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High Politics is Low Politics: The Domestic and Systemic Sources of Israeli Security Policy, 1967–1977

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Michael Barnett
Affiliation:
Wellesley College
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Abstract

The literature on international political economy explains foreign economic policies by integrating systemic, state, and societal features. Theoretical approaches to national security, however, have tended to extract the state from its societal context. An adequate conceptualization of security policy must integrate both systemic forces and the domestic political economy.

One way of integrating these concerns is by examining the state's strategies for mobilizing those financial, productive, and human resources considered necessary for national security.

This article examines the political economy of the state's mobilization of resources for national security, called “war preparation,” and proposes a framework for investigation that consists of three elements: (i) the objectives of state managers, (2) the constraints on the state, and (3) the policies of the state for mobilizing its required resources. Based upon these considerations, some tendencies in the government's war preparation strategies are suggested. The utility of this framework is explored through an empirical examination of Israel between 1967 and 1977. The study demonstrates how Israel's war preparation strategies were shaped by the state's domestic and security objectives, the domestic political economy, and systemic constraints and opportunities.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1990

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References

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9 Although some may object to this characterization of the “systemic” tradition and point to those studies that include in their analyses forms of the state for the formulation of the security doctrine or crisis politics, these studies isolate the decision process within the state and essentially ignore state-society relations. See Halperin, Morton, Bureaucratic Politics and Foreign Policy (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1974)Google Scholar, and Allison, Graham, Essence of Decision (Boston: Little, Brown, 1971)Google Scholar, respectively.

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12 Kennedy (fn. 10).

13 Cf. Friedberg, Aaron L., “The Political Economy of American Strategy,” World Politics 41 (April 1989), 381406CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The societal dimension is also overlooked by such distinguished sociologists as Immanuel Wallerstein, Michael Mann, and Anthony Giddens in a review symposium of Kennedy's book, British Journal of Sociology 40 (June 1989), 328–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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17 Kaldor, Mary, “Warfare and Capitalism,” in Thompson, E. P. et al. , eds., Exterminism and Cold War (London: New Left Books, 1983), 261–88Google Scholar, attempts to address these concerns and oversights. Also see Shaw, Martin, “War and Social Theory,” in Shaw, , ed., War, State, and Society (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984), 122CrossRefGoogle Scholar, which laments the lack of adequate theorizing by Marxist scholars on the relationship between war and society.

18 “War preparation” can be measured by the “defense burden,” that is, military expenditure as a percentage of the country's budget, including the amount of total unilateral transfers minus that amount earmarked for defense purposes. This reflects the priorities of state managers; it also indicates the amount of available resources that is diverted to national security expenditures and is therefore unavailable for other types of social spending. See Berglas,, Eitan “Defense and Economy,” in Ben-Porath, Y., ed., The Israeli Economy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1986), 173–75Google Scholar.

19 Huntington (fn. 6), 1.

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24 Although states may pursue any number of fiscal strategies, including letting public structures depreciate, assets deplete, and consumption diminish, “the principal means were nonetheless taxation and borrowing.” Kindleberger, Charles, A Financial History of Western Europe (New York: George Allen & Unwin, 1984), 292Google Scholar.

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26 Although some major international conflicts have been successfully fought without the use of the most advanced weaponry, most notably the North Vietnamese campaign against the United States and most recently Chad's conflict with Libya, such instances are rare. The possibility for low-technology warfare has lead Wulf as well as Park and Park to argue for “self-reliant defense” that is premised on mass mobilization. Wulf, Herbert, “Dependent Militarism in the Periphery and Possible Alternative Concepts,” in Neuman, Stephanie and Harkavy, Robert, eds., Arms Transfers in the Modern World (New York: Praeger Press, 1979), 259Google Scholar, and Park, Hans and Park, Kyung, “Ideology and Security: Self-Reliance in China and North Korea,” in Azar, Edward and Moon, Chung-in, eds., National Security in the Third World (Aldershot, Hants, England: Edward Elgar Publishers, 1988), 102–35Google Scholar.

27 See Mandel (fn. 16), and Neuman (fn. 25), respectively.

28 There are certainly a host of other variables that affect the state's conscription policy, including the societal attitude toward warfare. Corvesier, Andre, Armies and Societies in Europe, 1494–1789 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1976), 1516Google Scholar.

28 Bendix, Reinhard, Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977), 418Google Scholar. Also see Weber, Max, Theory of Social and Economic Organization (New York: Oxford University Press, 1947), 328Google Scholar.

29 Walzer, Michael, “Political Alienation and Military Service,” in Walzer, , ed., Obligations: Essays in Disobedience (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1970), 153–70Google Scholar. Even before the development of the modern nation-state, those European principalities that had a strong basis in society were able to enlist their populations for defense. See Beukema, Henry, “The Social and Political Aspects of Conscription: Europe's Experience,” in Anderson, Martin, ed., The Military Draft (Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1982), 479–91Google Scholar.

30 Anthony Giddens, The Nation State and Violence (Berkeley: University of California Press), 233–34.

31 This feature of Third World militaries is largely due to the postcolonial character of these states. Not only is the state's lack of legitimacy attributable to its colonial heritage, but most colonial powers built local armies with those ethnic groups, very often deriving from minority groups, that would be responsive to colonial authorities. The policy was consistent with the authority's divide-and-rule strategy, which would have important consequences for shaping the conscription policy of the postcolonial state. Consequently, the colonial power generally balked at arming those elements of society that might use such knowledge and arms against them. Janowitz, Morris, “Military Institutions and Citizenship in Western Europe,” in Haries-Jenkins, Gwyn and Doom, Jacques van, eds., The Military and the Problem of Legitimacy (Beverly Hills, CA: Sage, 1976), 127–30Google Scholar, and Alexander Wendt and Michael Barnett, “The International System and Third World Militarization” (Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Atlanta, September 1989).

33 For example, Saddam Hussein attempted to instill a sense of nationality and increase the legitimacy of the Iraqi state in order to further his mobilization potential in the war against Iran. See Chubin and Tripp (fn. 20), 94. The importance of the state's legitimacy is not confined to the capitalist context but is also noted in socialist states. Park and Park contend that in China and North Korea “mass mobilization … is made possible by political indoctrination of the people with measures of ideological education” (fn. 26), 108.

34 Howard (fn. 4), 69.

35 I assume that these strategies are noncomplementary; however, it is immediately apparent that the state's mobilization strategies will usually evidence a mix of these strategies. This is as true for the state's war preparation strategies as it is for its strategies of domestic adjustment to shocks from the international economy. Although this typology obviously distorts what actually occurs, it is useful for analytical simplification and generation of hypotheses.

36 This discussion is somewhat analogous to the state's adjustment strategy to changes in the international economy. See Ikenberry, G. John, Reasons of State (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988)Google Scholar.

37 Ibid., 40.

38 The state's ability to rely on foreign actors is also dependent on the type of resource that is being mobilized. For instance, in the modern era foreign troops are rarely attainable, thereby necessitating the reliance on domestic manpower. Alternatively, because there are numerous arms producers and merchants, the state may more easily depend on foreign suppliers for its immediate needs and not be compelled to intervene in the domestic economy.

39 See Edward Azar and Chung-in Moon, “Legitimacy, Integration, and Policy Capacity: The ‘Software’ Side of Third World National Security,” in Azar and Moon (fn. 26), 81, and Knorr, Klaus, The War Potential of Nations (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1956)Google Scholar. The importance of propagating the state's legitimacy in order to mobilize greater amounts of resources is observed in the cases of Israel, North Korea, and Iraq. See Yaniv, Avner, “National Security and Nation-Building,” International Interactions 11, no. 2 (1984), 193217CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Park and Park (fn. 26); and Chubin and Tripp (fn. 20), respectively. See Stein, Art, “Conflict and Cohesion: A Review of the Literature,” Journal of Conflict Resolution 20 (March 1976), 143–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Levy, Jack, “The Diversionary Theory of War: A Critique,” in Midlarsky, Manus, ed., Handbook of War Studies (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989), 257–86Google Scholar, for good reviews of the cohesion literature.

40 Israel represents a useful case study for the following reasons. First, the literature on Israel's security policy reproduces those scholarly biases that I noted earlier. For instance, Israel's wartime experiences and strategic policy have been a fertile testing ground and laboratory for many scholars of conflict behavior. Yet these studies have evidenced little explicit concern with how societal pressures have affected the state's mobilization of security-related resources. See, for example, Feldman, Shai, Israeli Nuclear Deterrence (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982)Google Scholar, and Beres, Louis Rene, ed., Security or Armageddon: Israel's Nuclear Strategy (Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1986)Google Scholar. Yaniv's, AvnerDeterrence without the Bomb (Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1987)Google Scholar discusses the importance of societal factors where immediately relevant, but these factors are decidedly secondary to his overriding strategic focus. I will demonstrate that the Israeli government's war preparation strategies were greatly affected by the domestic context and that this dimension provides a different explanation for various aspects of Israel's strategic behavior.

Second, given that this study represents a first effort at defining and approaching a research question, it makes sense to examine it in the context of an “exceptional case.” Lijphart, Arend, “Comparative Politics and the Comparative Method,” American Political Science Review 65 (September 1971), 653–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Because war preparation was particularly intense and vigorous during this decade, the researcher is in a privileged position to observe the various manifestations of the mobilization process.

Scholars have often objected to the use of Israel for comparative and theoretical purposes on the grounds of its historical uniqueness (though this never applied to its conflict behavior). I reject this common understanding and the exclusion of Israel from social scientific inquiry on the following grounds. (1) Israel's social-structural characteristics are not so unique that its exclusion from theorizing is self-evident. The comparability of the Israeli case has been affirmed by other scholars, who have noted its “late-industrializing,” “developing,” and “postcolonial” characteristics. See Eisenstadt, S. N., The Transformation of Israeli Society (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1985)Google Scholar; Shalev, Michael, Labour and the Political Economy of Israel (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989)Google Scholar; and Migdal, Joel, “The Crystallization of the State and the Struggle over Rulemaking: Israel in Comparative Perspective,” in Kimmerling, Baruch, ed., Israeli State and Society: Boundaries and Frontiers (Albany: State University of New York, 1988), 127Google Scholar. (2) For those who argue that the Israeli case is not generalizable because of its strategic relationship with the United States, I evoke Lijphart's “deviant case strategy,” in which the case is selected in order to reveal why it is deviant, “that is, to uncover the relevant additional variables that were not considered previously, or td refine the (operational) definitions of some or all of the variables” (p. 692). In other words, Israel's decision to rely more heavily on the U.S. is something to be explained, not assumed. My contention is that situating Israel's war preparation strategies in its societal context can help to explain this deviance. In general, Israel represents a good example of a developing state attempting to mobilize scarce (and sometimes nonexistent) resources for national security while pursuing its other political and economic objectives. That it does not resemble all other developing countries does not deny Israel's appropriateness as a case study, although it does caution us about drawing sweeping generalizations from this one case.

41 The share of defense in the gross national product rose from approximately 8% in 1965, to 25% in 1970, to 35% in 1977.

42 Peres, Shimon, David's Sling (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1970)Google Scholar.

43 Eisenstadt (fn. 40), 219.

44 My contention is that Histadrut is best conceived as private capital, particularly as it became less responsive to state demands and its investment decisions were motivated by profit criteria. See Michael Shalev (fn. 40).

45 Total taxes as a percentage of GNP were 26.0, 26.6, and 21.0 for the Israeli, Canadian, and Swiss states. Berglas, Eitan, “An Empirical Evaluation of Israel's Income Tax, 1953–1965,” in Uri, Pierre, ed., Israel and the Common Market (London: George Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1970), 69130Google Scholar.

46 See Spiegel, Stephen, The Other Arab-Israeli Conflict (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), 158–65Google Scholar, for an analysis of the U.S. decision to commit to a strategic alliance with the Israelis following the 1967 war.

47 Moshe Zambar, interview with author, Tel Aviv, June 29, 1987.

48 Although these unilateral transfers were legally restricted to financing development, they essentially freed more resources for defense. Zambar made the point that “legally all this money … was used for social development … while our domestic resources were used for defense. In reality it made little difference. If we got more money for development, we could just channel that much more for defense. … Money has no taste and no smell.” Ibid.

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51 Nadav Halevi, “The Economy of Israel: Goals and Limitations,” Jersusalem Quarterly (Fall 1976), 83–92.

52 Israel's occupation of the captured territories provided it with additional fiscal burdens and opportunities. While generally maintaining the pre-1967 fiscal arrangement, Israeli officials did introduce three changes: (1) West Bank and Gaza workers were subjected to payroll deductions; (2) West Bank and Gaza residents had to bear the burden of Israeli duties on goods imported through Israel; and (3) residents of Jerusalem after the 1967 annexation were subject to the higher Israeli taxes. Despite such measures, from 1967 until 1972 “revenues directly accruing to the public sector in the territories have been consistently lower than expenditures, the balance being met from military government sources.” After this date the picture becomes more ambiguous; it is likely that the territories were no longer a financial drain but were rather a net contributor to the Israeli budget. Arkadie, Brian Van, Benefits and Burdens: A Report on the West Bank and Gaza Strip Economies since 1967 (New York: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1977), 98101Google Scholar.

53 Seliktor, Ofira, “The Cost of Vigilance: Linking the Economic and Social Costs of Defense,” Journal of Peace Research 17, no. 4 (1980), 339–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 Eitan Berglas, interview with author, Tel Aviv, June 6, 1987. Berglas was director of the Budget from 1977 to 1979.

55 Berglas (fn. 18), 187.

56 Arnon Gafni, interview with author, Tel Aviv, June 24, 1987. Before his term as governor of the Bank of Israel from 1976 to 1981, Gafni was director general of the Finance Ministry.

57 Gafni (fn. 56).

58 According to one public opinion poll conducted soon after the 1973 war, “65.1% of the public are unreservedly prepared to tighten their belts and pay higher taxes and another 15.2% are prepared to pay a little more. Only 14.9% are absolutely opposed to paying any more taxes and 4.9% have no views one way or another.” Israel Economist 29 (December 1973), 20Google Scholar.

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61 For example, Tadiran was nominally private until purchased by the Defense Ministry. Only when the company was placed under the guidance of the Defense Ministry did it begin to receive defense contracts. Peres (fn. 42), 132–35.

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63 Tzvi Dinstien, interview with author, Ramat Aviv, June 16, 1987.

64 Before 1967 the government had already established a policy of favoring those industries that were considered essential to the state's national security, notably chemicals, metals, machinery, and electronics. Kanovsky, Eliyahu, The Impact of the Six-Day War: Israel, the Occupied Territories, Egypt, Jordan (New York: Praeger Press, 1970), 117Google Scholar.

65 This contributed to increased industrial concentration. Jerusalem Institute of Management, Export-Led Growth Strategy for Israel: A Final Report (Tel Aviv: Jerusalem Institute of Management, 1987)Google Scholar.

66 Pinchas Zusman, interview with author, Rehovot, June 24, 1987. Zusman was economic adviser to, and then director general of, the Defense Ministry from 1968 to 1975.

67 Tzvi Tropp, interview with author, Tel Aviv, May 30, 1987. The actual investment figures are classified; it is therefore impossible to verify the percentage of defense funds that went to the private and public sectors.

68 Also see Mintz, Alex, “Arms Production in Israel Jerusalem Quarterly 42 (Spring 1987), 8999Google Scholar. There was also increased interest in the benefits from increased foreign capitalist activity (although foreign capital had been courted in some fashion since before 1967). See Sheila Ryan, “U.S. Military Contractors in Israel,” MERIP Reports (January—February 1987), 17–22.

69 Because military industrialization became more sophisticated and expensive and domestic demand was not enough to lower production costs, there was a turn to export promotion. This market became more central to the industry's success and an increasing source of the state's revenue. For overviews of Israel's arms export market, see Steinberg, G. M., “Israel: High-Technolgy Roulette,” in Brzoska, Michael and Ohlson, Thomas, eds., Arms Production in the Third World (Stockholm: SIPRI, 1985), 181–88Google Scholar, and Klieman, Aaron, Israel's Global Reach (New York: Pergamon Press, 1985)Google Scholar.

70 Azkin, Benjamin and Dror, Yehezkel, Israel: High Pressure Planning (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1964)Google Scholar, and Eisenstadt (fn. 40), 403–31.

71 Dinstien (fn. 63).

72 Zusman (fn. 66).

73 Ibid.

74 Arnon (fn. 50); Dinstien (fn. 63).

75 Dinstien (fn. 63); Tropp (fn. 67).

76 Horowitz, Dan and Kimmerling, Baruch, “Some Social Implications of Military Service and the Reserve System in Israel,” Archives Europeennes de Sociologie 15, no. 2 (1974), 262–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 264.

77 Kimmerling, Baruch, “Determination of the Boundaries and Frameworks of Conscription: Two Dimensions of Civil-Military Relations in Israel,” Studies in Comparative International Development 14 (Spring 1979), 2241CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 23.

78 Ibid.

79 Luttwak, Edward and Horowitz, Dan, The Israeli Army (New York: Harper & Row, 1975), 327Google Scholar.

80 Ibid., 359.

81 Yaniv (fn. 40), 191–92.

82 Ibid., 192.

83 Eisenstadt (fn. 40), 160–61.

84 Yaniv (fn. 40), 206.

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