A humanitarian aid official who attended the meeting said Grande noted that Israel is one in a “tight circle of very few allies” that the U.S. will not oppose, nor will it “hold anything back that they want.”

  • @[email protected]
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    97 hours ago

    It is unfortunately simple. The feelings of religion and sympathy in the wake of WW2 completely aside, strategically they offer the US a strong military ally in the Middle East, including playing host to several military bases. That’s a very rare thing in that region.

    • @GoddessNoAi
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      57 hours ago

      IMO this is the real answer. Geopolitical stability in the region, at the cost of letting Israel do whatever it wants including genociding the Palestinians. It makes me sick, but I have a sinking feeling that if we allowed the entire region become unstable, that would make me sick as well.

      “Quagmire” is a word for a reason.

      • @[email protected]
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        35 hours ago

        What stability though? They’ve been there since being established after WW2 and it’s been an extremely volatile region the entire time.

        It would at least be a Faustian bargain if they were doing horrible atrocities but that’s just the price you pay for the Middle East being a peaceful and stable area of the world… but the Middle East has been in crisis for my entire life, so what am I missing?

        Also America has the ability to project its power in the region without Israel, so what exactly is there to gain?

        • @GoddessNoAi
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          24 hours ago

          Stability doesn’t mean “peace” it means “things don’t get worse.” And I think we both know that things could be A LOT worse.