The American People Should Not Be Forced to Fund Israel’s Atrocities
04/15/2026 •Mises Wire•Connor O'Keeffe
https://mises.org/mises-wire/american-people-should-not-be-forced-fund-israels-atrocities
Today is tax day. It’s a day where Americans
everywhere are forced to reflect on all the income we’ve been forced to hand
over to the government. Unpleasant as that is by itself, it’s also worth going
a step further and using the occasion to reflect on what the government is
using our money for.
There are, of course, the big-ticket items. The
programs the government spends the most money on: entitlements and war. The
federal government spends trillions of dollars on generational
wealth transfers like
Social Security, demand-side healthcare subsidies like Medicare and Medicaid
that have caused the price of healthcare to skyrocket for everybody (including those dependent on
government support), and a massive war-making apparatus that is
constantly creating new
enemies by
attempting to maintain a costly global empire—not to mention, by the way, all
the wealth siphoned away from us by the government through inflation.
There’s plenty there to get upset about. But, these
days, there’s another use of our tax dollars that, while not as quantitatively dramatic,
is quickly, understandably, and rightfully coming under a lot of scrutiny:
foreign aid to the Israeli government.
This is not a new spending program. The US government
has been sending money to the Israeli government for decades. In total, Israel
has received far more “foreign aid” from the US than any other
government. And most of that money—especially in recent years—has gone to the
Israeli military.
Also, much of this transfer has taken the form of
recurring annual payments. So it’s not really accurate to think of this as
foreign aid as most people understand it. It’s more accurate to say that a
portion of Israeli government programs are funded by American taxpayers and
have been for a long time.
This setup has been remarkably uncontroversial with
the American public for nearly its entire existence. It’s remarkable because
these are literally taxes being paid to a foreign government and because that
government has carried out abhorrent atrocities since its founding—the exact kinds of atrocities
Americans have prided themselves on opposing.
There are a lot of reasons for that persistent public
and institutional support, ranging from tribalism to apathy. But a primary
reason has been the success of the Israel lobby.
As I explained a few weeks ago, the massive war-making
apparatus in DC was not built up to current levels because that was in the
interest of the American people, but because it was in the interest of all the
government bureaucrats and officials making up the “national security state”
and the weapons companies and other “defense” contractors who stood to benefit.
These groups are perpetually lobbying heavily for more
money, more power, and more foreign interventions. But their interest in growth
is constant and largely indifferent to geopolitics. As long as the warfare
state keeps growing and never shrinks, they will be happy.
The specific directions and objectives of American
foreign policy are primarily determined by domestic and foreign interest groups
that lobby to steer Washington’s war-making apparatus to serve their own ends.
That isn’t a glitch or the recent corruption by
special interests of a system that used to work for the American people. It’s
how American foreign policy has operated since at least the
end of World War II. Government officials and industry insiders conspired to
build a massive warfare state, then turned around and offered it up for sale to
whichever groups had enough money to lobby effectively and the geopolitical
enemies necessary to justify further growth.
The Israeli government and its ideological allies have
proven to be remarkably
good at using
this setup. They are, arguably, the most effective foreign lobby in American
history—especially because they have extended their
efforts beyond
politicians in DC to the opinion molders in American academia and media.
So, while the Israel lobby helped steer Washington’s
foreign policy in ways beneficial to whatever regime was currently in power in
Tel Aviv, they and their allies in the US also worked to ensure that pro-Israel
narratives dominated in American media and, therefore, that the American public
was either enthusiastically supportive of or, at least, indifferent to what the
Israeli government was doing.
That narrative dominance began to show cracks after
the internet shattered the Israel-friendly American political
establishment’s monopoly over
the information space. But
the current historic collapse in public support for Israel didn’t really kick
off until Hamas used its atrocity-laden attack on October 7, 2023, to bait the Israelis into a response that would destroy,
not only the global sympathy they had garnered in the wake of the attack, but
the broad US public support Israel had been enjoying for decades.
Israel’s response was predictable and brutal. The
American public watched the Israelis rain airstrikes down on combatants and
noncombatants at scale in Gaza for years. The horrors conducted by the Israeli
military in that conflict, with US government support, go far beyond the scale
of this article. But, overall, at least tens of thousands—likely over a hundred
thousand—Gazans were killed in the war. And, at the very least, a substantial number
of those killed were civilians.
The American public was clearly affected by the
footage of horrors like children buried in
rubble, paramedics
being blown up while treating injured bombing survivors, crowds
of hungry Gazans being shot at while desperately seeking food at aid stations,
and much more. Public support for Israel began to take a nose
dive.
And rightfully so. Not only were these atrocities
happening in plain view, but we Americans were being forced to send money to
the government committing them. Even after the Trump administration helped
broker a ceasefire last year, the American public’s support for Israel has
continued to fall. And one only has to glance at the news to see why.
For starters, Israel is continuing to kill people in
Gaza. Since the so-called ceasefire went into effect last fall, the Israeli
military has killed over 750 people and injured over 2,000.
And then, of course, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu helped
encourage Trump to
launch this latest air war on Iran. A war that was unpopular with the American
public from the beginning, and that has caused significant and
unavoidable economic
damage that is now
beginning to hit an American population that was already struggling
economically. The war killed thousands of people—including thirteen American
soldiers—all to momentarily deplete Iran’s military capabilities to help shore
up Israeli hegemony in the region for the near future (notably, the operation
has, so far, appeared to have had the opposite
effect).
And finally, after Hezbollah entered the war that the
US and Israel started, likely in an attempt to draw some heat away from their
allies in Iran, the Israeli government launched a major invasion of southern
Lebanon with the explicit stated purpose of permanently
displacing over
600,000 people to expand Israel’s territorial control up to the Litani
River. Over a million people have been, at least temporarily,
displaced so far, and the operation has already brought about the exact kind of
brutal civilian death the American public was already growing increasingly
troubled by.
Much of that came last week when Israel launched a
massive bombing campaign across the city of Beirut that killed over
250 people and
injured over a thousand. The Israeli government first announced that the
strikes had targeted and killed a Hezbollah leader, but later revised their
statement to say it
was the leader’s nephew who had been killed. But the timing and intensity of
the strikes have led many to
speculate that its
purpose was actually to undermine Trump’s attempt to bring about a ceasefire
and return to the negotiating table with Iran.
That is, at the very least, a believable theory that
is in line with the recent behavior of Israeli government officials—especially
Netanyahu, whose looming
corruption trial gives
him a strong personal reason to extend any and all wars Israel is involved in
for as long as he’s able to. And it feeds the growing impression that Israel is
emboldened by and taking advantage of US support.
In addition to those strikes on Beirut, the Israeli
military in Lebanon has also targeted
paramedics and medical facilities, killed a UN peacekeeper, struck and collapsed residential
buildings, and even bombed a
funeral where four
family members of the deceased were killed, including a girl under the age of
two. And moving beyond Lebanon, Israeli forces also recently killed a
teenager in Syria and
a nine-year-old
girl in Gaza. And
all of this has occurred in just the past two weeks.
It is ridiculous that, as Americans, our government
forces us to bear a heavy tax burden to fund expensive domestic programs that
make our lives harder, less affordable, and less safe, all to benefit
government officials and their well-connected friends. Even more ridiculous is
the fact that—in addition to all that—we are forced to pay taxes to other
governments, too.
But as terrible as those rackets are, they are nothing
compared to the moral hazards and moral outrages we are forced to pay for
through Washington’s “foreign aid” to Israel. The American population as a
whole is finally starting to wake up to this reality. But, regardless of opinion
polls, all of us who oppose what the Israeli government is doing should, at the
very least, not be forced to fund it against our will.