A well-respected Israeli think-tank, the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), has proposed that Israel ask for a security treaty with the United States.
The proposal is in an editorial form and has no signatures attached to it. Therefore it isn’t clear if the proposal comes from the INSS director, Manuel Trajtenberg, or is the consensus of the organization’s research staff.
Such a defense treaty has long been opposed by most of Israel’s security establishment on the grounds it would inhibit the country’s freedom of action and tie Israel irrevocably to the United States.
INSS was originally founded inside Tel Aviv University. Its first head was Major-General Aharon Yariv. When founded it was known as the Center for Strategic Studies. The name was changed to the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, and in 2006 to the current name.
Its most dynamic head until 2021 was General Amos Yadlin. The current executive director, Manuel Trajtenberg, does not have a military or intelligence background. INSS is no longer part of Tel Aviv University.
Saudi treaty?
According to the policy proposal, the reason for Israel to pursue a defense treaty is ostensibly that Saudi Arabia is pursuing such a treaty and that without Israel also applying for one, the Saudi proposal won’t be accepted.
It is quite true that there is serious opposition to Saudi Arabia in the US Congress, mainly on the basis of human-rights complaints. A defense treaty would require a two-thirds vote of approval in the US Senate. Saudi Arabia on its own would fail to get Senate approval and “bundling” an Israeli treaty with a Saudi one is probably not possible, even though INSS somehow thinks it can be done.
It is by no means clear why Israel would want a defense treaty, given its strong need to have freedom of action toward Iran, which may soon start producing nuclear weapons. To begin with, despite many and sundry claims by the United States that it would never allow Iran to possess nuclear weapons, the truth of the matter is different.
The current administration, for example, is helping Iran move forward on the nuclear path by offering numerous concessions to the Iranian regime even before any agreement on Iran’s nuclear program is concluded. A good example is the findings of the International Atomic Energy Agency on Iranian violations of existing nuclear inspections, which the Joe Biden administration has simply swept under the rug.
For Israel the question is difficult in that it can hardly wait until Iran deploys nuclear weapons, at which point trying to eliminate them would potentially involve the use of nuclear weapons either by Iran or pre-emptively by Israel. This is what Benjamin Netanyahu mentioned at the UN, although his remarks were “walked back” by the Prime Minister’s Office.
It is hard to see what value a defense treaty would have in the context of Iran’s push for nuclear weapons and long-range missile delivery systems.
Similarly, it is hard to see how Saudi Arabia would benefit from a US defense treaty, since the US is unlikely to bomb Tehran to stop its nuclear-weapons buildup. A Saudi-US defense treaty would potentially help the kingdom if Iran directly attacked the country. But even when it has done so, as the attacks on the Abqaiq and Khurais oil installations that came directly from Iranian territory, Washington did nothing and said very little.
Of course the whole problem for Saudi Arabia gets complicated when Iran uses proxies to launch ballistic missiles, drones and cruise missiles on Saudi targets. Most of these originate in Yemen, some from Iraq. The US offers little help to combat such attacks.
There are other complications for Israel as well. Would a defense treaty apply to attacks by non-state actors such as Hezbollah, Hamas or Islamic Jihad, or attacks originating from the Palestinian West Bank? The US would never agree to a text that obliged it to come to Israel’s aid under a terrorist attack. In fact, the US response to terror attacks against Israel and Israeli citizens has always been subdued at best.
Presumably a defense treaty would protect Israel from a Russian attack, but a direct Russian attack is extremely unlikely. However, the Russians would see a defense treaty between the US and Israel as Israel taking sides in the bigger geo-strategic struggle between Washington and Moscow. This could encourage the Russians to step up arms supplies to Syria and Iran, something that does not serve Israel’s interests.
In practice Israel and Russia have found ways to cooperate and to try to avoid confrontation. Whether that will hold in the long run is an open question, especially as Russia starts supplying Iran with advanced weapons including the Su-35.
Weapons access
INSS makes the point that a defense treaty might facilitate defense-technology cooperation with the United States. In many ways Israel is a brain trust already for the United States and is able to pioneer in many areas important to US security.
For example, Israel’s Ballistic Missile Defense Organization is partnered with the US Missile Defense Agency and cooperates on air defenses including, most recently, exoatmospheric defense in the form of Arrow-4 development.
Israel is also rapidly developing sophisticated sensor-to-shooter technologies, advanced microelectronics and artificial intelligence.
These and other technologies are already sought after by the US Defense Department and by US defense companies, not to mention important US commercial companies including Intel, Microsoft, Google and many others.
There is no reason to think that a defense treaty would improve technology sharing or cooperation.
INSS says: “As an official ally, Israel’s access to advanced American weaponry and unique technologies would be guaranteed for the long term, thereby maintaining Israel’s qualitative military edge over time.”
Unfortunately, defense treaties do not guarantee or assure access to US weapons or unique technologies. Technology sharing is always a matter of national interest that is defined by time and circumstances.
Take the case of the F-35 stealth fighter. This is America’s fifth-generation fighter aircraft, stuffed with exotic technology. Lockheed, the US defense giant that manufactures the F-35, desperately wanted Israel to adopt the plane and not buy a new, advanced version of the F-15. Lockheed believed, correctly, that if Israel incorporated the F-35 as its top frontline fighter, other customers would gravitate to the F-35.
Lockheed was right. Lockheed, not the US, needed a defense treaty to do the deal, and in fact Israel got concessions on technology that exceed cooperative deals with major European and Japanese partners.
What isn’t clear is why INSS decided that Israel needs a defense treaty now. If it was to help out Saudi Arabia, there is no reason to believe it would do so.
There is little evidence that favors a US-Israel defense treaty, unless the real idea is to make Israel depend on the US for its future security. If that is the point, Israel should be wary of depending on US help. It has to defend itself.
In short, a US-Israel defense treaty is an untimely idea.
Stephen Bryen is a senior fellow at the Center for Security Policy and the Yorktown Institute. This article was originally published on his Substack, Weapons and Strategy. Asia Times is republishing it with permission.