6 in 10 Americans say "U.S. gives too much foreign aid to Israel"
PR Newswire - Most Americans (60.7 percent) believe the United States gives "much too much" or "too much" foreign aid to Israel according to the survey report American Public Opinion on U.S. Aid to Israel released by the Institute for Research: Middle Eastern Policy, IRmep. more
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The Staggering Cost of Israel to Americans
Pamela Olson, If Americans Knew - Israel has a population of approximately 7.8 million, or a million fewer than the state of New Jersey. It is among the world's most affluent nations, with a per capita income similar to that of the European Union. Yet the US has given more aid to Israel than it has to all the countries of sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean combined—-which have a total population of over a billion people. And foreign aid is just one component of the staggering cost of our alliance with Israel. more
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American Taxpayers Pay and Pay: Subsidizing Israel’s Ascendancy Over the U.S.
Alison Weir, CounterPunch & Antiwar.com - Israel’s Jerusalem Post newspaper recently published an article calling Israel “The New Golden Country” for young people from around the world. It reports that Israel boasts “an ever-increasing GDP, a strong currency, and a lower unemployment rate than the US.” more
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The Cost of Israel to the American Public
Richard Curtiss, Speech at the Al Hewar Center for Arab Culture and Dialogue - By now many Americans are aware that Israel, with a population of only 5.8 million people, is the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, and that Israel’s aid plus U.S. aid to Egypt’s 65 million people for keeping the peace with Israel has, for many years, consumed more than half of the U.S. bi-lateral foreign aid budget world-wide. more
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As US arms shipment reaches Israel, President Obama urged to halt further exports
Amnesty International - The new delivery to Israel of a massive consignment of US munitions, revealed by Amnesty International today, throws into question whether President Obama will act to prevent the US fuelling further Israeli attacks against civilians that may amount to war crimes, as were perpetrated in Gaza. more
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Gaza invasion: Powered by the U.S.
Robert Bryce, Salon.com - Taxpayers are spending over $1 billion to send refined fuel to the Israeli military -- at a time when Israel doesn't need it and America does. more |
A Conservative Estimate of Total Direct U.S. Aid to Israel: Almost $114 Billion
Shirl McArthur, Washington Report - This estimate of total U.S. direct aid to Israel updates the estimate given in the July 2006 issue of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. It is an estimate because arriving at an exact figure is not possible, since parts of U.S. aid to Israel are a) buried in the budgets of various U.S. agencies, mostly that of the Defense Department (DOD), or b) in a form not easily quantifiable, such as the early disbursement of aid, giving Israel a direct benefit in interest income and the U.S. Treasury a corresponding loss. Given these caveats, our current estimate of cumulative total direct aid to Israel is $113.8554 billion. more |
PA receives $150 million US government aid package
Ma’an News Agency - The Palestinian Authority (PA) said on Wednesday it received an additional US $150 million grant from the US State Department in March, according to Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. more |
Should the U.S. End Aid to Israel? Funding Our Decline
Alison Weir, CounterPunch - On April 1st I participated in a debate in San Francisco that raised the question of US aid to Israel. It was highly appropriate that this debate was held two weeks before tax day, since in Israel's sixty years of existence, it has received more US tax money than any other nation on earth.
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What Our Taxes to Israel are Funding
Alison Weir, Greenwich Citizen - Over a month after my talks at the Greenwich Library, I find that Israel loyalists are still publishing astonishingly inaccurate tirades about me in local newspapers. While the name-calling is unfortunate, it is excellent that discussion of the profoundly important topic of Israel-Palestine is continuing. more |
The Costs to American Taxpayers of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: $3 Trillion
Thomas R. Stauffer, WRMEA - Conflicts in the Middle East have been very costly to the U.S., as well as to the rest of the world. An estimate of the total cost to the U.S. alone of instability and conflict in the region—which emanates from the core, Israeli-Palestinian conflict—amounts to close to $3 trillion, measured in 2002 dollars. This is an amount almost four times greater than the cost of the Vietnam war, also reckoned in 2002 dollars. more
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A Conservative Estimate of Total Direct U.S. Aid to Israel: $108 Billion
Shirl McArthur, WRMEA - Because of the uncertainties and ambiguities associated with U.S. aid to Israel, arriving at a precise figure for total direct U.S. aid to Israel probably is not possible. Parts of it are buried in the budgets of other government agencies—mostly the Defense Department (DOD—or in a form not easily quantifiable—such as the early disbursement of aid, allowing Israel a direct gain and the U.S. Treasury a direct loss of interest on the unspent money. Given these caveats, the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (WRMEA) conservatively estimates cumulative total direct U.S. aid to Israel at $107.961 billion. more
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U.S. Aid to Palestinians Vital to Repair Effects of U.S. Aid to Israel
Delinda C. Hanley in WRMEA - American taxpayers may be unaware that their hard-earned dollars are playing a highly visible role in the Arab-Israeli conflict. But graffiti painted on Israel’s “annexation wall” clearly spells it out: “Apartheid Wall Paid for With U.S. Tax Dollars.” U.S. aid to Israel also has been used to construct checkpoints and commercial crossings that have strangled the Palestinian economy. Israel closed many of these crossings at the height of the winter export season for fruits and vegetables. As a result, farmers in Gaza alone lost $20 million when tomatoes, flowers, strawberries and other crops rotted in trucks. In 2003-2005, before Israeli settlers withdrew from Gaza, soldiers bulldozed orchards and destroyed the region’s $27 million-a-year citrus industry. more
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Cash crisis ‘risks Palestinian collapse’
Richard Galpin in BBC - Essential services could collapse in the Palestinian territories if the international community carries out its threat to stop financial help once the militant Islamic group Hamas forms a new government, a Palestinian minister has told the BBC.
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Economist tallies swelling cost of Israel to US
David R. Fransic in the Christian Science Monitor - Since 1973, Israel has cost the United States about $1.6 trillion. If divided by today’s population, that is more than $5,700 per person.
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US, Israel resume talks on $1.2b special aid package
Ran Dagoni in Globes - The US initiated the present resumption in the talks. US foreign aid for 2006 includes $2.52 billion for Israel.
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Commentary: Slap in the Face
Council for the National Interest - The complete details of the US aid package to Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority show that Congress is giving only $139.5 million to the Palestinian Authority and not the full $200 million requested by President Bush. And it's not really going to the Palestinian Authority itself, but rather to USAID approved non-governmental organizations, since Congress is loath to deal with the Palestinian Authority.
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Restrictions Imposed On Aid to Palestinians
Glenn Kessler in the Washington Post - In the emergency spending bill that lawmakers completed late Tuesday, the White House had sought $200 million “to support Palestinian political, economic, and security reforms,” as the president said in his February State of the Union address. But the fine print of the document gives $50 million of that money directly to Israel to build terminals for people and goods at checkpoints surrounding Palestinian areas. Another $2 million for Palestinian health care will be provided to Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, while the allocation of the rest of the money is tightly prescribed.
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House Sets Limits on Palestinian Aid As DeLay Defies Calls of Bush, Rice
Ori Nir in The Forward - Defying the wishes of the Bush administration, Congress approved a foreign-aid package this week forbidding any direct assistance to the Palestinian Authority and, in a rare snub, denying the president the authority to waive restrictions in the interest of national security.
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Israel Requesting American Assistance in Financing New Checkpoints American sources report Israel is requesting American monetary assistance, $180 million, to finance the establishment of new checkpoints in areas between Israel and PA autonomous areas.
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The Cost of Israel to U.S. Taxpayers
Richard Curtiss in the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs - In fiscal 1997 alone, Israel received from a variety of other U.S. federal budgets at least $525.8 million above and beyond its $3 billion from the foreign aid budget, and yet another $2 billion in federal loan guarantees.
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Palestinian Issue Riddles Bush’s 2005 Budget
Viewed through the proposed budget for 2005, President Bush has totally adopted the state line of Israel on almost every account.
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On Middle East Policy, a Major Influence
David Shipler in the New York Times - After several decades of growth in size and sophistication, the leading pro-Israel lobby in Washington, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, has become a major force in shaping United States policy in the Middle East.
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U.S. Aid to Israel Subsidizes a Potent Weapons Exporter
Jim Krane (AP) - At an arms trade fair in Paris this week, Israel showed the world’s military shoppers fruits of its high-tech arms industry, including its Merkava tank, unmanned spy planes and the planet’s most sophisticated missile defense system.
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A Costly Friendship
Patrick Seale in The Nation - Much of the talk in Europe these days is about how the United States and Britain were conned into going to war against Iraq, or perhaps how they conned the rest of us into believing that they had good reasons for doing so. It is now widely suspected that the war was a fraud, but who perpetuated the fraud and on whom? Everyone agrees that Saddam Hussein was a monster, but the military invasion to depose him is seen by many, and certainly on this side of the Atlantic, as illegitimate and unprovoked, and a blatant violation of the UN Charter, setting an unfortunate precedent in international relations. Henceforth, in the jungle, only might is right.
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