How Israel Can Help the U.S. Confront China and Iran https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2023/02/how-israel-can-help-the-u-s-confront-china-and-iran/

February 1, 2023 | Raphael BenLevi and Michael Doran
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At present, argue Raphael BenLevi and Michael Doran, the Biden administration’s Middle East policies suffer from two “flawed assumptions,” both of which are holdovers from the Obama White House. One is that an accommodation with Iran is both possible and desirable, the other is that the region “can somehow be quarantined off from the global competition between Washington and Beijing.” They explain, and suggest ways that the U.S. can change course:

Xi Jinping’s [recent] visit to Riyadh should prove to the Biden administration that China is quickly becoming a player in the regional balance of power. Before long, the instability inherent in a Middle East where Tehran dominates will inevitably suck America back into the region and attract China to deepen its strategic engagement.

However, by recalibrating its policies, the Biden administration can limit Chinese involvement in the Middle East while pushing back against Iran. Israel has a key role to play in this strategy, and Israel’s new governing coalition will likely have both the desire and the stability to carry it out.

Israel has evolved from a small state embattled on all sides to a regional power whose unique assets are attracting new partners around the region, as evidenced by the success of the Abraham Accords. Its relationship with the United States should evolve to reflect this new reality.

[For instance], the U.S. should consider moving away from the current model of assistance based on simple foreign military financing, which essentially gives Israel coupons to purchase weapons from American manufacturers. Instead, Washington should move toward a model based on joint military projects. This model already exists on a small scale in the field of missile defense. For the Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow systems, for example, Israel and the United States both contribute financially to development costs and then co-develop, co-produce, and share technology. They could expand this model to include cyber and artificial intelligence. The change would signal the advent of a new phase in their relations, one that recognizes Israel’s position as a partner rather than a client.

Read more on Hudson Institute: https://www.hudson.org/defense-strategy/time-recalibrate-america-middle-east-policy