Israel wants to be a member of NATO. It no longer looks down its
nose at military alliances. It no longer wants to stay away from
Western military arrangements. It wants in.
A majority of Israelis believe NATO membership would boost Israel's
security as well as NATO's strategic power. Interestingly enough, there
has been no Arab reaction to Israel's desire to join NATO, no Arab
attempt to block the move, and no preparations to deal with its
consequences.
Israel and NATO have grown closer over the past decade or so. In
2000, NATO expanded its Mediterranean Dialogue through talks with seven
countries from the Middle East and North Africa; namely, Egypt, Israel,
Algeria, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia and Mauritania. In 2004, NATO-
Mediterranean talks were held under the name "Partnership for Peace".
Six new countries were included in the new dialogue: Bahrain, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Israel, in
particular, was eager to use every opportunity the Partnership for
Peace had to offer.
On 24 February 2005, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer became NATO's first
secretary-general to visit Israel. In the following month, NATO and
Israel held their first joint military drills in the Red Sea. Within
weeks, a flotilla of six NATO ships called on the Israeli port of
Eilat. Israel (and Jordan) also took part for the first time in joint
military drills held within the Partnership for Peace programme in
Macedonia in the former Yugoslavia in February 2005.
According to the UK-based Jane's military magazine, Israel's
"geopolitical position" provided NATO with a foreign base to defend the
West, while NATO's military and economic might enhanced the security
and economic potential of the "host country".
In June 2005, Israel participated in submarine manoeuvres off the
coast of Taranto, Italy. At the time, US sources said that Israel was
seeking to widen the "scope of its strategic alliance" with NATO in
preparation for full membership in NATO. Israeli ground forces also
took part in NATO drills lasting two weeks and a half in Ukraine. In
2006, Israel told NATO that it wanted to participate in "active
operational efforts" conducted by NATO in the Mediterranean as part of
the campaign to "confront terrorism".
Soon after, Israel hosted and took part in three military drills
with NATO and attended a conference for NATO air force commanders. The Wall Street JournalThe Washington Post, meanwhile,
argued that many countries in Europe supported Israel's membership but
were waiting for Washington to suggest such a move.
reported closer links between NATO and Israel. It cited Uzi Arad,
founder of the Atlantic Forum of Israel, as saying that Israel would
benefit from NATO's membership.
Washington's view on the matter became clear in March 2006 when
James Jones, then chief NATO commander in Europe, said that the
deployment of NATO AWACS aircraft in Israel was a "clear signal to
Iran". In May 2006, eight NATO navy pieces arrived in Haifa to
demonstrate "the growing cooperation" between Israel and NATO.
In late June 2006, the House of Representative's Committee on
Foreign Affairs unanimously passed a decision calling for closer
Israeli-NATO ties. Consequently, Israel and NATO agreed on a long-term
plan to cooperate in 27 spots around the world. Israel thus became the
first non- European country and the first Middle Eastern country to
cooperate with NATO on that a crucial level.
Two months after the end of the 2006 war in Lebanon, a seminar on
NATO-Israel relations was held in Herzliya. Attending the seminar was
then Israeli foreign minister Tzipi Livni who said that Israel would
have preferred NATO to "do the job that Israel did in Lebanon". She
added that Israel wished to take part in NATO's regional and local
initiatives. NATO Deputy Secretary-General Alessandro Risso responded
by noting that the stationing of an Israeli liaison officer at the NATO
headquarters in Naples was a sign of the "vital cooperation" between
NATO and Israel.
By the end of 2006, Israel was granted a "partnership agreement"
with NATO that had more substance than any agreement NATO had held so
far with a non- European country. Still, many in Israel and the West
kept calling for full Israeli membership in NATO. One Russian political
analyst, Eduard Sorokin, warned that Washington was using Israel's
potential membership of NATO as a way of keeping Arab countries on
their toes. According to the NATO Charter, any attack on a NATO member
is considered as an attack on all members. Thus any future conflict
between Israel and its neighbours may trigger a broader regional
conflict and potentially a world war, Sorokin concluded.
The Jerusalem Post said that Israel's closer links
with NATO were crucial in the case of "future confrontation with Iran"
(1 April 2008). In fact, Netanyahu wanted Israel to join NATO even
before coming into office for a second time as prime minister. He has
since made Israel's membership of NATO a central piece in his policy.
On 13 January 2009, the Jerusalem Post reported that Israel
was launching a "diplomatic initiative" aimed to influence former US
secretary of state Madeleine Albright's review of NATO's policy. In
January 2009, Israeli officials met with Albright in Oslo to discuss
NATO's new strategy. During the meeting, the Israelis expressed a
desire for closer links with NATO and asked for a place at top-level
NATO meetings.
In Washington, some have said that once Israel is accepted as a
full NATO member, NATO should take over security missions in the West
Bank and Gaza. This view is not so far fetched considering the fact
that President Mahmoud Abbas once said that it wouldn't be a bad idea
if the Americans were to negotiate with Israel on behalf of the
Palestinians.
James Jones, the US national security adviser who had been NATO
commander in Europe from 2003 to 2005, is said to be busy putting
together a plan for controlling the occupied Palestinian territories on
behalf of Israel. The plan is said to involve actual policing of
Palestinian areas.
Before Operation Cast Lead was launched in Gaza, NATO was already
exchanging intelligence with Israel, sharing security expertise, and
organising military drills. Israel and NATO also cooperated in
non-proliferation programmes. Former NATO chief Scheffer visited Israel
in the midst of Israel's offensive on Gaza. And NATO officials were at
the time of the opinion that cooperation with Israel was essential for
their organisation.
We know everything we need to know about NATO-Israel cooperation.
What we don't know is what Arab leaders intend to do about it.
Al-Ahram Weekly