Israeli weapons companies often promote their products for export by emphasising that they are âbattle-tested.â Marketing weapons in such a way is misleading, to say the least.
Ever since the end of the 1973 October War, Israel has not participated in any battle if by âbattleâ we understand, as the Cambridge Dictionary does, âa fight between armed forces.â
This lack of battle has been offset by an abundance of testing. The laboratory has been no other than the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
In his book, Antony Loewenstein argues that the occupation of Palestine has provided Israel with an incomparable testing ground in the development of its weapons and surveillance technology.
At the same time, Palestine has also served as a display room for the effects of these weapons, which are then exported around the world generating both considerable revenue and valuable political influence for Israel.
As Loewenstein, an independent journalist, author, and filmmaker, writes, âThe Palestine laboratory is a signature Israeli selling point.â
The author explains how Israelâs path to becoming âa military powerhouseâ began after the 1967 War and the countryâs growing alignment with Washington in the context of the Cold War.
Israel soon accumulated unsavoury buyers of its weaponry, such as the Shahâs Iran in the 1970s and the Guatemalan military junta in the early 1980s.
By the 1990s, the Israeli government wanted its military industry to become more autonomous from the United States.
This coincided with the privatisation of the sector, which nonetheless continued to receive significant economic support from the state.
The so-called âWar on Terrorâ that followed the 9/11 attacks came at a for the countryâs high-tech industry and proved highly profitable for Israeli weapons companies.
Israel had long considered any kind of Palestinian resistance as terrorism. Thus, it was naturally well-positioned when governments around the world jumped at the occasion of labelling political opponents of all sorts as terrorists. As Lowenstein writes, Israel was given a great opportunity âto monetise the occupation.â
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research (SIPRI), Israel has been among the worldâs of weapons since at least 2004, and in the 2016-2020 period, it was the .
To understand the economic relevance of the weapons industry in Israel, it is important to keep in mind that Israel has a smaller population than Portugal or the US State of Michigan.
The links between the occupation and military submission of Palestine and the success of Israelâs weapons and surveillance industries are easily traceable and the examples are manifold.
During Israelâs military operation against the Gaza Strip in 2014, known as Operation Protective Edge, the CEO of the weapons firm Meprolight that âafter every campaign of the kind that is now taking place in Gaza, we see an increase in the number of customers from abroad.â
Meanwhile, and especially after the massive influx of migrants in 2015, the European Union and its borders agency Frontex have increasingly relied on Israeli drones, tested over Gaza and the West Bank, to police Europeâs borders. Lowenstein describes Israel as a key player in the EU's efforts âto both militarise its borders and deter new arrivals.â
The official private status of Israeli weapons companies provides the Israeli government with the advantage of certain plausible deniability in case of scandal.
This is particularly important when it comes to the cyber-arms industry, which is nominally independent but through revolving doors to the Israeli armyâs Unit 8200, the military corps responsible for cyberwarfare and surveillance. The Israeli company NSO Group, with to Unit 8200, developed the spyware Pegasus.
According to a recent report, the Mexican government was the to buy the technology in 2011. It was soon used by government agencies worldwide to infiltrate private mobile phones. Such varied people as a , an , and an were victims of the Pegasus spyware.
Despite the effort to keep up appearances, cyber-arms firms, as well as traditional weapons companies, âact as an extension of Israelâs foreign policy agenda, supporting its goals and pro-occupation ideology,â argues Loewenstein. This could be seen with the use of NSO Groupâs Pegasus to open diplomatic doors for Israel in the Gulf.
According to an by The New York Times, âsales of Pegasus played an unseen but critical role in securing the support of Arab nations in Israelâs campaign against Iran and even in negotiating the Abraham Accords.â The agreements official relations between Israel and the UAE and Bahrain in 2020.
In the hands of the UAE long before the normalisation of relations, Pegasus was used by Abu Dhabi to target, among many others, the private mobile phone of , the wife of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, assassinated in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018.
When we jointly consider the economic success of Israelâs weapons exports and the countryâs poor track in terms of human rights, the US support for the Israeli army and the funding of its national weapons industry becomes all the more unsettling.
Washington provides Foreign Military Funding (FMF) to allied countries to buy US weapons. In 2021, in FMF funds, 59% of the total, went to Israel.
Moreover, since the 1980s Israel has been the only country to from the âoffshore procurementâ clause, which allows Israel to spend part of the FMF funds on the domestic development and production of weapons.
For decades, Israel spent 25% of the FMF funds in the domestic market. Under the terms of the 2016 US-Israel Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), this percentage is currently decreasing, and the âoffshore procurementâ clause is by 2028.
The change, however, was compensated by an of $800 million per year in FMF funds in comparison to the previous MOU, signed in 2007.
Loewenstein predicts that Israelâs privatized military-industrial complex âwill only grow in the coming decades.â There are powerful arguments to support this assessment.
Israeli weapons exports by 55% between 2020 and 2022, and the Israeli Defense Ministry recently that the list of products that can be marketed without a license will be dramatically increased. The priorities are clear.
In the of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in 2019, Israel has âto take the risk, and itâs a considerable risk, of regulating less in order to grow more.â
India, with increasingly to Israel under the rule of ethno-nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is now the recipient of of Israelâs weapons exports.
Meanwhile, the Arab countries that have normalised ties with Israel, as well as Saudi Arabia which likely to do so when crown prince Mohammad bin Salman becomes king, have expensive defence programmes that Israeli companies may soon supply.
The global rise of Israelâs military-industrial complex was never unavoidable. There are measures that could have prevented the use of Palestine as a laboratory that fuels Israelâs weapons exports.
What is lacking, as is so often the case, is international political will.
In 2021, for instance, a Finnish member of Parliament Anna Kontula an innovative bill that would have prevented weapons imports from countries that, like Israel, have used the weapons they produce to violate human rights.
As Loewenstein documents in his book, Israel has not only paid any price for its occupation of Palestine but has economically profited from it through the success of its weapons exports.
In The Palestine Laboratory, Loewenstein sometimes struggles to find his own voice as he often resorts to quotations and references to other authorsâ works. However, when he finds it, it turns out to be a convincing and powerful voice.
Marc Martorell Junyent is a graduate of International Relations and holds an MA in Comparative and Middle East Politics and Society from the University of TĂŒbingen (Germany). He has been published in the , , , and .
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