This article was published on ynetnews.com. May 5,2025.
The state created in 1948 to ensure that the Jewish people would never again have to rely on anybody else for our security has repeatedly outsourced its security to others. The results have always been disastrous.
In the 1950s, we outsourced our security to UN peacekeepers in Sinai and Gaza only to see them evicted overnight by Egypt in 1967. During the First Gulf War in 1991, when the IDF was prepared to intervene against Iraqi forces firing Scud missiles at Tel Aviv, Israel instead relied on U.S. troops to fire Patriot missiles at the Scuds. The Patriots missed.
Now, even after the agonizing lesson of October 7, Israel is once again outsourcing our fundamental security. We expected the United States to deter the Houthis and save the IDF from having to do that difficult job. But, as the published correspondence between U.S. decision-makers revealed, America was bombing Yemen not to protect Israel but to shield international shipping—and that only reluctantly. The U.S. and British campaign, moreover, has proven singularly ineffective in stopping Houthi missile fire at Israel. It has only increased and, as of yesterday morning, has scored a strategic victory by striking our airport.
Having witnessed again and again the dangers of outsourcing, it is crucial that Israel not make the same mistake by relying on some other country or countries to eliminate the greatest threat of all. If Iran is once again enriched by a nuclear deal, it will reestablish its hegemony over Syria, revive Hezbollah and Hamas, and return Israel to the situation that existed on the morning of October 7.
Listen to this articles now