Decades after Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir emphasised Israel’s importance as a partner to the United States, reminding President George H.W. Bush in 1991 that it was no ordinary country, the two states’ relationship is once again tense.
The latest spat follows a comment from Benjamin Netanyahu, the current Israeli prime minister, that “Israel is a sovereign state which makes its decisions by the will of its people and not based on pressure from abroad, including from the best of friends”.
This less-than-subtle riposte was a response to US President Joe Biden’s call for Netanyahu’s government to halt plans to remove both power and independence from Israel’s judiciary, giving that power instead to Israeli politicians.
Poking a hornets’ nest
Netanyahu’s government’s plans have sparked a constitutional crisis in Israel, leading to massive demonstrations, unprecedented criticism from Israeli public servants, and the rare intervention in internal Israeli politics of a serving US president.
Yet Netanyahu’s fiery retort is not unprecedented, nor is it seen as shocking in Israel, since it aligns with the political thinking of many in his cabinet of right-wingers, ultra-nationalists, and/or extreme religious Zionists.
Israel respects the American democratic system, but the administration should understand - Israel is an independent country, not another star on the American flag.
The Israeli people had an election. They expressed their will. That must be respected.https://t.co/YMx1mf5fOe
— ItamarBenGvirEN (@ItamarBenGvirEN) March 30, 2023
National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who heads the far-right Jewish Power party, confirmed as much by saying: “Biden and his Administration must understand that Israel is not another star in the American flag.”
Yet at one level, the recent clashes between the US and Israel over constitutional amendments reflect longstanding disagreements regarding America’s role in Israeli politics and its approach to ensuring regional stability.
A history of tiffs
The US-Israel tension is not based on party political feuds - Shamir argued with a Republican US president, while Netanyahu is at odds with a Democrat.
Instead, it is rooted in the US vision to ensure Israel’s security and stability in the Middle East, which George Paul, the US Assistant Secretary of State during President Carter’s era, famously referred to as “saving Israel against its will”.