Of course, the million dollar question is if US support for Israel will continue forever. For instance, Barack Obama tried hard to stop Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. His relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu was also very cold. However, Israel and AIPAC then put pressure on Obama through their close friends in Congress. And now Donald Trump has placed the US Embassy in Jerusalem, which both Palestinians and Jews want as a capital, a move that greatly angered the Arabs and America’s European allies, as well as its enemies, but, of course, Israel.
The
Israeli-American Relationship
David Ben Gurion
was the first person to proclaim a Jewish state in 2000 years on May 14,
1948. He was Chairman of the Jewish Agency, an organization established
in 1929 with the aim to “ensure that every Jewish person feels an unbreakable bond to one another and to Israel no matter
where they live in the world”. Ben Gurion also
served as Israel’s first Prime Minister.
Immediately after
the British
withdrawal, fighting broke out between Arabs and Jews. Egypt also invaded
Israel but, despite
all that, the Jews celebrated the birth of their new nation, recognised first and foremost by the USA.
However, the idea
of a free Jewish state was not born in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem, the modern and
ancient capitals of the Jews. Its roots were planted long before as part of the
Zionism movement
in the Russian Empire. In 1896, a Jewish-Austrian journalist, Theodor Herzl,
asked for a state to protect Jews from anti-Semitism. Palestine, the place chosen by the
Jews for a homeland, was then controlled by the Ottomans (or Turkish sultans). This
movement
has ever since been called Zionism and is now linked to nationalist Israeli politics!
After the Russian
Revolution in 1917, eastern European and Russian Jews began to immigrate to
Palestine where a few thousand had arrived before and insisted on using Hebrew, the
ancient Jewish language used in their holy book, the Torah. During the First
World War, the Ottomans lost Palestine to Britain. The Balfour Declaration,
written by the British and named after the British Prime Minister of the time,
shows a powerful interest in establishing a Jewish homeland in Palestine and
was also accepted by the League of Nations, the ancestor of the United Nations, in
1922.
Yet the British
continued to rule over Palestine from 1920 to 1930 because of the Arabs’ opposition
to a
Jewish land there. After all, they were the people already living in
the region. In 1929, Arabs and Jews started fighting openly in Palestine, so
Britain had to
limit Jewish immigration to pacify the Arabs.
As a result of the
Holocaust,
however, which caused the deaths
of millions of Jews in Europe, many of them entered Palestine illegally
during World War II. Radical Jewish
groups thought the British were working against their interests and established
several extremist terrorist groups. But six million Jews had been murdered by
Hitler’s Nazis between the mid-1930s and the end of the Second World War in
1945 and there was huge sympathy for them. So, the USA took up the Zionist cause in the
United Nations in
a bid to partition Palestine but the organization was unable to find
any practical solution. The Jews possessed more than half of the land there
although they were far less than half of the population.
The Palestinians
fought them, backed
by other Arab countries, but the Jews were able to get their UN-allocated
land as well as some other Arab territory. On May 14, 1948, with the withdrawal of
Britain’s troops, Israel was proclaimed a state. The next day, Arab countries
including Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq invaded Israel, but although
the new state had less equipment and weapons, Israel not only managed to fight
off the Arabs but also seized key territories, like Galilee, the
Palestinian Coast, and the western section of Jerusalem.
US President Harry
Truman was the first world leader to recognize
Israel. But even so, the new state did not always have good relations with the
United States. There is evidence of this during the invasion of Egypt in 1956, when
Israel seized part
of Egypt's Sinai and Gaza and the United States threatened to cancel financial
assistance. Israel’s secret nuclear
project is another example of the USA going against the new state’s
plans.
But, after 1967,
the relations between the United States and Israel began to grow closer. During
the Arab-Israeli war in
1973, the Americans supported Israel. This decision guaranteed a strong
relationship between the two countries. At that time, US presidents and diplomats realized that Israel
could be an effective weapon in decreasing Soviet Russian influence in the Middle
East.
After the Cold War,
the United States was active in 'resolving' various conflicts and problems in the region.
The main reason was to bring the oil market under their own control. Of course,
a peaceful, stable
region meant a continuous supply of oil, while fighting sent prices rocketing.
So, the United States presented itself as the 'guarantor' of regional stability in
the Middle East at that time.
Countries like
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Jordan, Egypt, and Israel agreed
to this American ‘assistance’ because it allowed them to influence Middle Eastern
politics. But others, such as Iran, Syria and Iraq, did not join hands
with the US, which chose Israel to build military bases in the region to defend
its interests there.
The United States
then took on
the responsibility of building bridges between Palestine and Israel, so that a
lasting peace could be reached. Over the last few decades, every US president
has has tried to reconcile Israel with Palestine. However, American support for
peace has always been more in favour of Tel Aviv.
The United States does
not support Israel only because of its foreign policy and Middle East strategy
though. Israel has been a major issue in US domestic politics since the eighties
because most Americans are sympathetic to the Israelis – about 70 % according
to recent surveys. But why do US citizens support Israel? One of the major
reasons is shared values of democracy and the Israeli liking for the European
culture, fashion and way of life. Christian
religious organizations are also strongly in favour of the Jewish state
and Americans are, by and large, believers in the Christian faith.
Perhaps ironically,
there is some disagreement among Jews though. For example, 65% of America's Jews are against
Israel's new settlements
in the West Bank while Christians are positive about them. Again, Jews who are
younger than do not consider themselves as Zionists.
And then there is
another factor:
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) with its aim of brining US
and Israel always closer. Although AIPAC is not a political organization – or
says it isn’t – it has a major impact on deciding US foreign policy. How does it
manage this?
AIPAC spends a lot
of money on achieving
its goals. It does not directly finance any party but supports its preferred candidates as
individuals, especially Republicans. AIPAC has a special Congress Club, where
each member gives a minimum of $5,000 every election. And this money is spent
on helping pro-Israeli
politicians. Of course, if the AIPAC candidates win seats in the Senate or Congress,
they influence policies. Although it is not known how much money AIPAC spends overall,
they do have members who give from one million dollars to hundreds of millions.
The relationship
between the United States and Israel is also known as one of the most expensive
in the world. Just as Israel spends a lot of money to make an impact in the United States,
so does the United States in Israel. The United States signed a free trade
agreement with Israel in 1985 and, ever since then, business between
the two countries has increased considerably.
Of course, the
million dollar question is if US support for Israel will continue forever. For
instance, Barack Obama tried hard to stop Israeli settlements in the occupied West
Bank and Gaza. His relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu was also
very cold. However, Israel and AIPAC then put pressure on Obama through their close friends
in Congress. And now Donald Trump has placed the US Embassy in Jerusalem, which
both Palestinians and Jews want as a capital, a move that greatly angered the
Arabs and America’s European allies, as well as its enemies, but, of course,
Israel.
We will just have
to wait and see what happens in the future.