by Corinne Whitlatch
Everyone in the United States pays taxes and most taxpayers have strongly
held opinions on foreign aid. But there is a misconception about the amount of
foreign aid the United States actually provides. In fact, in 2004, foreign aid
(both economic and military, but not including Iraq war costs) was a scant 0.9
percent of the U.S. Federal Budget. Nevertheless, some constituents complain
that foreign aid is a squandering of tax dollars which should be spent on Americans.
Others appeal for increases to help the world's poorest people, victims of disaster
and disease, or to benefit women and children. Some would deny foreign aid to
those who do, or don't do, certain things.
While foreign aid has become a key component of U.S. foreign policy, those
elected to the House and Senate continue to favor appropriating monies that flow
to their states and constituents. The members of the House and Senate Appropriations
Committees, particularly the 15 Representatives and 17 Senators on the Foreign
Operations subcommittees, are the ones who act on the Administration's budget
request and shape the foreign aid bill that goes to the floor. Still, all Representatives
and Senators have a role in influencing the appropriation process by means of
non-binding resolutions, "Dear Colleague" letters, floor remarks, amendments
from the floor and informal conversations.
Support for the foreign aid bill is strong among pro-Israel advocates. Constituents
have let their elected officials know they want the U.S. to provide economic
and military assistance to Israel and to vote yes on the foreign aid bill. It
is a cliché among the Washington staff of development organizations, who
seek funding for many countries and causes, that support for aid to Israel drives
the train of foreign aid. So, there has been little opposition in Washington
to the roughly 38 percent of total foreign aid that goes to the Middle East,
93 percent of which goes to Egypt and Israel.
With the 2005 advent of President Bush's active engagement, following the
election of President Abbas and Israel's decision to disengage from Gaza, appropriators
are facing requests for supplemental foreign aid, over and above the "regular" amounts,
for both the Palestinians and Israel. With the disengagement plan in play, Israel
is reportedly requesting a special aid package of a whopping $2.2 billion in
some, as-yet unknown, combination of grants, loans, and loan guarantees.
The White House has new opportunities for using this aid to Israel as a foreign
policy tool as it prepares a funding request for Congress. Both citizen and congressional
supporters of Israeli-Palestinian peace will have to work hard to guarantee that
the funds are used to support steps toward the two-state solution and peace.
New Aid to New Leadership
The U.S. is the single largest contributor of assistance to the Palestinian
people, a fact not widely known. The U.S. has been giving an average of about
$85 million per year in foreign aid to the Palestinians since the signing of
the Oslo Accords in 1993. Most of the aid has been channeled through the U.S.
Agency for International Development (USAID) to contractors and private voluntary
organizations. (Outside of regular foreign aid, the U.S. has provided funds to
the United Nations Relief and Work Agency (UNRWA) since 1950 and is also the
largest donor to this U.N. program for Palestinian refugees.)
U.S. aid to the Palestinians has more restrictions than does any other aid
program, including a ban on direct aid to the Palestinian Authority. The law
does allow the President to waive that prohibition by certifying that it is in
the national security interest of the U.S. to do so. Aid has been given to the
Palestinian Authority (PA): $36 million in FY1994, $20 million in FY2003, $20
million in FY2004, and in May of this year the President announced he will provide
$50 million in direct aid, which will be drawn from remaining FY2005 funds.
The President announced in his 2005 State of the Union Address that he would
provide $350 million to the Palestinians, a substantial increase from previous
years, to support Palestinian reforms and further his two-state vision. The battle
for this aid began almost immediately, with the FY2005 Supplemental Funding Request
becoming a playground for anti-Palestinian action. Many Members of Congress had
a difficult time grasping the new opportunity for peace that had emerged and
failed to adapt to the changing situation. As Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-NY) explained
when asked about efforts to condition this aid package, "If you want to
ensure that there will not be a peace process, then you attach enough strings
[to the aid package] that you strangle the process."
By the time the dust had cleared, the aid package to the Palestinians had
been slapped with excessive restrictions and conditions that went far beyond
the transparency and accountability measures present when Arafat was in charge,
including language that a Presidential waiver not be used to give aid to the
Palestinian Authority.
After Congressional manipulations that earmarked $52 million for Israel's
use and $5 million for an extra audit, the Palestinians will receive $143 million
of the $200 million initially promised in the Supplemental, with every dollar
of this assistance earmarked, by Congress, for specific programs. Additionally,
the Administration raised the "regular" foreign aid to West Bank/Gaza
to $150 million, up from $75 million.
Outdated Zero Sum Game
Despite significant American-Jewish support for this new aid to the Palestinians,
many Members of Congress were still under the impression, as M.J. Rosenberg of
the Israel Policy Forum observed, "that humiliating Abbas and the Palestinians
helps Israel. For them Israel and Palestine is a zero sum game: help one, hurt
the other. They could not be more wrong."
Fortunately, some Members of Congress understood the President's wisdom in
seizing the moment to bolster peace through additional aid to the Palestinians.
Sen. Frist (R-TN), Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN),
Sen. Joseph Biden (D-DE), Rep. Lois Capps (D-CA) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA)
are among those that have spoken in support of Palestinian aid.
A recent World Bank report warns of "the potential disintegration of
the Palestinian economy." U.S. aid to the Palestinians can provide tangible
economic help, such as building housing that reawakens hope of a better future
with President Abbas at the helm of the Palestinian government. As Assistant
Secretary of State David Welch recently testified in a House hearing, U.S. aid
to the Palestinians "supports President Abbas," "helps ensure
Israel's long-term security" and is a "very important component" of
advancing the key U.S. policy goal of a two-state solution to the conflict.
Carrot or Caviar?
The annual economic aid to Israel that is earmarked in the foreign operations
bill, $240 million in the FY2006 budget, is given as a cash grant without conditions
or accountability, other than the law that prohibits U.S. aid being spent in
the occupied territories. The bulk of Israel's annual foreign aid package is
for Foreign Military Financing (FMF) which is intended to sell U.S. goods and
services. About 25 percent of the $2.28 billion in FMF for Israel in FY2006 can
be used for purchases within Israel.
Common sense would lead one to think that ending or cutting foreign aid to
Israel would change its behavior. If the U.S. would just use the leverage it
has, in providing an annual hefty foreign aid package, it is argued, then Israel
would be compelled to stop settlement building and would end the occupation.
Or, if the President would just threaten to cut the amount of the aid, surely
Israel's leaders would do what the President asks. The flaws in the logic lie
in the "if" and the "why."
First, the "if:" It is NOT going to happen; at least not in any
public way by a Presidential statement or in legislation. Then, the "why" it
is not going to happen. The political commitment to providing the "aid package" to
Israel, which was designed to fortify the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli Camp David Peace
Treaty, is entrenched. It is synonymous with supporting the existence of Israel.
For a legislator, or an advocate, to call for cutting or ending aid to Israel
as a punitive or pressure tactic, is considered tantamount to calling for the
destruction of Israel and is seen as political suicide.
This phenomenon is only partly explained as the result of decades of savvy
lobbying by AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee), the powerful pro-Israel
lobby in Washington, and Jewish activism in political campaigns. Many Americans,
politicians as well as ordinary people, know of the historical plight of Jews
and have internalized the pledge of "never again." Calling for an end
of aid to Israel is widely viewed as a threat to Israel's survival, and therefore,
morally wrong.
Keep Your Eye on the Ball
To the contrary, most of those who call for cutting aid to Israel do so as
a strategy to transform the conflict, making it possible for a viable Palestinian
state to be created that would exist side-by-side Israel. But frustration is
high. Presidents and peace activists have appealed to Israel for decades to stop
building settlements on Palestinian land, only to watch infrastructure and housing
spread out on confiscated land. During recent years, by building a separation
barrier, Israel has strengthened its hold on some of the best of the West Bank
land.
Nevertheless, the actual goal - moving Israel toward peacemaking - must be
kept in mind. Israel's self-identity as an isolated and beleaguered state, having
faced hostility since its founding, must be replaced by a confidence among Israelis
and their defenders that peace is possible. With careful shaping of incentives
and monitoring, the special aid request could foster a readiness in Israel to
make the compromises necessary for negotiated agreements.
A Friend in Deed
There IS a growing awareness that if Israel does not end the occupation soon,
the opportunity for a two-state solution will be lost, along with the recognition
and security it could gain through a negotiated peace. Israel's political scene
has shifted steadily toward the right, with the settler movement and religious
hard-liners now vehemently resisting P.M. Sharon's withdrawal from Gaza. Much
to the chagrin of Israel's peace advocates, Israel's political will to be a partner
for peace seems to have weakened at a time when the readiness of the Palestinians
has increased and the Bush Administration has taken leadership. Meanwhile, Israel's
government and settler movement have entrenched their hold on key areas of the
West Bank.
The Administration has chastised Israel in remarkably strong terms. Secretary
of State Rice said in June, "It is not possible to operate in the territories
in a manner that will change the situation before discussions on final status...
We cannot sanction creating a new reality on the ground by actions that continue
today. I mean by this those activities in Jerusalem and its environs."
By backing its words with actions, the Administration can persuade Israel's
leaders that its actions and policies need to be conducive to the establishment
of a viable Palestinian state, which requires territorial contiguity on the West
Bank and with East Jerusalem. The United States can, and should, require that
all special aid given to Israel, such as the anticipated request for costs related
to the disengagement, be used in an effective and responsible manner that is
consistent with the U.S. government's policy goals.
The need for transparency in how Israel spends financial aid is revealed by
an official Israeli inquiry on outposts and settlement expansion expenditures.
The Sasson Report concluded that outposts have received "massive financing
by the State of Israel, with no appropriate transparency." P.M. Sharon has
promised to remove outposts, as required by the Road Map, yet the Ministry of
Construction and Housing "pumped millions of dollars into the outposts through
a system of winks and nods that shredded the rule of law," writes Dror Etkes,
director of Peace Now's Settlement Watch project. The Israel newspaper Haaretz
investigated settlement funding in 2003 and concluded: "One of the most
closely guarded secrets in Israel is the amount of funding that is channeled
to the settlements."
Advocacy Actions
There are two aid related issues on the front burner: 1.)
The reluctance of Congress to go along with the President's will to provide aid
directly to the Palestinian Authority. 2.) Israel's request for an additional
$2.2 billion in special aid for the disengagement plan. Your advocacy with your
Representative and Senators, and to the Administration, is needed.
To contact the Administration, call the White House Comment Line at 202-456-1111.
To talk to or leave a message for Congressional foreign policy aides, call the
U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202-224-3121, or, if you have developed a relationship,
send them a brief email. If time allows, a handwritten letter is considered the
most effective. For an update, go to www.cmep.org.
With the Supplemental completed and the Foreign Aid bill approved by both
the House and Senate, we wait for the next legislative opportunity to advocate
in support of direct aid to the Palestinian Authority. In an article in USA Today
entitled, "Frist: Double the Funding for Palestinians" Sen. Frist said, "We
must look ahead and make sure President Abbas has the means to do his part to
make peace in the Middle East a real possibility."
Israel's request for special aid is at the White House and is expected to
be brought to Congress in September. While details are not public at the time
of this writing, it is expected that the special aid will be spread over a few
years and include a mix of grants, loans and loan guarantees. Make these points
in your advocacy.
1. The Supplemental "disengagement" aid to Israel must be used only
for specific projects that are consistent with U.S. policy and monitored to assure
transparency and accountability - as is required for other aid.
2. The U.S. should direct some of the special aid to building a safe passage
route that connects the West Bank with Gaza and the construction of a rail spur
connecting Gaza and the Israeli port, while the Gaza port is under construction.
3. The United States should condition special funds - grants, loans and loan
guarantees - on Israel's compliance with Road Map obligations, such as removal
of outposts.
4. Provision of special aid should include a clear statement of the U.S. policy
that the border and Jerusalem's status must be determined by final status negotiations.
The legislation should require a report on Israel's funding of projects that
prejudge borders and the status of Jerusalem, such as settlement activity and
the building of the separation barrier beyond the Green Line.
5. Express your appreciation for the aid to the Palestinians that has already
passed in the Supplemental and the FY2006 Foreign Aid Bill. Ask your Members
of Congress to support providing direct aid to the Palestinian Authority when
the President requests it. A well-functioning PA that is able to improve economic
conditions and enact political and security reforms will enhance Israel's security
as well.
The 216th General Assembly stated:
a. The occupation must end; it has proven to be at the root of evil acts committed
against innocent people on both sides of the conflict.
b. The security of Israel and the Israeli people is inexorably dependent on
making peace with their Palestinian neighbors, by negotiating and reaching a
just and equitable solution to the conflict that respects international law,
human rights, the sanctity of life, and dignity of persons, land property, safety
of home, freedom of movement, the rights of refugees to return to their homeland,
the right of a people to determine their political future, and to live in peace
and prosperity.
d. The policies and actions of the United States government have proven to
hinder rather than promote a promised peace. . . . The United States needs, now
more than ever, to become an honest, even-handed broker for peace, and should
review its approach to the problem . . . (Minutes, 2004, pp. 852-853) |