Israel´s Survival and American Assistance: It´s Been Done Before (AMERICAN SPECTATOR) By Lee A. Heilig 04/08/12)
Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/04/israels_survival_and_american_assistance_its_been_done_before.html
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Ben Stein has offered an easily readable and cogent piece on a
stratagem for dealing with the looming menace of a nuclear-armed
Iran. Mr. Stein, in writing for the American Spectator, has made a
compelling case for American involvement in helping secure Israel
from nuclear calamity. And it is a strategy that doesn´t embroil us
in another shooting war. The brilliance of Stein´s idea comes from
its simplicity and reliance upon the success of similar actions taken
in the not-so-distant past.
While America was by all accounts an economic and military powerhouse
in 1973, we did not enjoy nearly the level of relative military
hegemony then as we do today. By many measures, the former Soviet
Union held quantitative advantages in weapon systems that would
overwhelm us in a conventional slugfest, or obliterate us in a
nuclear exchange. The lack of an overwhelming military advantage and
a belligerent USSR did not stop President Nixon from doing the
indispensably vital and right thing by arming the Israeli Defense
Forces in their dark hour of need. Even in the face of escalated
Soviet military readiness and threats, President Nixon rushed
military aid to Israel that helped turn the tide of the Yom Kippur
War and secure Israel´s victory.
All this was accomplished, as Stein points out, in the context of a
highly intelligent and sophisticated foreign policy aimed at reducing
the Soviet Union´s worldwide threat. While Nixon courted the
People´s Republic of China as a strategic partner in the containment
of Russian expansionism, he found creative military, economic, and
diplomatic avenues to confound the Kremlin. Nixon´s was a strategy
of adult vision and far-reaching American interests. The success and
sophistication of his foreign policy still amaze historians and
political scientists alike. That President Nixon was able to achieve
such dramatic successes in the military and domestic tumult of the
Viet Nam Conflict gives even greater credence to his mastery of
events. The Nixonian foreign policy of the early 1970s set the stage
for the triumph of Reaganism in the 1980s, 1990s and beyond. Sadly,
it is a foreign policy of a bygone era, when adults populated our
national government.
Stein suggests that we can learn from our past and materially provide
Israel all that she might lack in the conduct of pre-emptive attacks
on Iranian nuclear facilities. The point here is not to debate the
intentions or capabilities of the Iranian government. That
government and its spokesmen have made their intentions clear. The
point is to make sure that Israel does not have to suffer the
unthinkable -- a nuclear strike on her soil. The ability to remove
that very real, existential threat is readily available. Moreover,
our participation need not require risking the lives of any American
military personnel. The supply of advanced C4I, satellite imagery,
refueling assets, advanced bunker-busting munitions, and other
material support to Israel would send a commandingly clear message to
the hostile Arab (and Persian) world that no attack upon our friend
and ally will ever be tolerated. If and when the pre-emptive attack
on Iran becomes necessary, the American aid would provide game-
changing advantages to the IDF and help assure their success. Again,
direct American personnel exposure would be minimal or non-existent.
It is an arrangement that should be favored by those in foreign
policy circles who are so risk-averse that even minimal casualties
anticipated in a military operation are considered too great for
commitment to the operation. It is the liberals´ ideal of American
military intervention. Then again, it is not -- for this was not
their idea.
The glaring recalcitrance toward Israel by this Obama administration
continually finds new and inventive ways to express itself. The most
recent example of Obama´s thinly veiled contempt for our ally came
earlier in a shocking report by Mark Perry, writing for the
periodical Foreign Policy. In a March 28 article entitled "Israel´s
Secret Staging Ground," Perry reported:
In particular, four senior diplomats and military intelligence
officers say that the United States has concluded that Israel has
recently been granted access to airbases on Iran´s northern border.
To do what, exactly, is not clear. "The Israelis have bought an
airfield," a senior administration official told me in early
February, "and the airfield is called Azerbaijan."... "We´re watching
what Iran does closely," one of the U.S. sources, an intelligence
officer engaged in assessing the ramifications of a prospective
Israeli attack confirmed. "But we´re now watching what Israel is
doing in Azerbaijan. And we´re not happy about it."
As anticipated, denials, accusations, and counter-accusations have
since followed in the wake of the Foreign Policy report. The
administration now denies any knowledge of alleged Israeli dealings
with the Azerbaijani government in Baku. Clearly, someone in State
Department or Defense Department circles leaked the story. The
accompanying question is, "Why?" If we are to assume the veracity of
the story´s details, it would seem logical that the IDF is seeking a
forward operating base that could help alleviate the refueling and
rearming demands of its F-15 and F-16 strike fighters in any proposed
attack plan against Iranian nuclear facilities. That this inherently
risky diplomatic venture on the part of the Israeli (and Azerbaijani)
government is made necessary seems to speak in ancillary fashion to
the conditions between the U.S. and Israeli governments as well. If
administration officials are leaking highly classified information
such as this, on what could be a run-up to armed conflict between
Israel and Iran, it portends that the president is attempting to
derail the possible Israeli attack before it begins. This
development, taken at face value, indicates that Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has already determined that he cannot expect
meaningful assistance from the Obama administration in what the IDF
considers a mission for national survival.
Often, and many times rightfully, prudence and sober reflection
before committing U.S. forces to military action are greatly
advisable. War by its very nature is a destructive and terrible
thing. If we can provide combat air assets to Libyan rebel forces;
if our State Department can debate the merits of now providing
material support to Syrian rebels; if we can intervene in the
internecine warfare of the former Yugoslavia; then I believe we can
assist our close friend and the only truly democratized nation in the
whole of the Middle East region. Liberal supporters of U.S.
involvement in the aforementioned conflicts are hard-pressed to
establish a meaningful reason in support of those interventions. Yet
have we not endured a decade of the shrill droning of the same
liberal elitists as they caterwaul about American military operations
against Iraq and Afghanistan -- two nations that arguably posed a
clear and present danger to our national security? Will it take the
loss of Tel Aviv or Haifa and hundreds of thousands of Israelis for
this administration to finally consider doing what is right?
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