Michal Lando,As Israel nears its 60th anniversary, the partnership
between the Jewish state and America remains a "fundamental conviction"
of the American public, according to former US secretary of state Henry
Kissinger.
"The partnership is changing because the conditions are changing,"
Kissinger told The Jerusalem Post over the weekend. "In the early years
it was a question of states interacting with each other, and now it is
part of a whole global situation."
But these changes, Kissinger said, had not weakened America's
conviction that support for Israel is in the American national
interest.
"I think the relationship remains essential," said Kissinger. "I think
there is a fundamental conviction that the security of Israel is in the
American national interest. That has not changed."
Kissinger, along with every other living former secretary of state, has
signed on as a vice-chair of the National Committee for Israel 60,
which will coordinate events to celebrate Israel's anniversary.
Co-chairing the national commemoration are former American presidents
George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
The involvement of the former presidents and secretaries of state sent
a strong and reassuring message of the continued stability and growing
strength of the bonds between the two countries, said Malcolm Hoenlein,
executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations, which is spearheading the committee.
"No matter what dips and valleys, the record is of 60 years of
remarkable friendship," said Hoenlein. "Support of the American people
is at an all-time high now."
The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy by John Mearsheimer and Stephen
Walt, which came out last year and argued that American support for
Israel had jeopardized not only US security but that of much of the
rest of the world, had not had "any great impact on the general
public," Kissinger said. "The American public continues to support the
relations [between the two countries], and resistance to any threat to
the survival of Israel."
Asked whether the theory of Mutually Assured Destruction - which during
the Cold War was seen as helping to prevent any direct full-scale
conflicts between the United States and the Soviet Union as they
engaged in smaller proxy wars around the world - could be applied to
Iran, Kissinger said: "The American government is committed to
preventing Iran from getting nuclear weapons, and I strongly support
that position. I don't want to speculate what would happen if they do
get nuclear weapons, because that should not happen."
Kissinger, who used his skills at conflict management to negotiate the
end of the 1973 Yom Kippur War and helped set the stage for the
Israel-Egypt peace treaty, said reaching such accommodations "is more
difficult if you have religious-based opponents than state-based
opponents."
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Kissinger: US public still committed to Israel
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