Two major arms sales were announced over the weekend. First, the US
announced that it is planning to sell Saudi Arabia $20 billion in
advanced weapons systems, including Joint Direct Attack Munition kits
or JDAMs that are capable of transforming regular gravitational bombs
into precision-guided "smart" weapons.
Largely in an attempt to neutralize Congressional opposition to the
proposed sale, the Bush administration also announced that it plans to
increase annual military assistance to Israel by some 25 percent next
year and that it hopes that next year's increase in assistance will be
maintained by the next administration.
The second arms sale was the reported Russian agreement to sell Iran
250 advanced long-ranged Sukhoi-30 fighter jets and aerial fuel tankers
capable of extending the jets' range by thousands of kilometers.
Russia's massive armament of Iran in this and in previous sales over
the past two years make clear that from Russia's perspective, all
threats to US interests, including Shi'ite expansionism, work to
Moscow's advantage.
ON THE face of it, these contrasting US and Russian announcements seem
to signal that geopolitics have reverted to the Cold War model of two
superpowers competing for global power by, among other things,
assisting their proxies in fighting one another. Yet, today the
situation is not the same as it was before.
Today, the US finds itself competing not only against an emergent
Russia, but against Iran, and the Shi'ite expansionism it advances.
Moreover, it finds itself under attack from Sunni jihadism, which is
incubated and financed by Saudi Arabia, America's primary ally in the
Persian Gulf.
The US's proposed arms sale to Saudi Arabia has raised pointed
criticism in Israel and among Israel's supporters in the US. As senior
defense officials told The Jerusalem Post Monday, the JDAM sale to
Saudi Arabia constitutes a strategic threat to Israel which has no way
of defending itself against JDAM capabilities.
To assess the reasonableness of Israel's opposition to the proposed
sale, and to understand the sale's significance against the background
of emerging regional and global threats to US national security
interests, it is worthwhile to revisit US actions toward Israel and
Saudi Arabia during the Cold War when checking Soviet expansion
worldwide was the main goal of US foreign policy.
THE US held Israel at arms length until after its stunning victory
against Soviet clients Egypt and Syria in the 1967 Six Day War. In the
aftermath of Israel's victory, the US realized that Israel was a
natural ally in checking Soviet power in the Middle East. As a result,
in 1968 it began providing Israel with political and military aid. This
policy paid off in spades in the 1973 Yom Kippur War and in the 1982
Lebanon War when the IDF handily beat the Soviets' proxy armies.
Indeed, from the US perspective, there was no downside to supporting
Israel. Israel's patent lack of expansionist ambitions ensured that the
US would suffer no ancillary blowback for its support.
The US-Israel alliance's central weakness was US's perception of Saudi
Arabia as its strategic ally. This weakness came to the fore most
prominently in 1981 with the Reagan administration's decision to sell
AWACs spy planes to the Saudis. As is the case with the US's current
proposed arms sale to the Saudis, back then Israel perceived the AWACs
sale as a strategic threat to its national security. Yet, since
checking Soviet expansionism and not securing Israel was the US's
primary strategic aim, and since the US perceived Saudi Arabia as an
ally against Soviet expansionism, the Reagan administration pushed the
sale forward against Israel's strenuous objections.
Original
Source
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America's best friends The Saudis
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