MOBILE DEVICES
Free Headline Alerts     
Worldwide Web WorldTribune.com

  breaking... 


Monday, April 5, 2010    

U.S. ex-officers warn of decline in Israel ties

WASHINGTON — Scores of senior retired U.S. officers have warned of the decline in American strategic cooperation with Israel.   

Close to 50 generals and admirals have signed a letter that termed Israel a key element in U.S. global strategy. In a letter organized by the Washington-based Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), the retired officers, who have toured Israel, said the Jewish state was highly important to U.S. policy in the Middle East and Mediterranean region.

"We brought with us our decades of military experience and, following unrestricted access to Israel's civilian and military leaders, came away with the unswerving belief that the security of the State of Israel is a matter of great importance to the United States and its policy in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean," the letter, released on April 2, read. "A strong, secure Israel is an asset upon which American military planners and political leaders can rely."


Also In This Edition


JINSA said the letter was organized after an assessment by U.S. Central Command that relations with Israel were harming Washington's efforts to form alliances with Arab and Muslim countries. In March, Vice President Joseph Biden was quoted as telling Israeli leaders that their policies, including Jewish construction in Jerusalem, were endangering U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"While we recognize, as [Centcom chief] Gen. [David] Petraeus did, that American support for Israel is used by our adversaries to foment anti-Americanism, we also recognize that the important countries of the region won't like us any better if we shed Israel as an ally," JINSA said. "They will wonder how quickly we will shed them when they are inconvenient."

JINSA has been lobbying the Defense Department and U.S. military regarding Israel since the early 1980s. In January 2010, the organization released a report that asserted that Washington was denying Jerusalem — the largest recipient of U.S. military aid — a range of weapons in what could harm Israel's military superiority over its Arab neighbors.

The letter, planned for publication in major U.S. newspapers, quoted the generals and admirals as expressing "grave concern" over tension between Jerusalem and Washington. The retired senior officers said they could not rule out the prospect that "political differences may be allowed to outweigh our larger mutual interests."

The admirals and generals said Israel and the United States have engaged in defense and military cooperation at all levels. The letter cited training, law enforcement, counter-insurgency as well as research and development.

The United States would require Israeli cooperation for a range of threats, the officers said. They said this would include nonconventional and ballistic missile proliferation as well as counter-insurgency operations.

"As American defense professionals, we view events in the Middle East through the prism of American security interests," the letter said. "In the Middle East, a volatile region so vital to U.S. interests, it would be foolish to disengage — or denigrate — an ally such as Israel."



About Us     l    Contact Us     l    Geostrategy-Direct.com     l    East-Asia-Intel.com
Copyright © 2010    East West Services, Inc.    All rights reserved.