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Amid Middle East Peace Deals, Israel and the US Reassert Commitment to Israel’s ‘Qualitative Military Edge’

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October 23, 2020
U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, left, signs a declaration guaranteeing Israel’s qualitative military edge with Israel Defense Minister Benny Gantz at the Pentagon in Washington DC on October 22, 2020. (U.S. Department of Defense)

(JTA) — The United States’ commitment to Israel’s “qualitative military edge” — or having the strongest armed forces in the Middle East — is longstanding and baked into the countries’ relationship, and into US law.

But the Pentagon’s proposed sale of advanced combat aircraft to the United Arab Emirates has stirred concerns among supporters of Israel that that commitment could be at risk.

So it was significant that Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz and Mike Esper, the US secretary of defense, on Thursday reasserted the United States’ commitment to maintaining Israel’s edge in a declaration signed jointly Thursday in Washington, D.C.

Gantz and Esper posed for photos after signing the declaration, and in his remarks, Gantz alluded to the underlying reason for the appearance: Israel is opposed to the sale of F-35 stealth fighters to the United Arab Emirates, even though the Trump administration brokered a normalization deal last month between the two countries.

Israeli leaders are seeking affirmations that if the sale goes through, there will be guarantees that the aircraft do not challenge Israel’s regional preeminence. The Trump administration says the UAE needs the planes to deter the enemy the Emirates shares with Israel: Iran.

“Over the last few weeks, you and I led, together with other people, very good and very important discussions that reassure the bipartisan commitment to Israel’s QME,” Gantz said. “I want to thank you and your people, and the American administration, for supporting it. Now that we are entering an era of positive normalization processes in the Middle East, which actually can face an aggressive Iran across the region, this ability of continued cooperation is so very important.”

Democrats in Congress have introduced legislation that would allow Israel a say on the U.S. sale of military hardware to the Middle East.

Consolidation of the normalization deals between Israel and the UAE and Israel and Bahrain, called the Abraham Accords, are continuing apace. Vast majorities of lawmakers in both chambers of Congress have agreed to cosponsor non-binding resolutions praising the deals. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee lobbied for the resolutions.

Direct flights from Israel to both countries have commenced, and there was a direct flight this week from Israel to Sudan, which President Donald Trump has said may be the next country to normalize relations with Israel. The United Arab Emirates and Israel have agreed to allow citizens to fly between their countries without prior visas.

The United Arab Emirates, the United States and Israel jointly announced a plan called the Abraham Fund that would raise $3 billion from the private sector for investment in the Middle East.

On Monday, delegations of top officials from Israel and the United States met in Bahrain to sign joint Israel-Bahrain agreements on economic and trade cooperation, air services, agriculture, telecommunications and postal services, visas, financial services. Bahrain was set Thursday to sign a memorandum of understanding with the United States on combating anti-Semitism.

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