As the bombardment of Gaza
enters its third week and the civilian death toll continues to rise, Clinton's remarks offer a
thin ray of hope that the next president will deviate from the long-set pattern
of U.S.-Israeli relations.
The Bush administration has been unwilling to use the
considerable U.S. influence --
as Israel's
major military and political backer -- to dissuade the government in Tel Aviv
from its pattern of claiming self-defense while perpetrating collective
punishment, human rights violations, and massively disproportionate attacks
that harm and kill civilians.
If the next administration is making a genuine commitment to
"a just and lasting peace that brings real security to Israel, normal
and positive relations with its neighbors; independence, economic progress and
security to the Palestinians in their own state" -- as Hillary Clinton
described the vision for the future -- they will have their work cut out for
them.
Arms Package
That work begins with a reevaluation of the financial and
military commitment the United States
made to Israel.
During the Bush administration, Israel
received over $21 billion in U.S.
security assistance, including $19 billion in direct military aid under the
Pentagon's Foreign Military Financing (FMF) program. Through the FMF program, Israel remains the single largest recipient of U.S. military aid each year, which they use to
purchase U.S.
weapons.
The bulk of Israel's
current arsenal is composed of equipment supplied under U.S. assistance
programs. For example, Israel has 226 U.S.-supplied F-16 fighter and attack
jets, over 700 M-60 tanks, 6,000 armored personnel carriers, and scores of
transport planes, attack helicopters, utility and training aircraft, bombs, and
tactical missiles of all kinds.
Hardware continues to flow in, despite the fact the Arms
Export Control Act (AECA) requires nations receiving U.S. arms to certify the weapons
are used for internal security and legitimate self-defense, and that their use
doesn't lead to an escalation of conflict. During 2008 alone, the United States
made over $22 billion in new arms sales offers to Israel, including a proposed
deal for as many as 75 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, worth up to $15.2 billion;
nine heavy transport aircraft, worth up to $1.9 billion; four Littoral Combat
Ships and related equipment, worth as much as $1.9 billion; and up to $1.3
billion in gasoline and jet aviation fuel.
One lone congressman -- Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) -- raised
concerns about Israel's
possible violations of the AECA. He hasn't had a response from the State
Department. What use are our laws if they are not followed?
The last time the United
States cut off military aid and weapons transfers to Israel was in
1981. During Israel's
incursion into Lebanon, the
Reagan administration cut off U.S.
military aid and arms deliveries for 10 weeks while it investigated whether Israel was using weapons for "defensive
purposes," as required under U.S. law.
The United
States lifted the ban after Secretary of
State Alexander Haig suggested that one could "argue until eternity"
about whether a given use of force was offensive or defensive.
Since then, the United States
has investigated Israel's
use of U.S.-origin weapons in relationship to the AECA a few times, most
notably in 2006, when Israel
let loose on southern Lebanon
with millions of cluster bomblets. The State Department Office of Defense Trade
Controls investigated the situation, and informed Congress with preliminary
findings indicating Israel
may have violated agreements by using cluster bombs against civilian-populated
areas. According to a January 2008 Congressional Research Service report, Israel denied
violating agreements, saying that it had acted in self-defense, and a final
determination wasn't made.
The issue was dropped and weapons transfers continued.
An Obama Alternative?
Those who seek peace in the Middle East, who refuse to
"give up" on it, must insist that the United States stop funding and fueling
the war.
What can Obama do differently? Enforce the AECA in a uniform
and dispassionate way. Given the close political and military ties between the United States and Israel, Haig's observation is a
cover for inaction, and worse. While the finer points of offense and defense
are being argued "until eternity," U.S.-origin weapons are killing
women and children.