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Who Can Control Israel's Arms Dealers?

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  • Who Can Control Israel's Arms Dealers?

    WHO CAN CONTROL ISRAEL'S ARMS DEALERS?

    Turkey too resells American weapons and military secrets for a
    profit-and that's a loss to our security.

    By PHILIP GIRALDI ~U August 1, 2013

    U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman George
    M. Bell/Released

    Ten years ago, FBI whistleblower Sibel Edmonds revealed that the
    defense ministries of several major recipients of United States
    military hardware were being scrutinized because they had been
    falsifying end-user certificates, claiming that the equipment was
    intended for their own use while at the same time arranging to
    sell it to other militaries that were blocked from receiving the
    sensitive technology. In May 2006, I described in a Deep Background
    column for TAC how the two countries most heavily engaged in the
    practice-Israel and Turkey-also benefited from their connections
    with leading neoconservatives in Washington. Richard Perle and
    Doug Feith in particular benefited financially from their ties to
    defense industries in Israel while also serving as richly rewarded
    "consultants" for Turkish interests. Feith's International Advisors
    Inc., a registered agent for Turkey in 1989-1994, was paid $600,000 a
    year by Turkish sources, while Richard Perle received $48,000 annually
    as a consultant. Feith has also long been associated with Northrop
    Grumman sales in the Middle East. While at the Pentagon in 1983,
    Perle was criticized for endorsing the U.S. Army's purchase of an
    armaments system from an Israeli company that had paid him $50,000
    in consulting fees one year before.

    Turkey, like Pakistan and Egypt, has a powerful and somewhat autonomous
    military establishment. It does not have a law barring its active-duty
    military officers from having potentially conflicting outside business
    relationships. Indeed, much of its defense industry has traditionally
    been run by senior-level retirees, with active-duty officers sometimes
    having equity stakes in the various armaments companies. That basically
    means that the people making the key decisions on procurement are
    often able to deal with former colleagues, enabling both parties
    to benefit from the process. It differs from the revolving door at
    the Pentagon-where senior officers retire to the boards of defense
    contractors and then work to sell arms to former colleagues who
    themselves expect to climb on the gravy train someday-in that the
    Turkish decision-makers might actually have a direct and immediate
    beneficial interest in the result.

    Israel operates similarly, though the arms trade is a much larger part
    of its total economic activity. The country's main export is weapons,
    ranking it as the sixth largestarms seller in the world by volume
    but number one as a percentage of its overall economy. As in Turkey
    and the U.S., the business is largely run by retired senior officers.

    Unlike Turkey and the U.S., there have been a number of scandals
    connected to Israeli weapons development and sales, including the
    arrests of Israeli weapons dealers in Latin America and Africa. There
    has also been illegal activity relating to the sale of restricted
    technology. The Israelis sold the F-16-derived avionics of the Lavi
    jet fighter that it was developing with U.S. funding to China, which
    then produced its own version, while the electronics of the U.S.

    Sidewinder air-to-air missile also went to Beijing, enabling it to
    produce a clone called the PL-8. The PL-8 was later sold by China to
    Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

    India also benefited from U.S.-developed technology pirated and sold
    by Israel when itpurchased the Israeli Phalcon version of the AWACS
    plane. In 2010 Tel Aviv sold electronic-warfare systems for the F-16
    fighter to Pakistan, nominally an enemy country with which Israel does
    not have diplomatic relations. More recently, the Pentagon hasbalked
    at giving Israel full maintenance access to the avionics on the F-35
    air supremacy fighter planes that Israel will be receiving as part
    of its annual aid package because of concern that the electronics
    will be stolen.

    In Sibel Edmonds's day, the Turks and Israelis were under investigation
    by the FBI because U.S.-made weapons incorporating restricted
    technologies were appearing in a number of countries not authorized to
    receive them, many of which were located in Central and South Asia as
    well as in Latin America. The weapons have also wound up in the hands
    of criminal cartels and narcotics traffickers, mingling arms sales
    with large-scale fraud, extortion, and drugs. In Turkey, these hidden
    relationships and the accompanying networking are frequently referred
    to as the "Deep State," meaning those non-elected powerful figures
    who are able to provide cover for transnational illegal activity
    and are well-placed enough to prevent any serious inquiry into their
    dealings. The always in-demand weapons are frequently the specialty
    items that make the rest of the relationship work, and the keys to
    acquiring the arms are the end-user certificates. FBI investigators
    believed that both the Turks and Israelis were falsely declaring their
    intended use of the weapons to enable downstream sales elsewhere at
    inflated prices to meet demand from countries and groups that could
    not obtain them legally.

    While Turkish interests are largely confined to the Near East and
    adjacent areas in Europe, the Israelis operate worldwide. Israeli
    arms dealers, security services, and consultants span the globe. They
    dominate the airport security industry and have also been linked
    to training, equipping, and intelligence-gathering for corrupt and
    dictatorial regimes in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Security
    companies sometimes work as stringers for Israeli intelligence and
    may have ties to criminal groups includingburgeoning Russian-Israeli
    organized crime in the United States.

    The scale of Israeli legal and clandestine arms sales now appears to
    far exceed anything that might have been imagined at the time when
    Sibel Edmonds was translating documents. Israel's state controller,
    to its credit, has reported that there are major deficiencies in the
    supervision of the country's arms-exporting companies, suggesting
    further that there have been abuses as a result. In a familiar
    pattern, those who issue the licenses also regulate those whom they
    license. The Israeli defense ministry approves arms exporters and
    also has oversight authority regarding them through its Defense
    Export Controls Agency (DECA). According to the state controller,
    DECA has failed to "ensure proper enforcement" of international norms
    and regulations on weapons sales.

    As in Turkey, this failure to act is largely due to the fact that
    the arms trafficking is highly profitable and widely perceived as an
    acceptable perk for active and retired military officers. The Israeli
    defense ministry has licensed 6,784 arms dealers, a figure that makes
    this quite possibly the country's largest private business sector. The
    ministry also disclosed that 6,684 individuals were involved in
    "security exports" during 2012, organized in 1,006 companies and
    312 independent businesses, with 1,900 marketing permits and 8,716
    export licenses issued. Presumably some of the numbers overlap, and
    the distinction between companies and independent businesses is by
    no means clear, though it does suggest that regulation of a large
    and politically sensitive industry has been perfunctory.

    An Israeli district court has ordered that the names of some of
    the licensees be made public amidst additional revelations from
    the Defense Ministry that some companies involved in weapons deals
    "do not appear" on the list of registered dealers, suggesting that
    there is an underground industry operating alongside, and possibly
    in collusion with, the legal one. The Ministry is resisting naming
    any of the licensees "to protect the security of the state and its
    foreign relations."

    How the ongoing attempt by the Israeli courts and state controller to
    bridle the arms-export industry develops will be interesting to follow,
    as it pits the civilian rule of law against the most powerful component
    in the Israeli state, the country's military. Patrick Tyler in his
    recent book Fortress Israel likens Israel to a new Sparta, where a
    dominant state militarism and an increasingly martial culture are the
    driving forces behind expansionistic policies and reluctance to make
    peace. The army is the largest landowner in Israel and is increasingly
    engaged with the private sector and other institutions, including
    the universities, where there is a flourishing security-knowledge
    industry. For example, Prof. Yitzhak Ben Israel of the Social Sciences
    Department of Tel Aviv University works on mathematical models for the
    success rates of targeted killings. He uses a substitution formula to
    predict how many people have to be killed to result in the collapse
    of an organization or political party.

    A key component of the militarized state is the drive to increase
    the production and export of weapons while also becoming a global
    security-services provider. This has led to a certain recklessness
    about who is being trained, where the arms wind up, and what sensitive
    technology might be exposed in the process. The Pentagon has long been
    nervous about the freewheeling Israeli consultants and arms dealers
    operating worldwide, particularly as those weapons and expertise
    command the highest prices in areas of armed conflict. The United
    States, as the primary source and funder for advanced weapons for
    Israel, most definitely has a horse in the race as the arms flow
    frequently produces political instability, and the technology that
    is sold or bartered can endanger U.S. security. But it would be a
    non-starter for the Defense Department to go head-to-head with an
    indifferent Congress in any attempt to restrict Israel's access to
    U.S. weaponry. So Israel will continue to sell and barter technology
    and weapons, legally or illegally, and the question becomes to what
    extent the Israeli government itself will put a brake on the unsavory
    side of that activity.

    Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, is executive director of the
    Council for the National Interest.

    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/who-will-control-israels-arms-dealers/

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