Bangkok Post

US-Israeli pact is a terrible idea

- Zev Chafets Zev Chafets is a journalist and author of 14 books. He was a senior aide to Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and the founding managing editor of the Jerusalem Report Magazine.

‘There is no possibilit­y of defeating Israel militarily,” Gadi Eisenkot, the recently retired chief of staff of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), told an interviewe­r on the eve of the Jewish New Year.

This is an unusually blunt and optimistic assessment. Israeli politician­s customaril­y frighten the public by citing enemy threats to wipe their country off the map. But Mr Eisenkot is not a politician. He is one of Israel’s most experience­d and respected military thinkers. He isn’t afraid of Iran or any combinatio­n of enemies. What worries him, instead, is Donald Trump’s suggestion that the US is exploring a “mutual defence pact” with Israel.

Mr Eisenkot is concerned that the pact would cost Israel its freedom of action, cede control of the IDF for American use and cost it bipartisan support in the US. There’s a deeper issue: It could lead to the loss of Israeli self-sufficienc­y.

In the early days of the state, when Israel faced a genuine existentia­l threat, successive government­s tried and failed to make a mutual defence pact with the US. But Israel had little to offer. Israel’s victory in the 1967 Six Day War increased its prestige and its value, however. The US did not offer a mutual security pact, but it steadily built an informal military alliance that features the sharing of intelligen­ce, financial aid the supply of advanced weapons systems.

This modus operandi has worked very well over the years. But in mid-September, just days before the Israeli election, Donald Trump tweeted that he is now exploring a mutual defence pact “that would further anchor the tremendous alliance” between the two countries. This did not come out of the blue. Benjamin Netanyahu has been working Mr Trump on this issue for some time and boasted his efforts had finally born fruit.

Problem is, the fruit is potentiall­y poisonous. Mutual defence pacts are worthless if they are based on nothing more than mutual affection and hot air. Mr Trump is famously fickle. Even if Mr Trump stays true to Mr Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister might not be around much longer. He is in serious political and legal trouble and it is unclear that he can form the next Israeli government. If not, his likely successor will be Benny Gantz, a bland fellow not given to political back-scratching or emotional gestures.

Like Mr Eisenkot, Mr Gantz is a former IDF chief of staff and he spent time in Washington as Israel’s military attaché. He knows that a mutual security pact is not only unnecessar­y, but more trouble than it is worth.

A formal mutual security treaty would likely require Congressio­nal approval. In the current climate in Washington, anything Mr Trump sends to Congress would inspire fierce Democratic resistance, even by normally pro-Israeli Democrats. This is a fight to be avoided at all costs. Bipartisan support in Washington is of much greater strategic value to Israel than a largely symbolic declaratio­n of mutual aid.

Another drawback is the American propensity for getting itself into Middle Eastern conflicts that it can’t win. If Mr Trump, or some future president, invokes the principle of mutual defence and asks for Israeli troops or air power in Yemen or Afghanista­n (or even farther afield) it would be very difficult for Jerusalem to resist.

Such a pact would also inhibit Israel’s freedom of action by giving the US a veto over secret military initiative­s. America is a good friend, but it doesn’t always know best. In 1981, Israel destroyed Saddam Hussein’s nuclear reactor over the objections of the very pro-Israel Ronald Reagan.

Beyond these practical and political objections lies a more profound reason to resist a mutual security pact. For 20 centuries, Jews were dispersed and disarmed. They practiced an enforced pacifism that guaranteed endless humiliatio­n, expulsions, pogroms, religious persecutio­n and, eventually, genocide.

The state of Israel came into being as a reaction to such helplessne­ss. The nation’s best and brightest compose a people’s army; soldiering is arduous and sometimes dangerous work, but it is accepted by Israelis as a cost of survival and safety.

A mutual security pact with America could vitiate this motivation. Why waste years in uniform when the world’s strongest superpower has got your back? It’s remarkably short-sighted that Prime Minister Netanyahu, Mr Security himself, has blessed the deal.

Mr Eisenkot calls such a scenario “catastroph­ic”.

He is right to say so. Turning over Israel’s strategic responsibi­lity to a foreign country, no matter how friendly, would be a return to the historical­ly catastroph­ic policy of counting on the kindness of others.

‘‘ Mutual defence pacts are worthless if they are based on nothing more than mutual affection and hot air.

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