An Israeli soldier is seen next to an U.S-funded Iron Dome interceptor battery deployed near the northern Israeli city of Haifa, Aug. 28, 2013. Tsafrir Abayov | AP
The U.S.-Israel Directed Energy Cooperation Actâwhich appears not to provide any direct benefit to the United Statesâwould deepen Israelâs access to grotesque weapons of war that have been developed by the U.S. military but have also been banned for use by American troops.
by Whitney Webb, reposted from MintPress
Last Thursday, Reps. Ted Lieu (D-CA) and Elise Stefanik (R-NY) introduced the âU.S.-Israel Directed Energy Cooperation Act,â which would authorize âthe Department of Defense to carry out bilateral cooperation with Israel to develop directed energy capabilities,â according to a press release.
.@RepTedLieu & I introduced the U.S.-Israel Directed Energy Cooperation Act today. This bipartisan bill allows us to collaborate w/ Israel to counter global adversarial threats by increasing our cooperation on directed energy technology. Read more -> https://t.co/ZYHu3jADZc
— Rep. Elise Stefanik (@RepStefanik) March 14, 2019
Directed energy weapons include laser weapons and particle beams; they are highly destructive but embraced by militaries for their âinfinite magazinesâ and âincredible speed and range.â
More specifically, the bill â which is identical to a bill of the same name that Lieu and Stefanik introduced last year but failed to pass â would allow the Pentagon âto carry out research, development, test, and evaluation activities, on a joint basis with Israel, to establish directed energy capabilities that address threats to the United States, deployed forces of the United States, or Israel, and for other purposes.â
Arguably more troubling is the fact that this bill would deepen Israelâs access to grotesque weapons of war that have been developed by the U.S. military but have also been banned for use by American troops. For instance, in the late 1990s, the U.S. and Israel collaborated on the âNautilusâ program that created lasers that cause permanent blindness in those targeted by literally âmelting the eyeball.â
Though the âNautilusâ lasers were banned for use by the U.S. under the Clinton administration because they could cause permanent blindness, they were nevertheless shared with Israelâs government. A spokesman for U.S. Army Space and Strategic Defense Command, John Cunningham, at the time told the Washington Report on Middle Eastern Affairs that the decision to share the technology with Israel had not been made by the command â which was the lead agency overseeing the program â and instead stated that âWe are taking our orders from the Secretary of Defense [William Perry] and President Clinton.â
The âNautilusâ lasers were later shelved for use as missile defense by Israel in 2006, despite the U.S. and Israel having spent $300 million, owing to the âprohibitive costâ of their operation. However, Israel has continued to use the highly experimental technology to develop a new system it claimed was on the âverge of completionâ this past December.
In light of this current bill, it is important to revisit the âNautilusâ example, as it clearly shows that the U.S. government, in past âcollaborativeâ efforts, has provided experimental, hi-tech weapons to Israel even when they are so controversial, potent and deadly that the U.S.â own military is banned from using them. This point is even more troubling when one considers that Israel regularly tests its experimental and newly developed weapons on Palestinians, including civilians, who live in the blockaded Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank.

U.S. to subsidize Israeli arsenal
While it has been touted as a means of âjointlyâ researching directed energy weapons, the text of the bill reveals that it would be used to funnel U.S. taxpayer funds to subsidize Israeli directed energy weapon research in Israel.
For instance, the bill states: âThe Secretary of Defense is authorized to provide maintenance and sustainment support to Israel for the directed energy capabilities research, development, test, and evaluation activities authorized.â It then states that Israelâs financial contribution to said research would not necessarily need to be equal to the U.S.â contribution, but merely âan amount that otherwise meets the best efforts of Israel, as mutually agreed to by the United States and Israel.â
Furthermore, the âmemorandum of agreementâ between the two countries states that the bill would require âthe United States Government to receive semiannual reports on expenditure of funds, if any, by the Government of Israel, including a description of what the funds have been used for, when funds were expended, and an identification of entities that expended the funds.â This passage strongly suggests that the research will take place in Israel under Israeli government supervision.
The bill is part of a recent congressional effort to mandate close cooperation between the Israeli and U.S. governments in sensitive technology, despite Israelâs history of using such collaboration to steal state secrets. For instance, a widely overlooked provision of the United States-Israel Security Assistance Authorization Act of 2018 â which was nearly passed but ultimately blocked last year in the Senate by Rand Paul (R-KY) â would have mandated that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) work closely with the Israel Space Agency (ISA) âto identify and cooperatively pursue peaceful space exploration and science initiatives in areas of mutual interest.â
The provision was included despite the fact that an Israeli postdoctoral student, Amir Gat, at Caltech had illegally transmitted to Israel classified information on NASA technology. Gat is now employed by an Israeli state-run research institution.
Considering the source(s)
This current bill appears not to provide any direct benefit to the United States and, instead, promises to be a way of subsidizing hi-tech weapons research of an allied government that regularly commits war crimes. Though Rep. Lieu has claimed that the legislation is an âopportunityâ for the U.S. and would âsave lives,â it seems that the $31,850 Lieu received from the pro-Israel lobby just last year may have swayed his opinion.
Yet, in contrast, the billâs other sponsor, Rep. Stefanik, has not received such largesse from the Israel lobby. Instead, Stefanik is connected with and used to work for the countryâs most notorious and zealously pro-Israel neoconservatives, when she served as communications director for the Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI). FPI was founded in 2009 by neoconservatives Robert Kagan and Bill Kristol as the successor to the Project for a New American Century (PNAC), which had fallen into disrepute for its role in promoting â and some argue helping to plan â the Iraq War. Yet, Stefanikâs association with neoconservatives goes beyond her association with FPI, as neocon National Security Adviser John Bolton endorsed her re-election campaign bid in 2017.
Given the lack of benefit for the U.S. â and Israelâs history of war crimes and testing its newly developed weapons on disenfranchised Palestinians in blockaded Gaza or the occupied West Bank â this bill is a perfect example of yet another âIsrael firstâ bill now making its way through the U.S. Congress.
Whitney Webb is a MintPress News journalist based in Chile. She has contributed to several independent media outlets including Global Research, EcoWatch, the Ron Paul Institute and 21st Century Wire, among others. She has made several radio and television appearances and is the 2019 winner of the Serena Shim Award for Uncompromised Integrity in Journalism.
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