Why Israel needs to be more self-reliant
0 Comments Published by Avi Green on Tuesday, November 25, 2025 at 1:01 PM.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently denied a report that Israel is seeking a new 20-year commitment of military aid from Washington, insisting that “I want to make our arms industry independent.” Israel, which received some $17.9 billion in defense assistance from the United States during the course of the Gaza war, is one of the most technologically innovative and capable military powers in the world. It can and should achieve self-sufficiency. It’s long past time for Jerusalem to decline additional financial support from Uncle Sam.While it's good that representatives on the right made sure to address the Carlson/Fuentes scandal, Israel obviously shouldn't rely heavily on supplies from any country, no matter their ideologies and/or politics. So of course it's time for the country to start seriously proving it can be self-sufficient when it comes to defense development as well. And then, foreign taxpayers will have less to complain about.
Israel has been under assault from the Arab world (and, more lately, Iran) since its inception. Dwarfed by the wealth and size of its enemies, it has nonetheless managed to dominate them — at enormous cost in Israeli lives and treasure. After the 1967 Six-Day War — following decades during which the United States had done little to nothing to support the Jewish state — U.S. military assistance to Israel rose. It skyrocketed after the 1978 Camp David Accords and the prospect these agreements offered for a wider peace in the Middle East. By 2000, Congress was appropriating almost $2 billion a year in Foreign Military Financing and almost $1 billion more in Economic Support Funds for Israel. And though this economic support ended in 2008, the military funds kept increasing. In 2016, recognizing the threat from Iran, the Obama administration sought to mitigate Israeli objections to its prized Iran nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, by committing $3.8 billion per annum in Foreign Military Financing for Israel through 2028.
But the Israel of yesteryear bears almost no relationship to the Jewish state of 2025. In 1960, the Bank of Israel put per capita income at a meager $1,229. By 2021, even in the midst of Covid, Israeli income had jumped to $43,689 per capita, ranking in the global top 20 richest countries, ahead of Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Israel is regularly ranked as the second-richest country in the Middle East. The deeper issue with U.S. taxpayer-funded assistance to Israel, however, is that it has become a cudgel. As early as the Nixon administration, the White House used military aid to compel changes in Israeli behavior. Threatening to deny assistance became a regular feature of Democratic as well as Republican administrations that sought to protest Israeli policies. The culmination of this approach came with President Joe Biden’s decision to withhold munitions from Israel at the height of its latest war with Hamas, following October 7, 2023.
Nor are Israel’s political challenges in the United States confined to the left. Although 55 percent of Republicans still view the Israeli government favorably, according to a recent Pew poll, support is plummeting among Gen Z and younger conservatives. The recent controversy sparked by Tucker Carlson’s decision to platform neo-Nazi “groyper” Nick Fuentes — and the subsequent defense of Carlson by the president of the once-Reaganite Heritage Foundation — underscores a widening generational divide over Israel on the right. And to a significant degree, this traces back to America’s continuing subsidization of Israel.
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