

Daniel Samet on the U.S.-Israel Relationship and the American National Interest: How the cold war shaped an enduring alliance between Washington and Jerusalem
Sep 12, 2025
Daniel Samet, a Jean Kirkpatrick Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, delves into the nuanced U.S.-Israel relationship shaped during the Cold War. He debunks the myth that American foreign policy is manipulated by a powerful Israel lobby, emphasizing that U.S. support stemmed from strategic interests. Samet analyzes how presidential perspectives influenced this alliance and highlights key historical events that have defined military cooperation. He also draws parallels between past and current geopolitical rivalries, notably with China.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Cold War Archive Undercuts 'Lobby' Thesis
- Daniel Samet argues Mearsheimer and Walt's 'Israel Lobby' thesis relies too heavily on anecdote and lacks archival support.
- Samet used presidential archives to show US policy toward Israel followed American strategic interests, not lobby control.
Early Restraint Was Strategic, Not Pro-Israel
- During the early Cold War the US avoided arming Israel to prevent escalation and Soviet entry into the Middle East.
- Washington viewed the region as a secondary theater and prioritized avoiding provocations that could invite Soviet influence.
Strategic Competition Frames US–Israel Ties
- Samet says US policy toward Israel was driven by overriding strategic contests: the Soviet Union then, China now.
- He argues Israel should align its offers to US strategic priorities to remain a valuable partner.