The announcement last week by the United
States of the largest military aid
package in its history – to Israel – was
a win for both sides.
Israeli prime
minister Benjamin Netanyahu could boast
that his lobbying had boosted aid from
$3.1 billion a year to $3.8bn – a 22 per
cent increase – for a decade starting in
2019.
Mr Netanyahu has presented this as a
rebuff to those who accuse him of
jeopardising Israeli security interests
with his government’s repeated affronts
to the White House.
In the past weeks alone, defence
minister Avigdor Lieberman has compared
last year’s nuclear deal between
Washington and Iran with the 1938 Munich
pact, which bolstered Hitler; and Mr
Netanyahu has implied that US opposition
to settlement expansion is the same as
support for the “ethnic cleansing” of
Jews.
American president Barack Obama,
meanwhile, hopes to stifle his own
critics who insinuate that he is
anti-Israel. The deal should serve as a
fillip too for Hillary Clinton, the
Democratic party’s candidate to succeed
Mr Obama in November’s election.
In reality, however, the Obama
administration has quietly punished Mr
Netanyahu for his misbehaviour. Israeli
expectations of a $4.5bn-a-year deal
were whittled down after Mr Netanyahu
stalled negotiations last year as he
sought to recruit Congress to his battle
against the Iran deal.
In fact, Israel already receives
roughly $3.8bn – if Congress’s
assistance on developing missile defence
programmes is factored in. Notably,
Israel has been forced to promise not to
approach Congress for extra funds.
The deal takes into account neither
inflation nor the dollar’s depreciation
against the shekel.
A bigger blow still is the White
House’s demand to phase out a special
exemption that allowed Israel to spend
nearly 40 per cent of aid locally on
weapon and fuel purchases. Israel will
soon have to buy all its armaments from
the US, ending what amounted to a
subsidy to its own arms industry.
Nonetheless, Washington’s renewed
military largesse – in the face of
almost continual insults – inevitably
fuels claims that the Israeli tail is
wagging the US dog. Even The New York
Times has described the aid package as
“too big”.
Since the 1973 war, Israel has
received at least $100bn in military
aid, with more assistance hidden from
view. Back in the 1970s, Washington paid
half of Israel’s military budget. Today
it still foots a fifth of the bill,
despite Israel’s economic success.
But the US expects a return on its
massive investment. As the late Israeli
politician-general Ariel Sharon once
observed, Israel has been a US
“aircraft carrier” in the Middle East,
acting as the regional bully and
carrying out operations that benefit
Washington.
Almost no one blames the US for
Israeli attacks that wiped out Iraq’s
and Syria’s nuclear programmes. A
nuclear-armed Iraq or Syria would have
deterred later US-backed moves at regime
overthrow, as well as countering the
strategic advantage Israel derives from
its own nuclear arsenal.
In addition, Israel’s US-sponsored
military prowess is a triple boon to the
US weapons industry, the country’s most
powerful lobby. Public funds are
siphoned off to let Israel buy goodies
from American arms makers. That, in
turn, serves as a shop window for other
customers and spurs an endless and
lucrative game of catch-up in the rest
of the Middle East.
The first F-35 fighter jets to arrive
in Israel in December – their various
components produced in 46 US states –
will increase the clamour for the
cutting-edge warplane.
Israel is also a “front-line
laboratory”, as former Israeli army
negotiator Eival Gilady admitted at the
weekend, that develops and field-tests
new technology Washington can later use
itself.
The US is planning to buy back the
missile interception system Iron Dome –
which neutralises battlefield threats of
retaliation – it largely paid for.
Israel works closely too with the US in
developing cyberwarfare, such as the
Stuxnet worm that damaged Iran’s
civilian nuclear programme.
But the clearest message from
Israel’s new aid package is one
delivered to the Palestinians:
Washington sees no pressing strategic
interest in ending the occupation. It
stood up to Mr Netanyahu over the Iran
deal but will not risk a damaging clash
over Palestinian statehood.
Some believe that Mr Obama signed the
aid package to win the credibility
necessary to overcome his domestic
Israel lobby and pull a rabbit from the
hat: an initiative, unveiled shortly
before he leaves office, that corners Mr
Netanyahu into making peace.
Hopes have been raised by an expected
meeting at the United Nations in New
York on Wednesday. But their first talks
in 10 months are planned only to
demonstrate unity to confound critics of
the aid deal.
If Mr Obama really wanted to pressure
Mr Netanyahu, he would have used the aid
agreement as leverage. Now Mr Netanyahu
need not fear US financial retaliation,
even as he intensifies effective
annexation of the West Bank.
Mr Netanyahu has drawn the right
lesson from the aid deal – he can act
against the Palestinians with continuing
US impunity.
- See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/2016-09-19/palestinians-lose-in-us-military-aid-deal-with-israel/#sthash.fL4Eq28N.dpuf
Hillary is running against locker room talk
and the Russians
By Paul Craig Roberts
October 20, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Russia’s very able Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova,
said that
the US presidential campaign is “simply some
sort of a global shame” unworthy of the
American people. She certainly hit the nail
on the head.
Hitlery’s criminal record had to be
suppressed by the Obama regime in order to
move the oligarchs’ candidate in the
direction of the White House. So here we are
on the verge of nuclear war with Russia and
China, and the important issue before the
American people is Trump’s lewd comments
with Billy Bush about sexually attractive
women.
I
mean really. Men’s talk about women is like
their fish and hunting stories. It has to be
taken with a grain of salt. But this aside,
why is lewd talk about women more important
than military conflict with Russia, which
could mean nuclear war and the end of life
on earth?
Trump has declared that he sees no point in
conflict with Russia and that he sees no
point in NATO a quarter century after the
demise of the Soviet Union.
Is
Trump’s lewd talk about women worse than
Hitlery’s provocative talk about Russian
President Vladimir Putin, whom Hitlery calls
“the new Hitler”? What kind of utter fool
would throw gratuitous insults at the
President of a country that can wipe the US
and all of Western Europe off of the face of
the earth in a few minutes?
Would you rather face a situation in which a
few women were groped, or be vaporized in
nuclear war? If you don’t know the correct
answer, you are too stupid to be alive.
Are
the American women really going to elect
Hillary as a rebuff to Trump’s lewd talk? If
so, they will confirm that it was a mistake
to give women the vote, although there will
be no one left alive to record the mistake
in the history books.
Hitlery, with the aid of the presstitutes—the
whores who lie for a living and who
constitute the American print and TV
media—have succeeded in focusing America’s
election of a president on issues irrelevant
to the dangerous situation with which
Hitlery and her neoconservative colleagues
confront the world.
For
Killary-Hillary the Russian issue is the
unsupported and false allegation that the
Russian government, in league with Donald
Trump, hacked her emails and released them
to WikiLeaks. The purpose of this absurd
claim is to focus voters’ attention away
from the damning content of the emails.
The
real issue is that the idiots in Washington
have convinced the Russian government that
Russia is going to be the target of a
pre-emptive nuclear strike. Once a nation is
convinced of this, it is unlikely that they
will just sit there waiting, especially a
powerful nuclear power like Russia, which
appears to have a strategic alliance with
another major nuclear power—China.
A
vote for the crazed killer bitch Hitlery is
a vote for the end of life on earth.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts editor of
was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for
Economic Policy and associate the Wall
Street Journal. He was columnist for
Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service,
and Creators Syndicate. He has had many
university appointments. His internet
columns have attracted a worldwide
following. Roberts' latest books are
Dissolution of The Failure of Laissez Faire
Capitalism and Economic the West,
How
America Was Lost,
and
The
Neoconservative Threat to World Order.
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