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The Tikvah Podcast

Dr. Raphael BenLevi on Ending U.S. Aid to Israel

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, Politics, Religion & Spirituality, News

4.8 • 658 Ratings

🗓️ 1 May 2026

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the spring of 2026, Israel and the United States conducted joint offensive military operations against Iran: coordinating targets, dividing airspace, and operating with a degree of integration that has no precedent in the history of the alliance. The operation significantly degraded Iran's military capabilities, and it marked what many analysts regard as a genuine turning point, not just in the regional balance of power, but in the nature of the American-Israeli relationship itself. For decades, that relationship had been structured as a powerful patron supporting a dependent client. What the Iran war suggested to some observers is that Israel has—at least in part—outgrown that structure.

That is the backdrop for a debate that is now live in both Jerusalem and Washington: what should American military aid to Israel look like when the current memorandum of understanding between the two countries expires in 2028? The U.S. currently provides Israel with approximately $3.5 billion annually in grants, earmarked for the purchase of American-made military equipment—an arrangement that dates to the aftermath of the Yom Kippur War and that has been renewed, and periodically enlarged, ever since. For most of that period, the case for the aid seemed self-evident. First the Arab states, and then Iran and its proxies, were actively threatening Israel's existence. American military and diplomatic support was an indispensable buttress of Israel's security. Whether that case remains self-evident today, in the wake of a war that has significantly diminished Iranian capabilities, is now a serious question being debated by Israelis and Americans of good faith, with thoughtful arguments on multiple sides.

In this episode, Mosaic's editor Jonathan Silver speaks with a proud Israeli patriot who has been making the case for ending American aid for some time. Dr. Raphael BenLevi is a senior fellow at the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy, director of the Churchill Program for Statecraft and Security at the Argaman Institute in Jerusalem, a reserve officer in the IDF intelligence branch, and an occasional contributor to Mosaic. He recently published an essay in Foreign Affairs titled "America Should Be Israel's Partner, Not Its Patron."

This week's episode of the Tikvah Podcast is generously sponsored by Steven Kleinman in memory of his mother, Estelle Fox. If you are interested in sponsoring an episode of the Tikvah Podcast, we invite you to join the Tikvah Ideas Circle. Visit tikvah.org/circle to learn more and join.

Transcript

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0:00.0

In the spring of 2026, Israel and the United States conducted joint offensive military operations against Iran,

0:16.0

coordinating targets, dividing airspace, and operating in a degree of integration that has no precedent

0:23.0

in the history of the alliance.

0:24.7

The operation significantly degraded Iran's military capabilities, and it marked what many

0:30.2

analysts regard as a genuine turning point, not just in the regional balance of power,

0:36.5

but in the nature of the America-Israel relationship itself.

0:39.3

For decades, that relationship had been structured as a powerful patron supporting a dependent client.

0:46.3

What the Iran War suggested, at least to some observers, is that Israel has, at least in part, outgrown that structure.

0:55.0

That's the backdrop for a debate that is now live in both Jerusalem and Washington.

1:00.0

What should American military aid to Israel look like when the current memorandum of understanding expires in 2028?

1:08.0

The United States currently provides Israel with approximately three and half

1:12.4

billion dollars annually in grants, earmarked for the purchase of American-made military equipment.

1:19.5

That is an arrangement that dates to the aftermath of the Yom Kippur War, and it has been renewed

1:24.7

and periodically enlarged ever since. For most of that period, the case for aid was, well, self-evident.

1:32.3

First, the Arab states and then Iran and its proxies

1:35.3

were actively threatening Israel's existence.

1:38.3

American support, both military and diplomatic,

1:41.3

was an indispensable buttress of Israel's security architecture.

1:45.8

Whether that case remains as self-evident today, as it did in 1973, in the wake of a war

1:52.3

that has significantly diminished Iranian capabilities, that's now a serious question for

1:57.6

serious people. Welcome to the Tikva podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver.

2:02.5

There are thoughtful arguments on multiple sides here, and it's a debate that Israelis and

...

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