Navigating Israel’s ship of state through the Biden storm

Right now, it seems that neither Israel nor the US’s Arab allies in the Persian Gulf can partner with the Biden administration to promote Washington’s regional policies.

By Caroline B. Glick, ISRAEL HAYOM 02-15-2021 11:43

In a media briefing Friday, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki refused to say whether the Biden views Israel as an ally.

Psaki’s behavior was easy to understand. Although Israel is America’s strongest and most reliable ally in the Middle East, Israel cannot follow where the Biden administration is now leading. President Joe Biden’s policy steps and foreign policy appointments since taking office have made it abundantly clear that his first priority is to return the US to the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.

The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action which was negotiated by Biden’s top advisors when they served with him in the Obama administration is not a non-proliferation agreement. It is a blueprint for Iran to achieve independent military nuclear capability and regional hegemony.

Neither Israel nor the US’s Arab allies in the Persian Gulf can partner with Biden and his team in advancing this policy. It puts them all in danger. This is the simple explanation for Biden’s refusal to date to speak to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and to other regional leaders. Quite simply, given his commitment to a policy that places their countries in jeopardy, Biden would prefer not to hear what they have to say.

Netanyahu adopted a three-pronged foreign policy when he was faced with a similar situation with Washington during the Obama presidency. After a four-year hiatus, the time has come to reinstate the policy.

The first component of that policy is a recognition that the US is irreplaceable. No other ally can provide Israel with the partnership that the US provides. That doesn’t mean that Israel’s government must bow and scrape before Biden and his advisors as they rush to empower Iran at Israel’s expense. On the contrary. Facing a hostile administration, Israel must unapologetically stand up for itself and defend its interests and rights.

As Israel does so, it must be mindful that even with the Democrats in control of the White House and both houses of Congress, the Democrats aren’t the only game in town. America is a huge, dynamic country. Moreover, not all Democrats are on board with Biden’s pro-Iran and anti-Israel Middle East policies. Israel has good friends at all levels of American politics and society in both parties. It must argue its positions and defend its actions to all of the relevant parties in US politics, media, and civil society.

Second, Israel needs to work with the US’s other allies whose views on Iran as closer to Israel’s than they are to the Biden administration. In the past, Netanyahu was able to develop a constructive dialogue on Iran and other issues with the Canadian and French governments. Today, the list of partners includes Greece, Cyprus, and Austria, among others.

Finally, Israel needs to expand and deepen its own alliance structure and diminish its strategic dependence on the US Israel is not the isolated, poor, and weak state it was fifty years ago. It is crucial for Israel to decrease, with the goal of ending the military aid it receives from the US and transition quickly from its status as client to partner in weapons and technology development.

Israel must expand its trade and strategic ties with its regional partners both within the framework of the Abraham Accords and outside of them.

Recognizing the Biden administration’s keenness to realign the US towards Iran, India has announced its plans to restore and expand its trade and defense ties with Iran. Israel should work to curb India’s enthusiasm. India, along with Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have all expanded their trade and defense ties with Israel over the past decade. And Israel must seek to develop and expand these ties still further while working with these governments to block rather than enable Iran’s nuclear and conventional empowerment.

The US will remain Israel’s most powerful and important ally, regardless of the policies of any specific administration because the interests and values that join Americans and Israelis are so wide and deep.

At the same time, Israel cannot concede either its sovereignty or its core interests to satisfy an administration committed to policies that harm both. With a foreign policy based on a commitment to maintaining the US-Israel alliance, a deep understanding of American politics and society; prudent coordination with NATO members and other key states; and expansion of Israel’s strategic and economic regional partnerships and ties in Asia, Israel will be capable of handling what awaits it in Washington.

February 15, 2021 | 3 Comments »

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  1. Is Israel still a U.S. ally? The answer was ‘no’
    By World Tribune on February 15, 2021
    FPI / February 15, 2021

    “By David Isaac, World Israel News”There are at least 42 ways to say “yes” in English. Biden’s White House press secretary chose none of them. That’s because the answer was “no.”

    “Does the administration still consider the Saudis and the Israelis important allies?”
    White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki. / Video Image

    The question was simple enough, but at last Friday’s press briefing, Jen Psaki couldn’t get the appropriate one-syllable answer to form on her lips, which is incredible, because even if you plan to shaft Israel at every turn, you still say, “Of course it is!” Then you throw out the well-worn cliches like, “unbreakable,” “unshakeable,” and “special relationship.”

    Psaki did none of that, so she gets credit for being honest, if turgidly so. She said, instead:

    “Well, you know, again, I think we — there are ongoing processes and internal interagency processes — one that we, I think, confirmed an interagency meeting just last week — to discuss a range of issues in the Middle East. We’re — we’ve only been here three and a half weeks, and I think I’m going to let those policy processes see themselves through before we give, kind of, a complete laydown of what our national security approaches will be to a range of issues.”

    She didn’t even circle back…”

    https://www.worldtribune.com/is-israel-still-a-u-s-ally-the-answer-was-no/

  2. With an extremely hostile US administration hell-bent on abandoning allies and aligning with the terror regime in Teheran, how exactly does one describe America as Israel’s most important ally? The US is no longer any kind of ally and I’m sure PM Netanyahu understands that. The interests of Israel and the US no longer coincide. That’s just life.