Is US policy driven by Israel?

NewsAmericaWorldMiddle EastAfricaPoliticsApril 3, 2026

US President Donald Trump

by LUKE ZUNGA
JOHANNESBURG, (CAJ News)IS American foreign policy dictated by Israel? Yes, it is.

The fluidity of American policy in Asia is anchored around Israel as the source of the policy.

America chooses Presidents who then switch to serve Israel financially, economically, and militarily. The war with Iran is difficult to understand, other than to please Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

If Iran had nuclear weapons, how do bombs destroy them without risking radiation? Israel has a legitimacy problem and is using American power to carve its space within American global policy.

The countries around Israel are viewed as enemies.

Israel is premised as a David fighting Goliath (the region), and the United States of America (USA) believes it is on the side of God, the religious ethos of the Jewish state, yet this is coupled with downright violence.

From the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, the US solidified its presence in the Middle East. Out of their invincibility attitude, the United States and its allies did not negotiate with Arab countries, but forcibly carved Israel by abolishing the Palestinian state.

The seeds of animosity were sown there, creating resistance groups. The fact that Iran supports these groups is not the core issue.

Striking Iran is not the solution, unless persuaded through the lens of Israeli policy. Israel has fought about seven Israel–Arab wars, all influenced by the United States mighty power.

The first war began immediately after Israel declared independence. Five Arab states – Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, and Lebanon – invaded Israel on 15 May 1948, extending into 1949.

The invasion was to reject the United Nations (UN) Partition Plan, Resolution 181, which divided the Palestine territory.

It is this resolution which created the Jewish state.

The Arabs fought to protect the Palestinian Arab population. The United States, with the backing of Britain, the two most powerful states in the world then, defended Israel and defeated the Arab countries, ending in the 1949 Armistice agreements.

In 1967, Israel fought a six-day war against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, which ended with territorial gains for Israel under the United Nations (UN) Security Council, Resolution 242, which gave Israel the Golan Heights from Syria and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt.

Here, the United States pushed Israeli policy through the United Nations.

Egypt and Syria launched a surprise attack against Israeli positions on 6 October 1973, targeting Israeli forces in the Sinai Peninsula and Golan Heights to regain territory lost in 1967.

Egypt crossed the Suez Canal with 100,000 soldiers, while Syria attacked in the north. The United States airlifted military and food supplies to fight alongside Israel.

Israel clawed back from the invasion and secured UN Security Council Resolutions 339–341 in October 1973, which paved the way for UN forces deployment and the 1978 Camp David Accords, ushering in a cold peace between Egypt and Israel.

The United States of America (USA) pushed Israeli policy. Israel invaded Lebanon on 6 June 1982 to destroy the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) guerrilla infrastructure and to install a pro-Israel Lebanese Christian government.

Israel is financed and militarised by the United States in these incursions. In 2006, Israel attacked Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Hezbollah resistance fighters had crossed into Israeli territory and attacked an Israel Defence Forces (IDF) convoy patrolling the border, killing three IDF soldiers and taking two captured IDF soldiers back into Lebanon.

Many conflicts occurred in between, leading to 7 October 2023. Hamas crossed into Israel, attacked a military base, and killed and abducted about 254 people, among them 12 Americans, starting the current Hamas–Israel war which killed nearly 73,000 Palestinians, mainly children.

Note that 7 October is the day the United States started attacking Afghanistan in 2001. The United States has been in the region to suppress any emerging power, leveraging Israel.

When Iraq was emerging as a powerhouse, the United States launched the Iraq War to dethrone Saddam Hussein from power, soon after Desert Storm in 1990–1991.

Iraq was falsely accused of having chemical weapons of mass destruction. Today, Iran is falsely accused of having nuclear weapons.

As long as the United States has no challenger, everybody is at risk of its force. Israel is a baby rhino of the United States.

Intelligent US politicians lose their heads to Israel, plunging into awful massacres.

The bubbling language of US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, ‘negotiating with bombs’, is neither intelligent nor diplomatic rhetoric.

Therefore, United States foreign policy in the region is framed by the demands of Israel, largely because Jewish businesses in the United States and elsewhere control the US economy.

The US is fighting an Israeli war, not an American war. The whole world is thrown into an energy crisis because of following Netanyahu’s biblical fantasy.

At the beginning, the United States needed the UN for its resolutions.

Now the US does not consult the UN at all and has restricted funding to it. Why are Africans glued to the UN, a shell of the US with an ineffective Security Council, one-sided and poorly represented?

Africa is warned that countries must grow their economies through organising capital internally and eventually create a deterrent against US behaviour, as China has done.

The idea of American investors should be considered outdated policy. There are many ways of organising capital, one suggested here: www.organizecapitals.com

– CAJ News

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