By Dan Williams
TEL
AVIV (Reuters) - Israel’s neighbors are buying arms on a scale that
threatens its regional military superiority, the deputy Israeli air
force chief said on Sunday, in remarks that appeared aimed at helping
secure more defense aid from a reluctant Washington.
U.S.
military payouts to Israel, currently around $3 billion annually,
expire in 2018, and Israeli officials have spoken of needing around $4.5
billion. U.S. officials have balked at such an increase.
At
the heart of the dispute is how to perpetuate Israel’s qualitative
military edge - a guarantee that it gets more advanced U.S. weapons than
Arab states get. Israel says it needs to bulk up its armed forces, not
just upgrade their technologies, to keep ahead of potential foes.
"There
are countries here which have plans that are being actualized for arms
deals in the hundreds of billions of dollars, for the most advanced
Western weaponry and the most advanced Eastern weaponry,"
Brigadier-General Tal Kelman told a conference to promote Israel’s
purchase of the advanced U.S. fighter jet the F-35.
Kelman
did not specify countries other than Iran, which the Israelis fear will
use sanctions relief from last year’s nuclear agreement to build up its
ballistic missile program and arm Islamist guerillas like Lebanon’s
Hezbollah militia.
Some
Israeli officials have privately voiced concern about U.S. weapons
systems being supplied to Western-aligned Gulf Arabs, as well as
Egyptian interest in advanced Russian arms, though in neither case are
the countries openly hostile toward Israel.
"There
is a very great danger here, because today’s enemy can be tomorrow’s
friend, and today’s friend could be tomorrow’s enemy," Kelman told the
forum, hosted by Israel Defense magazine and Fisher Brothers Institute
for Air and Space Strategic Studies.
"There
is a potential here for the erosion of the IDF’s (Israel Defence Force)
qualitative edge and the IAF’s (Israel air force) qualitative edge."
Russia's
military intervention last year in Syria’s civil war has also worried
Israel, given Moscow’s dispatch of S-300 and S-400 air defense systems
capable of seeing deep into its territory.
A
slide projected at the conference by Gary North, a retired U.S. air
force general now with F-35 manufacturer Lockheed Martin , showed
Russian radars in Syria covering much of Israel as well as its
Mediterranean training areas. The F-35 has stealth capabilities.
(Editing by Jeffrey Heller, Larry King)
No comments:
Post a Comment