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THE U.S. FACTOR IN ISRAEL'S MILITARY RELATIONS WITH CHINA

by Mike Roberts <MRMR@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 15, 2008 at 11:29 AM

http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=408&issue_id=3344&article_id=2369792

  THE U.S. FACTOR IN ISRAEL'S MILITARY RELATIONS WITH CHINA

By Yitzhak ****chor

The Jerusalem-Beijing-Wa****ngton imbroglio over Israel's sale of Harpy 
UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) to China that surfaced in December 2004 
is by no means over. Yet, while it is too soon to mourn the untimely 
death of Israeli arms sales to China, it is nonetheless becoming clear 
to all parties concerned that these controversial military transfers 
seem to have reached a dead end and have practically been suspended. 
Even if the deal goes through (an unlikely possibility), Israel will 
probably not resume its arms supplies to China in the foreseeable future 
– though not because of mutual unwillingness. On the contrary, the two 
parties are eager to continue their relation****p. But it is Wa****ngton 
that for the last fifteen years has gradually forced Israel first to 
limit and then to stop altogether its military transfers to China. This 
staged pressure reached its climax with the killing of the Phalcon AWACS 
deal five years ago. However, it has apparently failed to deliver the 
message. Using the Harpy as an aftershock, the U.S. seems to be 
promoting an uncompromising policy prohibiting all transfers to China of 
goods, services and technology – military and civilian – produced by 
Israel's defense industries. This policy effectively squelches 
Sino-Israeli military relations.

Produced by Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI), Harpy is a 500 km-range 
delta-wing lethal UAV with a day and night capability designed to 
detect, attack and destroy radar emitters with a very high hit accuracy. 
Launched from a ground vehicle behind the battle zone, Harpy is an 
all-weather autonomous weapon system that can effectively suppress 
hostile SAM (surface-to-air-missile) and radar sites for a long 
duration. Like the Phalcon, Harpy does not incor****ate U.S. technology. 
Indeed, when the Sino-Israeli Harpy UAV deal, negotiated in the 
mid-1990s, was re****ted to the U.S., Wa****ngton – while upset by the 
deal – did not explicitly object. By 1999, Israel had re****tedly sold 
China about one hundred Harpy UAVs for about $55-70 million. Unlike the 
aborted Phalcon deal (valued at $250 million-$1 billion), the Harpy deal 
is relatively small given Israel's total arms sales of about $15 billion 
in 2000-2004.

The deal was not exposed until 2002. In July, the Wa****ngton Times 
re****ted that several Harpy drones had been spotted during a PLA 
military exercise in southern Fujian province, opposite Taiwan. There 
was no mention of any U.S. objection to the deal but earlier U.S. 
accusations against Israeli arms sales to China were immediately 
recycled and later integrated into the 2004 Re****t to Congress of the 
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission published in June. 
According to Israel's Defense Ministry, its accusations were based on 
"erroneous information." Sources in the Israeli Embassy in Wa****ngton 
claimed that Israel does not require a license to ex****t Israeli 
technologies and that the U.S. is perfectly aware that Israel's ex****t 
control is among the best in the world, and all the U.S. technologies in 
its possession are well protected. Furthermore, the sources underlined 
that Israel acceded to a U.S. request by suspending all negotiations to 
ex****t weapons and military equipment to China in January 2003.

In 2003, Israel agreed to a Chinese request to renew its Harpy 
"spare-part inventory" and duly informed Wa****ngton. Harpy components 
probably arrived in Israel in August 2004. Wa****ngton, which had 
grudgingly agreed to the deal in the first place, could hardly oppose 
China's request. Provisions of overhaul, maintenance, spare parts and 
training are usually and legally covered by after-sale services of any 
transaction, military or civilian. Yet, by December 2004 Wa****ngton had 
come to believe that Harpy components were returned to Israel not for 
"spare part replacement and routine overhaul" but for upgrading. This 
upgrading may have included advanced technologies and sensors that could 
detect radar emitters even after they are switched off. Developed after 
the Harpy had been sold to China, these technologies have been 
incor****ated in a new Harpy model, re****tedly sold to Taiwan. Moreover, 
the Pentagon must have been concerned that joint U.S.-Israeli 
technological achievements related to an even more advanced model, would 
be leaked to the Chinese.

The Pentagon's surprise and consequent accusation against Israel for 
misleading the U.S. and for withholding information, therefore, came as 
a result of the upgrading, not the original sale. The upgrading was 
considered a threat to Taiwan (and the Seventh Fleet), representing a 
separate deal that has never been authorized. As such, it should have 
been re****ted to, and approved by, the U.S. – according to 
understandings reached with Israel in 2000, following the Phalcon 
controversy, and certainly in view of Israel's January 2003 decision to 
suspend all military ex****t contacts with China and to assure Wa****ngton 
that it would not sell any item to China that could harm U.S. security. 
While Israel regarded the Harpy upgrading as an integral part of the 
earlier deal, reached before these understandings were agreed on, 
Wa****ngton insisted that Israel should not only stop the upgrading 
process but, furthermore, confiscate Chinese-owned UAV components.

The short-term outcome of this dispute is not yet clear, but the 
long-term implications are already evident. In this triangular 
relation****p, Wa****ngton represents the independent variable whose 
uncompromising policy toward China is being systematically consolidated. 
Trying to prevent a European breach of the arms embargo imposed on the 
PRC after the Tiananmen 1989 confrontation, Wa****ngton can by no means 
approve Israeli military sales to China. Moreover, because of its 
overwhelming dependence on the U.S., Israel is a much easier prey 
compared to Europe. Actually, six months before the Harpy crisis 
erupted, the U.S. had re****tedly blocked the direct participation of 
Israeli defense firms in security tenders for the 2008 Beijing Olympic 
Games. This fits into Wa****ngton's policy of containing Beijing, 
especially in view of the U.S. perception of the dangerous combination 
of China's accelerated military modernization, increased political 
authoritarianism and continued violation of human rights.

Indeed, China represents a dependent variable in this triangular 
relation****p, apparently with little room to maneuver. State Counselor 
and Deputy Prime Minister Tang Jiaxuan who arrived in Israel heading a 
large delegation on December 25, 2004, soon after the crisis erupted, 
warned the U.S. against meddling in Beijing's affairs. However, his 
reaction was rather tempered and he hardly touched on the Harpy issue in 
public. In fact, official China has been remarkably quiet and restrained 
on the Harpy issue – unlike its response to the Phalcon affair that 
immediately and seriously affected Israel's military, diplomatic and 
economic activities in China. For one reason, upgrading the Harpy UAVs 
is a relatively small deal and China already keeps most if not all of 
the drones. It is only a question of time until the Chinese develop 
their own version of sophisticated lethal UAVs, if they have not 
already. The Israeli-made UAVs and most other arms acquisitions from 
abroad (with the possible exception of Russia – but including Europe) 
are primarily a quick fix. Also, unlike the Harpy affair, the Phalcon 
affair involved a public loss of face for former president Jiang Zemin 
who was personally promised to get the Phalcon. But the most im****tant 
reason is China's ultimate realization that Israel has no choice.

Lu Jing, the political affairs counselor at the PRC Embassy in Tel Aviv, 
told The Jerusalem Post on February 3, 2005 that Beijing's more 
forgiving and understanding response to the Harpy affair is the outcome 
of a learning process. "We have realized that what happened with the 
[Phalcon] plane is not only the fault of the Israeli government … There 
were some external factors involved as well. We have to look forward, 
not backward. This relation****p is mutually beneficial for both 
countries." Now, he added, we attempt "to put ourselves in your boots. 
We were more tolerant this time around … We never scolded the Israeli 
side. We just wanted to let the issue resolve quietly and not let it 
damage the bilateral ties. I can't say we are satisfied, but while last 
time we publicly expressed our outrage, this time we kept everything in. 
We learned a lesson and didn't want to turn it into a big issue. This is 
only one aspect of our relation****p." Numerous Chinese Internet comments 
have been less understanding and displayed strong anti-American 
sentiments, disbelief in Israel's dependence on the U.S. and even 
criticism of Chinese officials' shortsightedness. One comment said: "A 
small brother is a small brother. He should obey his big brother in 
everything. One day, when Israel needs Chinese help, we shall firmly say 
‘no'!" Indeed, unofficial Chinese sources said that if the UAVs were not 
upgraded according to earlier Sino-Israeli agreements, China would apply 
sanctions against Israeli companies both in China and in Hong Kong.

Finally, Israel is an even more dependent variable in this triangular 
relation****p. For all of its irritation about Wa****ngton's behavior, 
from now on it would be very difficult – if not impossible – for Israel 
to sell China any kind of arms or technology of defense industrial 
origin. Last March, before leaving on a visit to the U.S., Israel's 
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz warned CEOs of some fifty of Israel's 
leading defense firms that they need written permission for any business 
negotiations with China or even for visiting China. After meeting U.S. 
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Mofaz admitted that the Harpy 
upgrade deal with China might be abandoned under U.S. pressure. Also, 
earlier in the year Japan's Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura asked 
the Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom to end arms sales to East 
Asia. He meant China.

The inevitable outcome of the Harpy crisis will be an end to Israeli 
arms sales to the PRC. Negotiations concerning the upgrade deal could 
drag on for several months but ultimately, barring a reversal of events 
and a dramatic change in Wa****ngton's strategic thinking about Beijing, 
the China market is lost for Israel's defense industries for the 
foreseeable future.

Yitzhak ****chor is Professor of East Asian Studies and Political Science 
at the University of Haifa, and Senior Fellow, the Harry S Truman 
Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace, the Hebrew University 
of Jerusalem, Israel.
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
THE U.S. FACTOR IN ISRAEL'S MILITARY RELATIONS WITH CHINA
Mike Roberts <MRMR@[EM  2008-05-15 11:29:43 
Re: THE U.S. FACTOR IN ISRAEL'S MILITARY RELATIONS WITH CHINA
"free.tuneup@[EMAIL   2008-05-15 11:45:34 

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