By Zack Beauchamp
An amazing Wall Street Journal story today reveals
just how bad US-Israel relations have gotten during the Gaza crisis:
Israel is going behind President Obama's back, to the Pentagon, to get
restocked with American weapons.
How can this happen? When Congress passes bills funding foreign military
aid, it doesn't always itemize every item that every country gets. Look
at the 2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act, for instance, and you'll find that it says "not
less than $3,100,000,000 shall be available for grants only for Israel"
with only a little more qualification. It's up to the president and the
Pentagon to figure out what the Israelis should have and give it to
them.
Netanyahu commanded that Obama was "not to ever second-guess me again" about the Gaza war
Normally, this is pretty routine — Israel and the US cooperate very closely on defense. But according to Journal reporter Adam Entous,
the US and Israel have been at each other's throats during the Gaza.
The Obama administration were concerned that Israel's ground incursion
into Gaza beginning on July 17th was using disproportionate force — for
example, using hard-to-target artillery fire in heavily populated areas.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thought Americans had no
business micromanaging how he defended his country from Hamas rocket
fire.
So instead of asking
Obama for more weapons, Israel went straight to the Pentagon offices on
July 20th. The Pentagon went through their standard process, and
afterwards approved Israeli requests for mortar and tank shells. Then,
on July 30th, Israeli artillery shells hit a UN shelter for displaced
Palestinians. They were reportedly US-made.
"We were blindsided," one U.S.
diplomat told Entous. The State Department and the White House had just
discovered the Pentagon's arms transfers.
After that, US-Israeli
relations quietly collapsed. The next three paragraphs from the
Journal's story are astonishing — particularly the part where Netanyahu
commanded that Obama was "not to ever second-guess me again" about the
Gaza war:
The last straw for many U.S. diplomats came on Aug. 2 when they say Israeli officials leaked to the media that Mr. Netanyahu had told the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, that the Obama administration was "not to ever second-guess me again" about how to deal with Hamas.
The
White House and State Department have sought to regain greater control
over U.S.-Israeli policy. They decided to require White House and State
Department approval for even routine munitions requests by Israel,
officials say.
Instead of
being handled as a military-to-military matter, each case is now subject
to review-slowing the approval process and signaling to Israel that
military assistance once taken for granted is now under closer scrutiny.
It's a striking story for any number of reasons. US-Israel relations periodically get rocky,
but defense cooperation usually remains stable. If Obama is imposing a
higher standard for arms transfers, and generally slowing military
cooperation, that's a pretty significant development.
Second, and perhaps more fundamentally, Entous' reporting illustrates why the US is so bad at pressuring Israel.
The United States and Israel are bound so tightly together in so many
ways that Israel has all sorts of avenues to get around the limited
pressure that administrations might want to bring to bear. US officials
admitted to Entous that their influence over Israel has been "weakened"
during the Gaza war. That's because Netanyahu "has used his sway in
Washington, from the Pentagon and Congress to lobby groups, to defuse US
diplomatic pressure on his government over the past month."
The American public and Congress both overwhelmingly support Israel
and sympathize with it over its enemies during conflicts. That helps
maintain a strong US-Israel relationship, even when the leaders of both
countries can't stand each other. It also seriously ties America's hands
when the two countries disagree.
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