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Office of Terje Rod-Larnena September 9 update
9 September, 2012
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Article 1.
The Washington Institute
Asset Test: How the United States Benefits from Its Alliance with Israel
(Executive Summery)
Michael Eisenstadt and
David Pollock
Article 2.
BBC
Saudi Arabia's al-Qaeda challenge
Gerald Butt
Article 3.
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Al-Ahram Weekly
Peace treaty must be revised
Galal
Nassar
Article 4.
Washington Post
A more religious world
David Ignatius
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Article 1.
The Washington Institute
Asset Test: How the United States Benefits from Its Alliance with Israel
(Executive Summery)
Michael Eisenstadt
and David Pollock
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September 2012 -- THE U.S.-ISRAEL B
special relationship has tradiB-tionally been defined in terms of a moral obligaB-tion,
shared values, and common interests. DurB-ing the Cold War, Israel also came to be
seen as a strategic asset that served as a bulwark against Soviet influence and a
counter to radical Arab nationalism. U.S. military assistance to Israel conB-tributed to
peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, and has deterred the outbreak of major interstate
Arab-Israeli conflicts since 1982. The U.S.-Israel relationship likewise has helped
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spur closer U.S.- Arab ties ever since the 1973 war, because most Arabs have
believed that only the United States could deliver the Israeli concessions that they
required for a peace agreement. Yet since the end of the Cold War, some in the United
Statesbal°
Israethhave preferred not to discuss the details of the security relationship, at least in
public, because it was feared that it would disrupt U.S. cooperation with Arab and
Muslim allies. As a result, many of the benefits of U.S.-Israel security cooperation
have gone unrecognized.
A decade after 9/11, however, al-Qaeda is a fragB-mented, weakened organization.
And while the war on al-Qaeda and its affiliates is far from over, the
United States faces a changed, more complex security environment. It is defined not
only by the bhardbintelligence and counterterrorB-ism communities and for the U.S.
military. It is a leader in the development of technologies that are transforming the face
of modern warfare, includB-ing cyber systems, robotics, rocket/missile defenses,
battlefield ISR, advanced munitions, passive and active defenses for armored vehicles,
and mini-satellites. And Israeli innovations in a number of civilian areasbIT. water conservation
and managegrment high-tech agriculture. medical R&D, cleara-techlrenewable
energy' and saciatairasillancab have the potential to help the United States meet many of the
bsoftb
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