Shared Interests Bind U.S., Israel Continued from Page L-1 beginning in the 1950's, Israel had to rely on European suppliers for its military defense until 1962. Even then, Israel had to purchase the U.S.-made anti-aircraft missiles; it was not a form of military aid. In fact, in the 1948 to 1967 period, U.S. foreign policy was decidedly cool toward Israel and favorable toward the Arabs. For example, the United States refrained from challenging Arab violations condemning Israel for responding to Arab provocation, and pressured Israel to withdraw from the Sinai in 1957. It was not until 1967, after France refused to sell aircraft to Israel, that the United States agreed to fill the defense gap. In 1973, when Israel was being battered by Arab armies on all fronts, the United States sent an airlift that helped Israel withstand and reverse the massive attack. The late 1970s and 1980s were marked by both intensive diplomatic efforts by the United States to establish peaceful relations between Israel and the Arab nations, and a much closer military and political alliance between the United States and Israel. In fact, these two trends went hand in hand: to the extent that the Arab nations perceived American support for Israel to be solid, they understood that further aggression against Israel would damage those nations' ties to the United States. In the aftermath of the U.S.- sponsored Camp David Accords and the Israel-Egypt peace treaty, U.S. aid to Israel climbed to $3 billion annually, $1.2 billion of which is used to help Israel repay prior loans from the United States and $1.8 billion enables Israel to make purchases from the American defense industry. However, the 1967 and 1973 wars sowed the seeds of strain between the two nations, over the issue of Israel's control of the territories in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza. The United States was particularly upset by Israel's annexation of the Golan Heights and of East Jerusalem. Every .American peace proposal since al/2 affth7 THE JEWISH NEWS 27676 Franklin Road Southfield, Michigan 48034 May 10, 1991 Associate Publisher Arthur M. Horwitz Jewish Experiences for Families Adviser Harlene W. Appelman L 2 - FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1991 1967 has included eventual Israeli withdrawal from the territories. As of the early 1990s the U.S.- Israel relationship continues to contain both encouraging and distressing elements. On one hand, despite pressures from many quarters to reduce foreign aid (of which Israel is the largest recipient), the form and level of aid have been enlarged. The United States now cooperates with Israel in many projects involving strategic cooperation which are of direct benefit to Israel (and the United States, too). The United States has also agreed to guarantee bank loans that Israel needs to resettle and house the hundreds of thousands of Soviet olim. On the other hand, following the American-led victory against Iraq, the United States is attempting to use its increased leverage to pressure Israel in the current peace process. Israel's dependence on American foreign aid provides the United States with an implied threat should Israel choose to ignore American wishes. The Source of American Support for Israel As has occurred during previous periods of strain, the two nations will likely patch up their differences before risking a divorce. The reasons go well beyond Israel's dependence on the United States. American support for Israel hinges on basic, enduring factors, deeply embedded within the belief system of the American public. Americans feel a deep sense of affinity with the land and people of Israel. We and our fellow American citizens see Israel as a nation of democratic values, a nation committed to a sense of progress that we share, and a nation embodying the pioneer spirit that was so integral to America's development. America's sense of justice and morality has also triggered public support for Israel as the refuge from the Holocaust and from religious persecution in the Arab world, Soviet Union, Ethiopia and elsewhere. America's Christian majority, particularly those who cherish the Five Books of Moses, also value Israel as the land of the Bible. For many Christians, American support for Israel is intimately connected to their religious beliefs, and these feelings are reinforced by trips to Israel that include visits to the holy places of the Bible. While not as deeply rooted as the above-mentioned factors, a strategic alliance has undergirded U.S.-Israel relations during the past decade. The alliance was established to counter Soviet influence in the Middle East and Arab terrorism against U.S. targets. As the Soviet Union's threat diminishes and given America's cooperation with its former enemies Syria and Iran in the defeat of the third troublemaker, Iraq, the strategic alliance rationale may lose significance in the years to come. We who want Israel to flourish need to do all we can to help strengthen and preserve the U.S.- te, 0 ',-- ;,,:."-- '-' -.. -- Israel linkage. However, that linkage hinges on the willingness and ability of Israel's advocates to remind other Americans in general and U.S. leaders in particular about the underlying basis of the U.S.-Israel bond. David Gad-Had is executive director of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. lc ry e-....„. e. . e /..,.... 4 -. 1-. e..., ;„; e 1/ y P - e 1.•,-. ,,.../ .e .,r fe /.., i i'liTi7liVirie7 III Yil C.171(ADA:Viliffk lifel /- ; -r- ;;ee-ee . / ex ; t?- " , e/ / „ / . /// 4 .4, --*/,'- ■ 14f. i erjy.-,-, .: re /7 * / ;r* P i ); i , ,re,e,- .r., , r..e . ffe et . e e rV " artt::" ,,.e•:.,..t:!p'ei:F:.i:Kt ..r :, S -''''; !i''l . ' .'" 'IiIr:I: rr:'' , ii':ii 4aeuci '':iF,':":i:P: ;•'.':: g:,ar'•: Famous Facts '1 b Y"'4t:,' l t t •4f!• t. ""'' ' ; °:' s' Q. Which state of the Union was the last to accord full political rights to Jews? A. The Constitution of the United States, formulated by brilliant and original thinkers like James Madison and Benjamin Franklin, had assured full political rights for all citizens regardless of creed. However, many individual state governments continued long- standing religious practices by favoring Protestants over Catholics, Unitarians, dissenters, freethinkers and Jews. The separation of church and state was not as widely accepted and as natural in the eighteenth century as it would become later. The new states never restricted the practice of religions, nor did they refuse any citizen the right to vote. However, the right to hold office was often limited. New Hampshire, one of the original thirteen states, did not allow non- Protestants to hold high office until 1876. The prejudice was in practicality directed against Catholics more than Jews, of whom there were never more than a handful. However, well into the twentieth century, a clause in the New Hampshire constitution still ordered that "every denomination of Christians . . . (our italics) shall be equally under protection of the law." Compiled by Dr. Matthew and Thomas Schwartz.