities how to recognize what is happening and what to do.

Clearly then the United States is developing a vast military and intelligence
infrastructure in the Middle East as an integral part of its global strategy.
The rationale is the supposed missile threat from Iran and Iraq. Of the Middle
Eastern states Israel is very much America's senior partner. Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Jordan are on board but they have been assigned subordinate roles.
Indeed, Israel's military is now increasingly integrated with that of the
United States. It is likely that this alliance will develop into something far
more substantial with military bases, integrated commands, streamlined
procurement and eventually a regional armed force. No doubt other countries
will be encouraged to participate. Turkey, Pakistan and Taiwan are obvious
candidates. Japan will be bludgeoned into joining. If, as seems increasingly
likely, NATO will quietly fade away, this will be a nice alternative for the
United States. The Palestinians are of very little importance in all of this.
Which is why, an impatient Bill Clinton told them at Camp David to take the
deal on the table and be glad that they can still do so.

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A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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