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Israeli Phalcon sale to India in trouble
By Kesava Menon
JERUSALEM, AUG. 20. The U.S. administration is reported to be
opposed to the Israeli sale of an advanced Airborne Early Warning
System (AEWS) to India. Concerns that the Phalcon airborne system
could undermine stability in South Asia by altering the balance
of power between India and Pakistan was said to be the basis for
the U.S. opposition.
The report which appeared in today's edition of the respected
Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz was sourced to an unnamed US official.
A report in Ha'aretz several weeks ago had noted that the U.S.
administration was trying to set up a special system to monitor
weapons sales from Israel to India and 26 other countries.
Today's report that the U.S. administration was considering
active opposition to the deal suggested that the matter was being
taken a step forward.
The daily report also stated that the proposed sale of the
Phalcon system was the main stumbling block to the signing of a
new U.S.-Israel agreement for the supervision of Israeli arms
exports. Israeli officials were said to be concerned that a new
arms exports supervision agreement would enable the U.S. to veto
the India deal.
Under the circumstances it was not clear whether the report about
U.S. opposition to the Phalcon sale was an inspired leak - to
inform Israel that whether or not the export supervision deal was
in place, opposition to the India deal would remain.
The supervision agreement is germane to U.S. strategic concerns.
Originally the U.S. had wanted Israel's exports to twenty-seven
countries be subjected to the terms of this agreement. Now the
U.S. reportedly wanted weapons exports to only four countries -
India, Pakistan, Russia and China - to be brought within the
ambit of the agreement.
Pakistan, of course, does not have diplomatic relations with
Israel and the question of arms deals between them should not
normally arise unless the U.S. was privy to some special
information.
Israel's weapons deals with Russia and China, as also with India,
are extremely lucrative. While the U.S. does not consider weapons
sales to India as a potential threat to their own forces, they
feel that advanced technology in the hands of China, could pose
such a threat. It is possible that the U.S. is threatening to
jeopardise the India deal, so that Israel softens its objections
to the export-supervision agreement.
U.S. officials were said to have promised their Israeli
counterparts, in the course of talks held in Washington, that
they did not plan to cast an automatic veto on arms deals, even
in respect to deals pertaining to the four countries. However,
the U.S. wishes that Israel give prior notice of transactions
with the four countries.
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