Arming Our Enemies
By Alan Caruba
fighter jets to Egypt in the wake of the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak with whom the deal was struck in 2010 and in light of the fact that man now in charge, Mohammed Morsi, is a rabid anti-Semite and enemy of Israel
Wouldn’t a prudent U.S.
administration review the earlier deal, part of a $1 billion U.S. foreign aid
package, and conclude that a regime now led by a leader of the Muslim
Brotherhood and man who calls Jews “descendants of apes and pigs” not have its
military power increased at a time when much of the Middle East and the
Maghreb, northern Africa, is embroiled in turmoil?
Egypt is not threatened by Israel, but it is known that Morsi meets regularly with
Mohammed Badi, the Muslim Brotherhood’s supreme leaders, who last year declared
that “The jihad for the recovery of Jerusalem is a duty for all Muslims.”
Recently, Dr.
Daniel Pipes, the founder and director of the Middle East Forum, editor of
its Middle East Quarterly journal, a historian and political commentator, wrote
a commentary in which he said, “The persistent belief that training and
equipping foreign troops imbues them with American political and ethical
values, making them allies of the United States” was “another sign of
innocence.” He was being polite. It’s not innocence, it’s stupidity and the U.S. has been repeating it for a long time.
Dr. Pipes cited several
cases that are worth recalling.
When U.S. “peacekeeping” troops landed in Lebanon in 1982, “the priority was to train a national
army.” Lebanon was in the midst of a civil war that lasted from
1975 to 1990. The U.S. effort was a failure that included the 1983 suicide bombing of a Marine
Corps barracks that killed 220 Marines and 22 other U.S. servicemen. As Dr. Pipes noted, most of those
trained and equipped returned to their communal militias. A renewed effort to
repeat this stupidity is underway again! It’s worth noting that Lebanon is governed by members of Hezbollah, a terrorist
organization and proxy of Iran.
After more than a decade in Afghanistan, U.S. efforts to train a national police force and
military often resulted in attacks by its members on coalition service
personnel. In the first eight months of 2012, they killed 45 persons; at which
point the training stopped. When the U.S. finally leaves later this year and next, those left
behind to continue training programs will be sitting ducks. The billions in
military gear will eventually become the property of the Taliban and Afghanistan will return swifty to its seventh century mentality.
As Dr. Pipes noted regarding
Mali, U.S. efforts to train “the woebegone Malian national army
to take on al Qaeda did not exactly work out.” Der Spiegel, a German
daily, reported that “American specialists did train four crack units, totaling
600 men, to fight the terrorists. But it backfired: Three of the elite units
have defected en masse to the rebel Tuareg.” One of its commanders, “Captain
Amadou Sanogo, trained in the U.S. overthrew the government in Bamako and ousted the elected president.”
Perhaps the most egregious
idiocy was the result of the U.S. efforts to mediate the discord between Israel and the Palestinian Authority in which the U.S. “has trained over 6,000 Palestinian Authority
security personnel in the hope they will become Israel’s partners for peace.” Neither the PA, nor its
competitor, Hamas, has ever acknowledged Israel’s right to exist and Dr. Pipes has predicted that
“these militiamen will eventually turn their guns against Israel.” Israel continues to intercept arms intended for Hamas and
had to wage a short military operation against Hamas, an Iranian proxy, to
deter its daily rocketing of southern Israel. The Palestinian Authority, meanwhile, already has
plenty of arms provided by the U.S.
Few allies in the Middle East, with the exception of Israelis and the Jordanian
monarchy, are reliable. The Gulf States depend on the U.S. for a defense shield against Iran, as does Saudi Arabia. The U.S. has received cooperation from Yemen, but it is folly to think that Egypt or any of the North African states are friendly to
our interests.
Sending
Egypt F-16s is idiotic. Egypt already has a fleet of more than 200 comparable jets
provided courtesy of the American taxpayer. Continuing the practice of arming
nations that are unreliable is a very bad, very stupid one.
© Alan Caruba, 2013
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