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Israel and the U.S.: 40 Years of Manna in the Wilderness
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14619 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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5 / 1988 |
2,558 Words |
| Author
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Moshe Zak Moshe Zak, editor emeritus and editorial page columnist for
the Ma'ariv, a daily in Tel-Aviv, Israel, is currently doing
research on Israeli-Jordanian relations. He has published two
books in Hebrew: Israel and the Superpower Game in the Middle-
East (1986) and Forty Years' Dialogue with Moscow (1988). |
"Even though Pakistan has a defense treaty with the United States, we didn't receive one rifle from America during the India-Pakistan War. You, on the other hand, have no formal treaty, yet there was a massive arms airlift to you during the 1973 war." This was the thrust of a complaint that the Pakistan Prime Minister Ali Zulfikar Bhutto made to Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban during a chance meeting at the UN.
Indeed, to this day there is no written defense treaty between Israel and the United States. Of course, over the years there have been suggestions for the signing of a written treaty with the United States that would ensure the security of Israel and its borders. In the fifties, when Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was setting up a network of defense alliances between the United States and the countries of the Free World, Israel tried to join the Western alliances, but was not accepted. Senator Fulbright proposed the "deal" that Israel withdraw from the territories in return for an American guarantee of security. President Jimmy Carter at one time proposed a similar idea to Prime Minister Menachem Begin. Israel, apparently, was more convinced by the arguments of Dr. Henry Kissinger and believed that a formal agreement would be of little weight. Allegedly, Kissinger had asked "What would you do with it if attacked? Turn to the International Court of Justice in the Hague to force the United States to intervene militarily on your behalf?" He also reminded Israel that "during the Yom Kippur War you received large amounts of aid, in spite of the absence of a written defense treaty between Israel and the United States."
Abba Eban and Ali Bhutto never met again, but the sorry end of the Pakistani leader holds the key to
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