Subject: Born in the USA
Israeli weapons bear an embarrassing label: made in USA
By Paul McGeough
March 23 2002
British objections to the use of British-supplied weapons in Israel's 
latest military push against the Palestinians have focused new attention on 
the United States' reluctance to restrain Israel's use of the 
multi-billion-dollar, high-tech arms it sells to the Jewish state each year.
The US is embarrassed by the high profile given to some of its machinery in 
the occupied territories - particularly its F-16 fighter jets, in missile 
strikes against police stations and other public buildings, and its Apache 
attack helicopters, in Israel's controversial campaign to assassinate 
Palestinian militants.
But the Administration has refused to go public with its growing unease 
over the use of US weaponry, in what the UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, 
now calls an "all-out conventional war" on Palestinian civilians.
But last week Britain revealed that in 2000 it had extracted a written 
assurance from Israel that no military equipment originating from Britain 
would be used in the occupied territories. The revelation was sparked when 
a British diplomat stationed in the Middle East recognised an Israeli 
armoured personnel carrier as a modified Centurion tank, which Britain had 
supplied to Israel up until 1970.
Now Britain is demanding an explanation from the Israelis. Last year an 
unnamed US State Department spokesman told The Independent in London that 
at some point Washington would have to make a call on whether the Israelis 
were in breach of a stipulation in the Arms Export Control Act that weapons 
sold could be used only for "legitimate self-defence" - but yesterday a 
department spokeswoman would not tell the Herald if the issue had advanced.
Israel is one of the biggest buyers of US arms, and much of the trade is 
financed with the $US2 billion a year it gets from Washington in military 
aid. Its arsenal includes dozens of US helicopters (AH 64As, AH 1Fs, AH 
1Gs); hundreds of tanks (M-60s) and armoured personnel carriers; and the 
biggest fleet of American fighter aircraft outside the US (F-15s, F-16s, 
F-4s and A-4s).
A US-based lobby group, the Palestinian Monitor, says the US should act 
against Israel because of its "consistent pattern of gross violations of 
internationally recognised human rights" and, in particular, killings 
carried out by its airborne assassination squads.
However, the argument that the US was refusing to put pressure on Israel 
over its treatment of Palestinians was laughed at by one of the US's top 
authorities on the Israeli military, Anthony Cordesman, of the Centre for 
Strategic and International Studies.
Told by the Herald about the assurance won from Israel by the British, he 
said: "Someone has to be joking. This kind of contract clause is a joke in 
the weapons trade. If you think you can tightly control weapons after you 
have sold them, then you're living in fantasy land ...
"People in this trade make a lot of promises for face-saving purposes. 
There are provisions in international law on not using weapons on 
civilians, but defining civilians in a low-level war like this one can be 
an academic exercise."
But on the ground, the Israeli choice of US weapons does make a difference. 
After the Israelis launched a US-built TOW missile in a helicopter attack 
on a Gaza police station last year, a staff member who survived confronted 
an American visitor. "This is what your country is doing," he said, holding 
up a part of the missile carrying the words "made in the USA".
He reportedly went on: "We hate the Israelis for this ... but we hate 
America more." FROM
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/03/22/israeliweapons.htm

Reply via email to