Blank-Check Aid To Israel Costs U.S. Tax
Payers $10 Billion
Congress skillfully gives Israel $10 billion a year to expand its brutal
occupation of Palestinian lands in a manner that hides the amount from
taxpayers.
Exclusive
to American Free Press
By James P.
Tucker Jr.
“U.S. aid to Israel has some unique aspects, such
as loans with repayment waived, or a pledge to provide Israel with economic
assistance equal to the amount Israel owes the United States for previous
loans,” says a Library of Congress “briefing paper.”
This paper, Israel: U.S. Foreign Assistance, was
prepared by the library’s Congressional Research Service in April and is
available to all congressmen. It confirms assessments made previously by American
Free Press that blank-check aid to Israel costs taxpayers $10 billion a
year.
“Israel also receives special benefits that may
not be available to other countries, such as the use of U.S. military
assistance for research and development in the United States, the use of U.S.
military assistance for military purchases in Israel, or receiving all of its assistance
in the first 30 days of the fiscal year rather than in three or four
installments as other countries do,” the report said.
Because, in the age of deficits, the United States
has to borrow the money it gives Israel in one chunk at the start of the fiscal
year, taxpayers are paying interest on all the money given Israel for the
entire year.
These revelations come as Israel is demanding $12
billion—in addition to all other aid—because tourism is down dramatically and
its economy is in shambles. The traditional celebrations of Christmas and
Easter attracted fewer believers because they feared a premature trip to heaven
in the war-ravaged land.
Israel is also asking for more money in Bush’s
“road map” to peace in the Middle East, which was unveiled after Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat named Mahmoud Abbas to the new office of prime minister.
Israelis are unhappy with the road map because it
requires withdrawal from part of the occupied territories. So they are asking
for money to finance the withdrawal. The United States finances Israel’s war
machine so it can invade and occupy Palestinian lands. Now, the United States
is being asked for money to pay for withdrawing from part of those lands.
The United States and Israel hope they have a
patsy in Abbas, a close associate of Arafat who has little support from
ordinary Palestinians. But Abbas said on April 28 he would not visit foreign
capitals until Israel allows Arafat to travel freely again.
Though Arafat receives support from Europe, many
Palestinians believe he is ineffective and corrupt.
President Bush said he would invite Abbas, who
dresses in business suits and speaks English, to the White House for peace
negotiations but not Arafat. Bush said he will regard Abbas, not Arafat, as the
Palestinian leader.
Middle East experts said Abbas fears that
accepting a White House invitation would make him appear a U.S. lackey in
Palestinian eyes unless Israel stops trying to isolate Arafat.
“I will not travel anywhere before Israel lifts a
siege on President Arafat so that we can get a guarantee he will be able to go
abroad and come back freely without Israeli objection,” Abbas told Reuters News
Agency.
The government of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon said Arafat is free to go abroad but it will not guarantee letting him
return.
Arafat has denounced suicide attacks targeting
Israeli civilians.
On assuming office on April 29, Abbas warned
Israel that it must abandon Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza to
achieve lasting peace. He again denounced terrorism and said peace is the
Palestinian goal. The “road map” envisions an independent Palestinian state by
2005.