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It was a session replete with superlatives when the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs Andrew J. Shapiro spelled out in unprecedented detail the Obama administration's approach to US-Israel security cooperation, reassuring the Israelis that they were committed to "preserving [Israel's] qualitative military edge". The well-attended event, held at the Brookings Saban Centre founded by a wealthy Egyptian Jew, seemed to serve as an obvious attempt by the administration to reassure Israelis that President Barack Obama, whose popularity in Israel is currently very low (about 10 per cent), means well in his lethargic bid to solve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Shapiro, a onetime senior research assistant at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a pro-Israeli think-tank, and for eight years foreign affairs and defence adviser to Hillary Clinton before she was named secretary of state, reminded his audience of Clinton's "deep sense of pride in being a strong voice for Israel". At the packed session he faced some tough questioning but was evasive in his responses. For example, he was asked why Israel would choose to make any concessions when it had all it needed from the US, or why Obama's popularity remains very low despite the amazing favours he has bestowed on Israel, often described by Shapiro as "unprecedented". One woman shot back at Shapiro that he sounded more like "an agent of the Israeli government than a US representative", adding that the "special relationship" with Israel "is very dangerous", a point that surprisingly prompted some cheering in the audience. Extensive assistance Among the highlights of Shapiro's remarks were: • Despite these "challenging budgetary times", the Obama administration has requested from Congress $2.775 billion (Dh10.2 billion) in security assistance funding specifically for Israel, "the largest such request in US history". He promised that "this administration will continue to honour this 10-year, $30 billion commitment in future fiscal years". • "Israel is a vital ally and a cornerstone of our regional security commitments [and] US support for Israel's security is much more than a simple act of friendship. We are fully committed to Israel's security because it enhances our own national security ..." • US bolstering of Israel's security has included the sale of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, joint training exercises, research and development, and "the funding of the Iron Dome missile defence system developed [jointly with Israel] to answer the threat of medium-ranged rockets being fired by both Hamas and Hezbollah". • "A testament to our special security relations [is] that each year Israel accounts for just over 50 per cent of US security assistance funding distributed through the Foreign Military Financing programme ... The total FMF account is $5 billion annually and is distributed among 70 countries." • "Israel is the only country authorised to set aside one quarter of its FMF funding for offshore procurements [and] this exception provides a significant boost for Israel's domestic defence industry, [and] helps them to develop indigenous production capacity ..." • "Israel-origin equipment deployed on Iraqi and Afghan battlefields [is] protecting American troops every day [and] we are also working closely ... to enhance our shared security, from efforts to shut down the vast network of tunnels being used to rearm Hamas, to tacking and combating terrorist financing, to countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction ..." Of course, Shapiro was only detailing what Obama had said earlier this month: "The United States is committed to Israel's security. We are committed to that special bond, and we are going to do what's required to back that up, not just with words but with actions". But what was sorely missing from all this one-sidedness was any discussion of whether the 50-year-old US policy of maintaining "a strong and secure" Israel has brought the Middle East any closer to peace or served US national and strategic interests. In the end, it may turn out that this American largesse will not be rewarded — certainly not without any arm-twisting in the next few months when and if direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians resume. George Hishmeh is a Washington-based columnist. He can be contacted at ghishmeh@gulfnews.com.
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