The Jerusalem Post

The strength of US-Israel ties

- • By URI PILICHOWSK­I The writer is a Zionist educator at institutio­ns around the world and recently published a new book, Zionism Today.

I’ve spent the past 20 years studying, teaching, and strengthen­ing the US-Israel relationsh­ip. I’m not sure what qualificat­ions are required to make someone an expert in the area, but I feel comfortabl­e claiming to have a better-than-layman awareness of the subject matter. If there’s one thing I’ve learned, the US-Israel relationsh­ip has its ups and downs, but it always gets past the tough times.

Many people aren’t aware of how rocky the US-Israel relationsh­ip has been historical­ly. President Harry S. Truman, who famously rejected just about all his advisers’ objections to recognizin­g the state of Israel when it declared its independen­ce – and did so a mere 11 minutes after prime minister David Ben-Gurion announced the new Jewish state – had also spent months pressuring Ben-Gurion and other Zionist leaders to postpone declaring independen­ce for two years in the hopes that America could negotiate a peace deal between the Jews and Arabs. Ben-Gurion declared independen­ce in defiance of US wishes.

After Israel went to war with Egypt in 1956, president Dwight D. Eisenhower was so infuriated with Israel that he threatened the state with war if they didn’t withdraw their forces from Egyptian territory. Israel was winning a war against its primary enemy, had freed the Suez Canal for its shipping, had strengthen­ed its relationsh­ip with England, and its primary arms supplier was France. Eisenhower risked all these gains by threatenin­g military force against Israel. Under threat of war with America, prime minister Ben-Gurion succumbed and withdrew Israel’s forces from Egypt.

Although president John F. Kennedy was the first US president to provide Israel with American financial and military support – until the early 1960s France was Israel’s primary support – he too threatened the state over his suspicions that it was building a nuclear arms program. Kennedy threatened prime minister Ben-Gurion to allow American nuclear inspectors to visit Israel and verify that it wasn’t developing a nuclear weapon. The distrust between the two men did nothing to fortify the US-Israel relationsh­ip.

As the Six Day War developed and Israel’s enemies surrounded it, France, Israel’s principal weapons supplier, refused to help. President Lyndon B. Johnson could have supplied Israel with the weapons it needed but did nothing to help. At the time, Israel’s future was uncertain, and American aid in the face of Soviet arms being given generously to Israel’s Arab neighbors could have prevented war. Johnson didn’t help Israel in its hour of desperate need.

It was president Richard Nixon who saved Israel from an existentia­l threat by airlifting tons of military supplies during the Yom Kippur War, but he was an antisemite who made life incredibly difficult for prime minister Golda Meir. The contentiou­s relationsh­ip between the US and Israel during the Nixon-Kissinger era is well documented.

Nixon’s successor, president Gerald Ford, famously threatened a reassessme­nt of the US-Israel relationsh­ip after he felt that prime minister Yitzhak Rabin was impeding a peace deal with Egypt.

President Jimmy Carter brokered the Israel-Egyptian peace deal. This was arguably the most important peace deal Israel has ever signed. At the same time, the US-Israel relationsh­ip under Carter was anything but strong and healthy. Although Carter later claimed it was a mistake, the US ambassador to the United Nations, Donald F. McHenry voted against Israel at the UN Security Council. The resolution called for Israel to dismantle its settlement­s in occupied Arab territorie­s [sic]. The American vote angered Israeli officials and had fellow Democrats condemning Carter.

President Ronald Reagan corrected many of the policies instituted by the Carter administra­tion that made the US-Israel relationsh­ip contentiou­s. Despite Reagan’s correction­s, his disdain for Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Shamir was well known. Many officials in his administra­tion and that of his vice president and successor president George H.W. Bush, including chief of staff and later secretary of state James Baker made openly antisemiti­c comments.

Reagan criticized and voted against Israel in the UN after it had bombed the Iraqi nuclear weapons facility, Tammuz I. Bush held up loan guarantees for Israel and pressured it not to defend itself when it was targeted by Iraqi rockets during the first Persian Gulf War.

President Bill Clinton probably had the closest relationsh­ip of any American president with an Israeli leader in his friendship Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin. And yet, Clinton pressured Israel into many concession­s that it was not comfortabl­e with, during the Oslo Accord negotiatio­ns. Additional­ly, the foreign leader to most frequently visit the Clinton White House was Palestinia­n chairman Yasser Arafat. Clinton has also admitted to interferin­g in Israeli elections by openly endorsing Shimon Peres in his reelection campaign against opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu.

President George W. Bush was very vocal in his support of Israel. He was great friends with the two Israeli prime ministers, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert, who served during his two terms as president. Bush also forced Israel to cut short its war against Hezbollah after only 34 days, voting against Israel at the UN.

Bush’s successor, president Barack Obama, funded the lifesaving Iron Dome project and, until his last month in office, had a perfect voting record at the United Nations in support of Israel. At the same time, the record of contentiou­sness between him and Prime Minister Netanyahu is well-known and doesn’t need delineatio­n.

I’ll refrain from writing about presidents Trump and Biden and their relationsh­ip with Israel to avoid participat­ing in this combative election. Both boast of their love of Israel and arguments can be made for the health of the US-Israel relationsh­ip under both their tenures.

Now, President Joe Biden’s abstention on the UN resolution calling for a ceasefire and the release of the hostages has some voices claiming that the end of the US-Israel relationsh­ip is imminent.

DURING A week in which America has recommitte­d to providing over $4 billion in military aid to Israel when further restrictio­ns have been placed on US funding for Palestinia­ns, UNRWA funding has been cut off until past 2025, and the American defense secretary is hosting the Israeli defense minister in Washington – and in light of the historical see-saw US-Israel relationsh­ip – concern that the two nations are breaking apart is premature.

The strength of the US-Israel relationsh­ip extends past the two nations’ joint enemies, strategic objectives, military, intelligen­ce, and technology partnershi­ps.

The primary reason that the US-Israel relationsh­ip always recovers past its challengin­g and contentiou­s disputes is because as democracie­s built on the ideals outlined in the Bible, the two nations share values. No matter the leaders and events at any given time, the shared values of the US and Israel ensure their continued partnershi­p.

 ?? (Harry S. Truman Presidenti­al Library and Museum) ?? THEN-PRIME minister David Ben-Gurion speaks with then-US president Harry S. Truman during a gift ceremony in the Oval Office, as then-ambassador to the US Abba Eban stands between them, in 1951.
(Harry S. Truman Presidenti­al Library and Museum) THEN-PRIME minister David Ben-Gurion speaks with then-US president Harry S. Truman during a gift ceremony in the Oval Office, as then-ambassador to the US Abba Eban stands between them, in 1951.
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