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DrMaddVibe Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,507
Friends Without Benefits

The U.S. is Israel’s BFF, but the feeling isn’t mutual.Matthew Yglesias | May 26, 2011


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a lot of things in his address to a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress on Tuesday, most of them foolish and some of them offensive. But one of his very first statements was among the most important: “Israel has no better friend than America,” he claimed, “and America has no better friend than Israel.”

Protecting Israel is a special project taken on by the United States. The reasons may be good and bad, but it’s a burden we undertake. Israel does us no favors and is no use to us. Recognizing that fact hardly solves the decades-long Arab-Israeli conflict, but it ought to be the starting point for what Americans should debate--not Israel’s policy toward its Palestinian subjects but America’s policy toward Israel.

It’s not actually clear which country is truly America’s best friend. A traditional answer cites the United Kingdom, former colonial overlord turned key partner in world wars and in designing the institutional architecture of the Cold War West. Our vanquished enemies from World War II, Germany and Japan, also suggest themselves as the most economically and geopolitically significant of our close allies. The dark horse candidate is oft-neglected Canada, our biggest trade partner. It’s tied into our electricity grid, and its prime ministers have tended to join us in legitimate wars while attempting to warn us off fiascos in Vietnam and Iraq. (Friends don’t let friends get into military quagmires.) Canada took in American planes when U.S. airspace was closed on September 11, and Canada is a key source of human capital for the United States. So, three cheers for Canada.

Does that mean Israel is a friend at all? We are certainly a friend of Israel’s. The United States gives the country billions in aid. Indeed, it is the largest recipient of American foreign assistance in the world, even though it’s neither a poor country nor a large one. Netanyahu explained that his country and ours are such good friends because “we stand together to defend democracy.”

There are democracies with more serious needs: India, Brazil, and Indonesia are all large developing democracies with many poor citizens. “We stand together to advance peace,” Netanyahu said. “We stand together to fight terrorism.”

But not really. Israel doesn’t contribute to international peacekeeping efforts. Israel isn’t preventing Taiwan and the People’s Republic of China from going to war. Israel fights terrorism, of course, but this hardly distinguishes it from dozens of other countries. Israel’s lack of practical utility to the United States is no knock on it. It’s a small country, which, despite its prosperity, simply doesn’t have a ton of resources for solving global problems. And unlike, say, Sweden or the Netherlands, Israel faces substantial security challenges at home. While those other countries do what they can in the international arena, even though it isn’t a huge amount, Israel focuses on its own problems.

Israel’s definition of those problems—especially as outlined by Netanyahu—is quite expansive. According to Netanyahu, it’s in the vital interest of Israel to annex 100 percent of Jerusalem to the Jewish state, including neighborhoods that are inhabited nearly exclusively by Palestinians. Netanyahu also thinks it’s vital for Israel to prevent any hypothetical future Republic of Palestine to have a military. But that’s not to say he thinks there should be no military on Palestinian soil; he just wants to make sure it’s an Israeli military stationed in the Jordan River Valley. For good measure, he added that “in Judea and Samaria [that is, the West Bank], the Jewish people are not foreign occupiers.”

This is not an agenda that takes the interests of the region’s Arab population seriously. Which makes sense, in a way. Israel is a democracy, as Netanyahu was at pains to note, and its prime minister is accountable to an Israeli electorate. The current Israeli priority is to enforce the interests of Israelis rather than promote fairness for Arabs. But when America positions itself as Israel’s best friend, this signals to Palestinians and hundreds of millions of Arabs and Muslims around the world that we, too, don’t take the interests of the Palestinian people seriously. One can debate how big an impact this has on our policies throughout the greater Middle East, but it clearly doesn’t help.

American pundits have spent a lot of time over the past week debating the merits of Netanyahu’s strategy for Israel. But what we really ought to talk about is America’s strategy for America. Personally, I think Netanyahu’s view of Israel’s interests is mistaken. But too much of the discourse about his policies has taken this tack. It’s genuinely not America’s place to second-guess the Israeli electorate about settlements or East Jerusalem. But it shouldn’t be America’s place to do what Congress did on Monday and simply stand and cheer while a foreign prime minister offers absurd lies about who America’s friends are in the world. Israeli politics has taken an aggressively hawkish and nationalistic turn over the past decade, and whether or not that’s good for Israel, it’s certainly not good for the United States. The starting point for our policy ought to be to recognize that and respond accordingly.


http://prospect.org/cs/articles?article=friends_without_benefits
DrMaddVibe Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,507
Crisis, Shmisis: 81 Congressmen Head to Israel

The American economy is in a crisis. Suburbs are falling into poverty. Schools are struggling. Cities teeter on the edge of bankruptcy.

And 81 U.S. Congressmen are off in Israel when they should be here, dealing with the mountain of problems facing the American people -- you know, the men and women who elected them.

Of course, Congressmen deserve a break. They need to relax and spend time with their families just like any other working stiff. But those 81 Congressmen aren't exactly on vacation. They're on a junket funded by the American Israel Education Foundation, a supporting organization of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). As AIPAC is a special interest group -- pro-Israel hardliners who support expansionist policies -- it is unlikely that the Congressmen will be getting a clear-eyed view of the country.

With perks like all-expenses-paid trips for government employees, it's no surprise that Israel is the largest single foreign recipient of U.S. aid. Israel receives three billion dollars worth of aid annually from the United States. America has committed to giving Israel a whopping 30 billion from 2009-2018. It's worth adding that Israel is not using these dollars to build schools or help the needy. Rather, the funds come in the form of weapons that are used to maintain the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.

And what are American taxpayers getting in return?

In his article, "Friends Without Benefits," Matthew Yglesias gives a succinct answer: "Israel does us no favors and is no use to us."

The Congressmen's trip to Israel illuminates this point. Not only is it useless to the American people, it's a distraction during a time when taxpaying U.S. citizens need and deserve the full attention of the representatives they elected.

As Josh Ruebner, National Advocacy Director of the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, puts it,

"This August break is for Members of Congress to be at home, meeting with constituents to hear about our concerns. They should be listening to our anxiety about the economy and thinking through ways to dig us out of the financial mess they've created with their corporate giveaways, tax breaks for the wealthy and lax regulation of unscrupulous banks that are forcing people out of their homes with fraudulent mortgage documents."

While the disappearing act these 81 Congressmen have pulled is reprehensible, it's not surprising.

After all, this is the same Congress that showered Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with standing ovations as he stood and spoke one half-truth after another. This is the same Congress that took the unusual move of breaking its own rules to pass a resolution about foreign policy -- wasting time and energy that could have been spent on pressing domestic issues.

So, no, this trip isn't shocking. It's just one more outrageous example of American politicians putting special interest groups ahead of the dire needs of the American people.



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mya-guarnieri/crisis-shmisis-81-congres_b_923555.html
DrMaddVibe Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,507
Report: 81 congressmen going to Israel on break
By Joshua Norman Topics Congress

Perhaps seeking a salty dip in the Dead Sea to end a stressful debt debate, nearly one in five members of the House in Representatives will use their summer recess period to visit Israel, The Jerusalem Post reports.


Of the 81 heading over, 55 are Republicans and 26 are Democrats, The Post reports. Half of the freshmen Republican reps - 47 of them - make up that group, and many of them will be visiting Israel for the first time.


Among the Democrats heading over is Illinois Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr., who will be there for an eight-day visit, the Associated Press reports.


Jackson, like most congressmen on the sponsored trip, is scheduled to meet with both Israeli and Palestinian leaders. The famous civil rights leader's son told the AP that he's looking forward to learning about Israel's business and commercial sectors as well as the latest tools and technology the country is using in its fight against terror.


Almost all of the week-long trips are sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation, which promotes similar trips for Congress every other August, the Post reports.


House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer will head the Democratic delegation, and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor will lead one of the Republican groups.


American Israel Education Foundation is a supporting organization of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, which describes itself on its website as "America's leading pro-Israel lobby...AIPAC works with both Democratic and Republican political leaders to enact public policy that strengthens the vital U.S.-Israel relationship."


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20089313-503544.html







I think I see an area we could save a ton by using the scalpel!
HockeyDad Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,163
Bought and paid for. Cha-ching!
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