Section 224 of the FY2027 National Defense Authorization Act, since renumbered 219 in the House, creates a "United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative." It directs the Secretary of Defense to appoint an executive agent to synchronize joint work on missile defense, counter-drone systems, AI, autonomous platforms, and cybersecurity, and to move that work faster from research into production. Its text derives from the stalled U.S.-Israel FUTURES Act, folded into a must-pass bill.
Anti-Zionists are livid.
It is true that no other country has quite this arrangement with the U.S. military. The provision shifts a deepening relationship out of the annual appropriations process, where each year's aid faces a vote and conditions, and into Pentagon procurement channels that are harder to see and harder to unwind. That's a real risk that needs to be weighed against the benefits.
But critics are going past the logical objections into antisemitic conspiracy theories.
Khanna posted, "We cannot integrate our military with Israel's and lose our sovereignty." How does that work?
The United States runs AUKUS with Australia and the United Kingdom, a submarine and advanced-technology pact deeper than anything Section 224 contemplates. It shares co-development across NATO. Foreign components run throughout the F-35 supply chain by design. None of that is said to cost America its sovereignty, because they plainly do not. No amount of technical cooperation changes who sits in the Pentagon and decides how to defend the country; command, acquisition authority, and classification rules stay in American hands, as they do with every ally. For "lose our sovereignty" to mean anything, you need an unstated premise: that partnering with this particular party can somehow override the judgment of American leaders and bend their decisions against American interests. That the mere presence of Israelis in the process corrupts the process. That premise is not an argument. It is a spell.
Khanna is only the beginning. Joe Kent, former director of the National Counterterrorism Center, warned that opening sensitive technology to Israel means "back doors and spyware can be installed that will most certainly be used by the Israelis to influence U.S. policy." Not "might be" but "most certainly," a categorical prophecy that Israeli technology inside American systems will function as a hypnotic device operating on American policy itself. This is the sovereignty spell restated in software: contact with Israeli code does not add a supplier to be vetted, it plants a mechanism that overrides American will.
The other headline objection is quite different from Kent's. Josh Paul of the Arab Center presses it hardest: Israel will use its access to steal American technology, pursuing espionage against the systems it now touches.
Paul adds another fantasy: "Israel will be able to threaten to withhold, or actually withhold, subcomponents or software updates that might be key to the operability of future US weapons systems, essentially holding US military capabilities hostage."
Then there are the simultaneous social media accounts popping up with the single word: "merger." They are claiming that this bill would merge the US and Israeli militaries into a single force. This has become a major theme in recent days, from CAIR to BDS to lots of social media "news" sites. This is too stupid for words.Another objection from Eli Clifton and Ian Lustick in The Guardian spins an amazing conspiracy theory that has to be read to be believed. Describing the people behind the FUTURES Act, they say:
Their vision is of “New Jerusalem” (the US) wedded to “Old Jerusalem” (Israel) on the basis of both having been divinely chosen for the mission of saving civilization from the “red-green” (Marxist-Muslim) alliance.
For Israel, this means not just ruling all the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, but dominating the Middle East, launching wars of “prevention” against all potential adversaries (including Turkey, Iran and even Egypt) and, with Britain and France succumbing to the influence of foreign immigrants and the disease of “European secularism”, serving as the US’s most important ally in its global struggle to preserve “civilization” – labeled either “Jewish-Christian” or “western”.
The extravagance of such ideas clearly marks the origins of the project, exposing the influence of well-funded dark-money groups and thinktanks exerting their influence on behalf of Israel’s government.
Not coincidentally, Clufton and Lustick are releasing a book in August titled "Israel’s Lobby: America in the Grip of a Foreign Power."
The assumption behind each objection is that Israel is inherently an evil power hellbent on world domination leveraging America as its unwitting slave.
In the end all of these criticisms are not just assuming Israeli brilliance and duplicity, but also American naivete and stupidity.
In reality, US military and political leaders don't enter agreements that are bad for America. They have every ability to rebuff Israel and that all-powerful "Zionist Lobby" when they feel that their interests diverge. And they have, repeatedly.
In the real world, nations extensively test weapons systems and software before adopting them. In the real world, the harm from being discovered to install spyware far outweighs any benefits. In the real world, nations sign agreements for each shared technology to impose real penalties for anyone who breaks the agreement. In the real world, any implementation of technology would include controls to ensure that the risks of depending on a single component are mitigated (i.e., with source code included with the software.) These are all risks that armies (and even regular corporations) know how to handle.
And notice what none of them address: the benefits to the US of such an agreement. Why would it even be entertained if the US didn't see a real advantage of adopting Israeli technologies and share information that might give them new ways to attack known problems?
When you refuse to even acknowledge the benefits along with the risks, then it is not a serious analysis. It is the retroactive justification for the pre-designed anti-Israel opinion. Which explains why so many different critics come up with so many different yet equally bizarre objections - because the point isn't a coherent argument, but the appearance of one. Something for other anti-Zionists to grab onto and think, look, this "expert" says what I want to believe..
As I said, there are reasonable arguments against the act. Ro Khanna even says some of them separately. But when the rhetoric reaches into conspiracy theory and the assumption of American incompetence to hold onto its own sovereignty, we are no longer dealing with responsible argument.
We are looking at age-old antisemitism swapping the Elders of Zion with "Zionists."
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Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026) "He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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