By Seth Mandel
Tuesday, January 13, 2026
Jewish Insider has a fun scoop
today that illustrates one of the iron laws of Western debate over the Middle
East: The more knowledgeable one is on the subject, the more supportive of a
strong U.S.-Israel relationship one is likely to be.
For example, U.S. aid to Israel is actually an economic
stimulus program for American domestic manufacturers in defense-related
industries. As a bonus, some hardware gets field tested in scenarios in which
all of the risk is borne by Israel.
As a result, some of the maintenance of the U..S-led
world order is offloaded to a capable ally while creating jobs here at home and
keeping research and development humming along.
You can support this or you can oppose it, but this is
what is meant by “U.S. aid to Israel.”
Yet opponents of U.S. military aid to Israel usually say
things like “Americans are poor because the Zionist Occupied Government is
sending their money to Jews abroad” rather than discuss the merits of actual
policy, which is the opposite of sending Americans’ money away.
But because the arrangement is so beneficial to America,
President Trump was shocked by the suggestion that U.S. policy would be
influenced by these idiots. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is
seeking to base defense manufacturing in Israel so as to defang the “aid”
talking point among pundits who are far more influential in this debate than
their range of knowledge would suggest they should be.
“When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu proposed
winding down U.S. military aid late last year,” Jewish Insider reports,
“President Donald Trump was bewildered and did not immediately support the
move.”
The president’s attitude seems to be: If a bunch of
so-called America-first illiterates want to sabotage American defense
manufacturing, they should just be ignored. To wit: “Trump could not understand
why Netanyahu would propose ending American military aid to Israel and
disagrees that the move would improve U.S. public opinion on the Jewish state,
one source familiar with the president’s perspective told JI. He is skeptical
that the plan would benefit either country, but is also not dismissing it out of
hand, they said.”
One unfortunate lesson of the Gaza war has been that
Israel really does need to increase its own production because Western
countries are increasingly and openly allowing themselves to be manipulated by
foreign propaganda. The inclusion of anti-Israel bobbleheads in the mainstream
discourse is its own sort of DEI program: Everyone gets a seat at the
policymaking table, even Columbia grads who think the Jews are new to the Land
of Israel and failed conservative pick-up artists with a microphone and wifi.
But it isn’t as though the U.S. and Israel are going to
stop working together for the benefit of both countries. They’ll simply have to
rearrange the aid structure: “Likud lawmaker Amit Halevi, who has been the
primary engine within the party pushing to phase out U.S. military aid, told JI
that the model Israel has been presenting to the Trump administration and on
Capitol Hill is this one of ‘joint projects and investments.’”
If that sounds familiar, it should: Missile defense (such
as Iron Dome) is the type of program that falls under this rubric. Such
programs also require government spending, though not as stimulative as the
spending under the existing model. American taxpayers won’t see the same
returns from having joint projects cannibalize more of the aid allocation, but
the dishonest podcasters and their audience will think they’re actually
getting a better deal, so they might pipe down a bit.
It’s yet another example of policy advocacy that is
vocally anti-Israel but functionally anti-American. There’s a lesson there, but
everyone with an open mind has already learned it.
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