Senate wants to force US to share sensitive intel with Israel [View all]
A measure in a must-pass bill would dramatically increase Israeli access to American secrets
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-intelligence-israel/
Buried deep inside a 192-page
intelligence authorization bill is Section 622, titled United States-Israel Intelligence Sharing Enhancement. It would require the president, acting through the director of national intelligence and as necessary the secretary of defense, to expand and enhance intelligence sharing with the Government of Israel on a list of subjects that encompasses almost every topic of intelligence interest in the
Middle East.
The bill, put forward by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, would prohibit any suspension, reduction, or limitation of such sharing except on the basis of a specific and identifiable national security concern determined by the President. Any such exception would require a report to Congress within fifteen days detailing not only the reason for the change but also the categories of information involved. The same report would require an assessment of the anticipated impact on regional security and various other matters.
This proposal is one of several recent moves by those in Washington who carry the Israeli governments water to keep the United States tied to
Israel despite
plummeting support for the country among the American public. The most salient form of U.S. support to Israel has been
more than $300 billion in economic and especially military assistance. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has tried to get ahead of the declining public support and avoid embarrassing losses by
suggesting it would be fine with him to phase out the military aid.
Israels strategy and that of its U.S. supporters is now to rely on ties with, and support from, the United States that are not as salient as the military aid with its prominent price tag. The strategy includes forms of military integration that are
less visible than congressionally appropriated grant aid and therefore less publicly accountable. Section 224 of a
defense authorization bill currently in the House of Representatives
embodies this form of integration.
snip