Critical Connections: Egypt, the US, and Israel
Minimally explored in all the coverage of the momentous Egyptian uprising taking place over the last 10 days are the Israeli connections.
A central and critical reality is that it is US tax money that has propped up Hosni Mubarak’s despotic regime over the past 30 years, and that this money has flowed, from the beginning, largely on behalf of Israel.
Israel is generally a significant factor in events in the Middle East, and to understand ongoing happenings it is important to understand the historic and current Israeli connections.
The violent creation, perpetuation, and expansion of a state based on ethnic expulsion of the majority inhabitants has been central to Middle East dynamics ever since Israel was created by European and American Zionists in 1948 as a self-identified "Jewish State."
Israeli leaders and outside observers realized from the very beginning that the only way to maintain such a violently imposed, ethnically based nation-state was through military dominance of the region. For Israel to achieve this military dominance required two things:
(1) The creation of a military more powerful than all the others in the region combined. Israel has achieved this through a uniquely massive influx of US tax dollars and technology, occasionally purloined but largely procured through the machinations of its lobby. (Among other things, Israel has several hundred nuclear weapons, a fact almost never mentioned by American media or the American government.)
(2) The prevention of any other nation in the region from becoming a threat. Israel has attained this goal through several strategies: divide and conquer techniques, direct invasions and attacks (or pushing the U.S. to carry out attacks), and the propping up of despots who would openly or tacitly agree (sometimes in return for similarly large influxes of American tax money) not to support the rights of those oppressed and ethnically cleansed by Israel.
For the past 30-plus years, Egypt has been among those despotic regimes supported by the U.S. and Israel in return for turning its back on Palestinians.
The Egypt-Israeli peace treaty of 1979 has occasionally been mentioned in news reports on the current uprising. That treaty was an arrangement in which the Egyptian leader of the time, Anwar Sadat, stopped opposing Israel’s previous ethnic cleansing of close to a million indigenous Palestinian Muslims and Christians (at least 750,000 in 1947-49 and an additional 200,000 in 1967). This removed the most populous and politically significant country from the Arab front opposing Israel’s illegal actions and led the way for other nations to "normalize" relations with the abnormal situation in Palestine.
In return, Israel gave back to Egypt the Sinai, Egyptian land it had illegally annexed in its 1967 war of aggression. (Egypt had almost managed to re-conquer this land and more in 1973, but the most massive airlift in American history, engineered by Henry Kissinger under pressure from the Israeli lobby, was sent to Israel, preventing this outcome.)
Also in return, the United States agreed to give Egypt more US tax money than any other nation, with the exception of Israel. Since 1979, Egypt has received an annual average of close to $2 billion in economic and political aid from American taxpayers (most of whom have known nothing about this use of our money). The arrangement has allowed Mubarak to stay in power for decades despite periodic attempts by Egyptians to free themselves from his ruthless rule.
At the same time, it’s important to note that the U.S., as broker of the peace treaty, gave Israel even greater rewards: guaranteeing Israel’s oil supplies for the next fifteen years; assuring Israel of American support in the event of violations; committing to be "responsive" to Israel’s military and economic requirements; and promising a variety of major transfers of technology and aid, including $3 billion to relocate two Israeli air bases out of the Sinai, where, as journalist Donald Neff noted, they had no right to be in the first place.
In fact, the American financial arrangement with Israel, which had begun years before Egypt’s, has been far cozier than Egypt’s: Israel gets considerably more money from the US, even though its population is one-tenth of Egypt’s; there is little U.S. oversight of how it uses that money; and, unlike Egypt, which receives its allotment monthly, Israel receives its handout in a lump sum at the very beginning of the fiscal year (which means that Americans then pay interest for the rest of the year on money that the government has already given away, while Israel makes interest on it).
In the cases of both Israel and Egypt, the Israel lobby’s role in procuring this U.S. tax money has been central. While this fact is largely missing from US media reports and many liberal/left analyses, it is frequently referred to in Israeli and Jewish media. For example, a current Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) report states: "The question of whether to stake a claim in the protests against 30 years of President Hosni Mubarak’s autocracy is a key one for the pro-Israel lobby and pro-Israel lawmakers because of the role they have played in making Egypt one of the greatest beneficiaries of U.S. aid."
As conditions change in Egypt, U.S. lawmakers known for their allegiance to Israel are evaluating what to do about U.S aid. Many such Israel partisans have particularly powerful and relevant positions, such as Rep. Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.), the ranking Democrat on the foreign operations subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations Committee; Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), the chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee; Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.), the ranking Democrat on the House Middle East subcommittee; Rep. Howard Berman (D-Calif.), ranking member on the Foreign Affairs committee and the author of last year’s sweeping Iran sanctions law; and Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-Nev), member of the subcommittee on the Middle East of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. A person close to the Israel lobby notes: "No matter what happens, clearly one of the top criteria Congress is likely to use is Egypt’s approach to its peace treaty obligations with Israel."
Through the years a variety of Egyptian groups have opposed the Egyptian regime, some using violence (while the regime has used greater violence against them). This is virtually always reported without context and in extremely negative terms, without noting that it is routine for resistance movements to use violence; the American Revolutionary War was not known for its nonviolence. Yet, Israeli-centric U.S. media rarely discuss this.
In recent years, Mubarak has collaborated with Israel in closing off the Gaza Strip, largely imprisoning 1.5 million men, women, and children, resulting in a humanitarian disaster in which children suffer malnutrition, stunting, and trauma, and 300 Gazan patients have died through lack of essential medical supplies or being denied exit passes for medical care. Egyptian citizens, furious at their nation’s complicity in this cruelty, have been powerless to stop it.
Israel has long worked to create enmity between Egypt and the U.S. In the early 1950s the Israeli secret service, the Mossad, hatched a plan to firebomb areas in Egypt where Americans gathered — and to make these attacks appear to be the work of Muslim extremists. The plot was discovered and caused a scandal in Israel known as the "Lavon Affair," but few Americans have ever heard of it. Some analysts suspect that other such plots succeeded and that the little-known Israeli attack on the U.S. Navy ship USS Liberty may have been a similar false-flag operation. (Certainly, there is little doubt that the U.S. would have attacked Egypt if Liberty crewmembers had not succeeded, against all odds, in getting a distress signal out before Israel succeeded in sinking the ship with all men aboard.)
Another little-discussed result of the 1979 Egypt-Israel peace treaty was the creation of an international peacekeeping force in the Sinai, known as the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO), charged with mediating between Egypt and Israel. It is telling that this force was not placed on Israeli land but instead occupies Egyptian territory.
Its current head is Ambassador David M. Satterfield, an American diplomat who served extensively in the Middle East, was Senior Advisor on Iraq for former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and held a number of other high positions in the state department, including Deputy Assistant Secretary of State.
In 2005 Satterfield was named as having provided classified information to an official of the powerful pro-Israel lobbying group, AIPAC. According to documents, Satterfield had discussed secret national security matters in at least two meetings with AIPAC official Steven J. Rosen, who was subsequently indicted by the U.S. Justice Department (later quashed over the objections of the FBI.)
In 2004 Satterfield presided at a State Department conference on the 1967 war. A Washington Report on Middle East Affairs report on this conference stated that Satterfield repeatedly referred to Palestinian terrorism while failing to mention Israel’s brutal attacks on Palestinian civilians. The article reports "Satterfield’s remarks dampened audience expectations for an even-handed U.S. approach to peacemaking."
Among those in the audience at the conference’s panel on the USS Liberty, though not on the panel itself were USS Liberty survivors, trying to tell their story. State Department moderator Marc Susser quickly cut them off, and his treatment of the survivors reportedly "bordered on abusive."
Now, David Satterfield is heading up international forces occupying Egyptian land charged with being a "neutral" mediator between Egypt and Israel.
It is unknown whether his conversations with AIPAC continue.
Read more by Alison Weir
- Israeli Assassinations and American Presidents – January 24th, 2012
- The Real Story of How Israel Was Created – October 10th, 2011
- American Taxpayers Subsidize Israel’s Prosperity – August 31st, 2011
- Israeli Video Games in Gaza – August 23rd, 2011
- Israel Lobby Dominates Congress, Media Covers it Up – August 10th, 2011





Bodkin
February 5th, 2011 at 1:06 am
"Mubarak has collaborated with Israel in closing off the Gaza Strip, largely imprisoning 1.5 million men, women, and children, resulting in a humanitarian disaster in which children suffer malnutrition, stunting, and trauma, and 300 Gazan patients have died through lack of essential medical supplies or being denied exit passes for medical care."
And yet the author makes no mention of the fact that a radical, fundamentalist gang of genocidal thugs controls Gaza. The author and her ilk will never acknowledge the role played by any Arabs or Muslims in being the authors of their own misfortune. It's much more satisfying to blame Israel for any and every hardship they endure. And is there really a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, or is this constantly exaggerated to further demonize Israel?
BillA
February 5th, 2011 at 6:16 am
Thank you Alison for your courage in standing up to the Zionist machine.
I submit the most important fact we Americans must deal with is Zionist control of our information supply, from Hollywood through the MSM and Washington.
A race is on now, between this information spreading and control of the Internet. On this matter, beware of how control can be seized. For example, requiring positive ID to access the Internet is one way to do it. It's not obvious how this would work, but give it some thought and talk about it while we still can.
Bill
tomofsnj
February 5th, 2011 at 7:41 am
Hillary opening remarks at the 2010 AIPAC convention. She also commented on her many trips to Israel over the last 30 years. So what good has she done since the last 30 years has been nothing but a time of great aggression on the part of the AIPAC gang:
The United States has also led the fight in international institutions against anti-Semitisms and efforts to challenge Israel’s legitimacy. We did lead the boycott of the Durban Conference and we repeatedly voted against the deeply flawed Goldstone Report. (Applause.) This Administration will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself. (Applause.)
An.Hafed
February 5th, 2011 at 9:45 am
The importance of the egyptian revolution stems from the fact that one of israel's pillars is crumbling leaving israel unprotected by the most populous arab states.Future predictions indicate that Arab awakening will ultimately reache the four corners of the arab world and consquently, none of the israeli arab subservients will remain in his place.Israel has fooled the world for so long using all kind of cheap tricks to either glorify its deeds or attract sympathy to its unholly claims.Revolutions sweeping the Arab world should give israel the opportunity to reconsider its position ,either to become a normal state or to back its shenanigans and go to where it originally came from,the Khazar land.The degree of hate implanted in the MidEast, because of Israel,makes it essential for all peace lovers to joint forces in uprooting this entity once and for all from this region.
fedupandsick
February 5th, 2011 at 10:29 am
The thugs that control Gaza were created with israeli support.
No humanitarian crises. The Gazans are just "on a diet". Tool.
RickR30
February 5th, 2011 at 10:54 am
It's pretty safe to say that USrael are working very hard now to ensure that Mubarak is replaced with someone even worse than him, probably that monster of Suleiman. I sincerely wish the Egyptians luck, not just in getting rid of Mubarak but also in eliminating once and for all the disastrous control of USrael of Egyptian politics. But I suspect that USrael with get away with whatever they are scheming.
Ian
February 5th, 2011 at 10:55 am
Demonize Israel ? …
Poor Zionists , everyone is out to get them. Time to beg,demand and/or steal more money from the US taxpayers.
andy
February 5th, 2011 at 11:46 am
Israel has been nothing but trouble for America since the first day it was created.
ML3
February 5th, 2011 at 12:26 pm
of course we hear so much about egypt only because of the IsReal? connection. I love the dual citizens yapping their way into paroxysms trying to differentiate between freedom and demicracy brought ot Iraw by the point of a bayonet, and the homegrown throwing off of the shackles in egypt
Bodkin
February 5th, 2011 at 2:52 pm
People in the throes of a humanitarian crisis don't have the resources to build themselves something like this:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jacob-shrybman/gaza…
Maybe the tools are the ones who believe every single anti-Israel slander they hear. Maybe the tools are the ones who never consider context before they spew malicious slanders of their own.
Maybe the tools are the ones who can't understand how people always suffer when thugs are in control, smuggling in weapons, launching rockets on their neighbors, vowing to annihilate their neighbors, and plotting with regional despots who share their agenda.
jojo
February 5th, 2011 at 3:07 pm
"thugs controls Gaza" you got it all wrong–try Isrear''Firster thugs control USA
BobKin–get away from under your mother's skirt and grow up.
americanpendulum
February 5th, 2011 at 3:09 pm
Until the United States addresses publicly the influence of Israel over our government, finance sector, media and education, we aren't going to get anywhere in solving the problems that are piling up for us in all areas of our society.
There HAS to be a way to cut the chains that Israel has wrapped around our government!! I don't think the internet is succeeding although it has helped increase the awareness.
americanpendulum
February 5th, 2011 at 3:17 pm
We are actually watching the manipulation of Egyptian people taking place. It is so disgusting to watch as they begin using the same tactics they used Iraq to divide the people. It has to stop.
Maybe (just suggestion) conscientious people in the West and Egyptian masses need to link up someplace on the Web….To make sure the masses in Egypt don't get led down the wrong alley. That is what seems to be happening already.
When they pulled Sullieman out of the hat I knew this was turning into a manufactured revolution. Same thing happened to the Tea Party (maybe the situations are different but same practical manipulations). It began with some redeeming qualities and some good intentions, but quickly the Koch brothers along with Sarah Palin and Glen Beck types basically co-opted the entire drive. Not all the Tea Partiers were weird in the beginning. It got that way once it was realized by the big Cartel that runs America, that they may have a real challenge on their hands. I fear this may happen to Egyptians and am whole heartedly backing them and hoping they can stay clear from the Powerful hands that ultimately gain access everywhere.
tomofsnj
February 5th, 2011 at 6:53 pm
Sharet was the second prime minister of Israel. In his diary he recorded about "return of refugees.
I am floored at this since you apparently are more informed on matters than the former prime minister.
Could you tell us how the former Prime Minister was so misinformed as to believe that there were "refugees" since clearly we have your information that "nobody had been expelled"
Sharat diary:
During a meeting in July 1950, Moshe Dayan proclaimed that a peace treaty with Jordan would be costly in territorial concessions and return of refugees, and Israel should capture the West Bank up to the Jordan River. Moshe Sharett refuted this idea, and said:
"The State of Israel will not get embroiled in military adventurism by deliberately taking the initiative to capture territories and expand. Israel would not do that, both because we cannot afford to be accused by the world of aggression and because we cannot, for security and social reasons, absorb in our midst a substantial [Palestinian] Arab population . . .
tomofsnj
February 5th, 2011 at 8:57 pm
And yet the author makes no mention of the fact that a radical, fundamentalist gang of genocidal thugs controls Gaza'
Bibi, Lieberman and who is the third?
R.C. Williams
February 5th, 2011 at 9:02 pm
I've told my Egyptian co-workers to PLEASE not allow the Americans/Israeli's to co-op their revolution. They know what kind of viscious sociopath Sulieman is, so why would they be interested in meeting with him for anything? He should be exiled along with Mubarak. The minute the opposition goes home, he'll begin hunting them down, and come September, there'll be no opposition. Aren't the Egyptians meeting him aware of this!?!?
andy
February 5th, 2011 at 10:46 pm
Campaign finance reform would be a good place to start. Also make AIPAC register as an agent of a foreign government.
andy
February 5th, 2011 at 10:49 pm
I wish the people of Egypt my best, but I honestly and sincerely believe America's best course of action would be to simply mind its own business, something America just can't seem to ever do.
wadosy
February 5th, 2011 at 11:19 pm
what gave europeans the right to move to palestine and found a nation in lies, terror and injustice?
why are the lies, terror and injustice continuing to this day?
why did a founding father of israel say, "Neither Jewish ethics nor Jewish tradition can disqualify terrorism as a means of combat"?
would i be entitled to found a movement, recruit members, and move to israel, terrorize a few million israelis from their stolen land, declare israel extinct and found a new nation on the land i stole from israelis, then continue cleansing jews from what used to be israel, which used to be palestine?
of course i would, if my bedrock moral philosophy was, "might makes right".
so, once the oil runs out, and your american protector puppet collapses, what are you gonna do? …nuke everybody that wont knuckle under to your benevolent global hegemony or tikkun olam, or whatever you want to call it?
wadosy
February 5th, 2011 at 11:29 pm
what does it say about the underlying philosophy that drives israel if israelis are willing to nuke millions of people to defend a bad idea?
…because it's becoming more and more evident that israel was a bad idea, right from the start.
god and ten dollar gas
fetideye
February 6th, 2011 at 4:37 am
Agree with a lot of comments here. One comment about Rand Paul: I like that he wants to cut aid to Israel. The problem I have with him is that, from what I have seen, while he talks about the aid to Israel, he doesn't seem to talk enough about the problem of Israel ITSELF. I also have a slight problem with the fact that he used the ultra-zionist Sarah Palin to help promote his candidacy (which by the way, his father would never do). I have tremendous respect for Ron Paul but am a little suspicious of Rand Paul. By the way, I am African-American and had no problem with Rand Paul's statements about the private sector and race because that is consistent with a libertarian perspective. But I do have a bone to pick with him on these other issues.
fetideye
February 6th, 2011 at 5:01 am
Also just wanted to add: I tend to have some progressive views but it feels great to come to this website and have dialogue with conservatives (whether in the comment section or the people who write the editiorials) that I have tremendous respect for. Much respect to each and all of you (except for the Zionists that post here, of course).
Jaime
February 6th, 2011 at 9:10 am
When this bodoke doesn't have answers, he very conveniently shuts up, so his real mission is to spread lies. This is a very classic tactic of the Mossad.
jeff_davis
February 6th, 2011 at 9:15 am
"The author's presentation of the facts is selective and self-serving." Actually, the author's presentation of the facts is selective — he selects the truth — and serves the universal desire for justice.
Bodkin, you're thoroughly brainwashed. Why are you here? Your Israeli mythology won't work here, we know the truth. The Zionists stole Palestine with the help of the British. That's steal as in criminal conduct. Not complicated.
The Palestinians — let's distinguish them from the other Arabs so the full brunt of the crime can be seen — were unarmed and helpless against the Zionist's. That's a fact little known and never heard. And if the other Arabs came after the Zionists, they came like the police to stop the theft, stop the crime. You just don't get it. The attempt to convert the crime into some kind of legitimate act — "declaration of statehood" sounds so legitimate doesn't it? — is just a lie, The crime is still a crime, no attempt to "cleanse' it can ever make it lawful.. A lie can NEVER be converted into the truth. So finally, when the lies come to an end, the truth emerges, always, as it must.
"…a war of annihilation" aside from being a fabrication intended to defame the "cops" coming to arrest the "perps' and halt the crime, is also one of those "let's play the Holocaust card" moments. You've milked the Holocaust dry. No one gives a hoot anymore. In fact lots of folks are wondering if maybe there wasn't some underlying reason for the Holocaust which has been hidden from view out of sympathy for the victims. Now that we can see the racism, ruthlessness, brazen criminality, viciousness, and astonishing indifference of the Zionists to what anyone else thinks — and by extension, all their tribally-inclined Jewish supporters and enablers the world over — one begins to wonder if maybe we're seeing a pattern, with consequences demonstrated unerringly over five-thousand years.
"Context is everything. No invasion, no displacement." Yes, context IS everything. NO Zionist theft, no Zionist murder, no need for the Arab cops to come and bring justice by arresting the Zionist criminals. And if the criminals want to resist, and resist with violence, what choice have the cops but to employ proportionate counter-force? When criminals don't want to be killed, they need to surrender, or better yet, don't do the crime in the first place.
"And besides, a million J*ws were expelled from Arab lands, so what's with the double standard?"
No double standard, Two different contexts, but thanks for acknowledging the crime of Zionist ethnic cleansing, and the commitment to criminal-mindedness shown by continuing to deny (ie lie about) it. This is the very essence of criminality: the belief that criminals, knowing that they are criminals, have the same rights to a life of crime, as do people conducting themselves lawfully according to the rules of cooperative civil society.
"A pre-emptive attack to prevent annihilation is no "war of aggression"…. As you said yourself, context is everything. (And there's that "annihilation" bullsh*t again.) You can rebrand criminality all you want, but the world knows the truth. The Zionists have been engaged in crime against the Arabs since the late 1800s, with 1967 yet another criminal incident.
"Buffer zones…" Sorry, criminals don't get 'buffer zones'.
"You want imperialist conquest?"
So you're admitting it then? You admit that you stole Palestine and murdered Palestinians? No need. We knew it already. And of course we knew that you knew. This is why lying is so ineffective. The truth is always oozing out from behind the wall of corpses.
You really really need to go somewhere else to spread your Zionist mythology.
Or you could stay around and learn the truth. Frankly though, I suspect you'll hang on to your mythology, because your mental habits and character are stubbornly criminal.
I truly feel for my fellow Jews, wish them well in the world, and consider myself immensely fortunate to be one, and wish the world well in profiting from the talent and effectiveness and culture the Jews offer humanity. Sadly, until they learn to behave better, more evenhandedly, the fate of the Jews can only be rough justice at the hands of those they have abused.
thedissenter
February 6th, 2011 at 3:30 pm
People in the throes of a humanitarian crisis don't have the resources to build themselves something like this:
Ever heard of self-defense? Oh, of course, not. To you, self defense is when you attack others.
thedissenter
February 6th, 2011 at 3:32 pm
Shimon Peres or Rabi Ovadia Yosef.
thedissenter
February 6th, 2011 at 3:39 pm
A friend recently remarked "ever noticed that before 1948 there was chaos in Europe and peace in the ME? After 1948, there's chaos in the ME and peace in Europe. Coincidence?" That summarizes it.
Bodkin
February 6th, 2011 at 4:50 pm
What do you have to say about King Faisal, who warmly welcomed the early Zionist settlers? Yes, an actual Arab KING welcomed the formation of the Zionist state. Imagine that: an Arab who actually SYMPATHIZED with the need to re-establish the J*wish homeland, and who didn't see it as a crime or a threat. Imagine!
Alas, the dominant narrative since those early days has been that Zionism is racism, J*ws are evil, Israel is a crime, and so on. And you accuse ME of being brainwashed? Look in the mirror.
You've discredited and embarrassed yourself, Davis. It's a rare post when you don't advertise your ethnic background, as a way of ingratiating yourself with the people you fear. Your naked fear discredits you; it compels you to repeat a narrative whose only purpose is to distance your own virtuous self from your evil brothers and sisters. Your posts are all about self-preservation at the expense of others (whom you "wish well" — yeah, right!).
Goebles
February 6th, 2011 at 8:20 pm
Let's not attack and answer to Bodkin and his israel as : the more you touch the s… , the more it stinks….
MvGuy
February 6th, 2011 at 8:25 pm
What a pack of lies..!!!!!!!!!!
andy
February 6th, 2011 at 9:26 pm
Israel was a very bad idea.
andy
February 6th, 2011 at 9:27 pm
That is an interesting observation.