Ending Military Aid to Israel Shouldn’t Be “Unmentionable”

A New York Times columnist, Nicholas Kristof, feared the reaction when he questioned the military aid we give to Israel, although he makes totally valid points (“Lots of folks will disagree with my column today”). I’ve edited out parts of his column where he goes wishy-washy:

Israel is in the headlines, evoking tumultuous debate. Yet one topic remains largely unmentionable, so let me gingerly raise it: Is it time to think about phasing out American aid for Israel down the road?

This is not about whacking Israel. But does it really make sense for the United States to provide the enormous sum of $3.8 billion annually to another wealthy country?

… Today, Israel has legitimate security concerns but is not in peril of being invaded by the armies of its neighbors, and it is richer per capitaĀ than Japan and some European countries. One sign of changed times: AlmostĀ a quarterĀ of Israel’s arms exports last year went to Arab states.

The $3.8 billion in annual assistance to Israel is more than 10 times as much as the U.S. sends to the far more populous nation ofĀ Niger, one of theĀ poorest countriesĀ in the world and one underĀ attack by jihadis. In countries like Niger, that sum could saveĀ hundreds of thousandsĀ of lives a year, or here in the United States, it could help pay for desperately needed early childhood programs.

Aid to Israel is now almost exclusively military assistance that can be used only to buy American weaponry. In reality, it’s not so much aid to Israel as it is a backdoor subsidy to American military contractors, which is one reason some Israelis are cool to it.

ā€œIsrael should give up on the American aid,ā€ Yossi Beilin, a former Israeli minister of justice, told me. He hasĀ arguedĀ that the money can be used more effectively elsewhere.

Daniel Kurtzer, a former American ambassador to Israel, agreed.

ā€œIsrael’s economy is strong enough that it does not need aid; security assistance distorts Israel’s economy and creates a false sense of dependency,ā€ Kurtzer said in an email. ā€œAid provides the U.S. with no leverage or influence over Israeli decisions to use force; because we sit by quietly while Israel pursues policies we oppose, we are seen as ā€˜enablers’ of Israel’s occupation.ā€

ā€œAnd U.S. aid provides a multibillion-dollar cushion that allows Israel to avoid hard choices of where to spend its own money and thus allows Israel to spend more money on policies we oppose, such as settlements.ā€

At some point when running for president in the last election, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren all suggestedĀ conditioning aid to Israel….. [but were apparently concerned about the negative reaction if they called for eliminating it].

It’s not just liberals. ā€œCut the stranglehold of aid,ā€ Jacob Siegel and Liel Leibovitz argued recently in Tablet magazine, saying that the aid benefited America and its arms manufacturers while undercutting Israeli companies….

Martin Indyk, who twice served as America’s ambassador to Israel, also favored new security agreements and said that it’s time to have this discussion about ending aid.

ā€œIsrael can afford it, and it would be healthier for the relationship if Israel stood on its own two feet,ā€ he told me.

The issue is politically sensitive, of course. Just a couple of years ago, more thanĀ 325 membersĀ of the House of Representatives signed a letter opposing any drop in aid to Israel.

ā€œThere’s a serious conversation that should be had ahead of thisĀ next memorandum of understandingĀ about how best to use $40 billion in U.S. tax dollars,ā€ said Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of J Street, an advocacy group. ā€œYet instead of a serious national security discussion, you’re likely to get a toxic mix of partisan brawling and political pandering.ā€

… We’d all benefit by finding the maturity to discuss the unmentionable.

Unquote.

The most recommended comments on the Times site all said we should stop giving money to the Israeli government. But, as so often is the case, our politicians haven’t caught up with reality.