A Hebrew opinion piece argues that the remarks Vice President J.D. Vance made last week about U.S. military aid to Israel reflect a deeper shift in the alliance, not a clean break. The author says the relationship between Washington and Jerusalem is still intact, but is becoming more transactional, conditional, and tied to U.S. strategic priorities on Iran, China and the Middle East.
The column says the old unwritten understanding, that the United States could criticize Israel but ultimately accepted Israel’s right to decide what was necessary for its survival, is now under strain. When Vance noted that two-thirds of Israel’s defensive systems were built and funded by the United States, the writer says he was not just stating a budget fact, but publicly highlighting strategic dependence. The article says that does not amount to a legal threat or a formal halt to weapons deliveries, but it does signal that Israel is expected to align more closely with Washington’s agenda.
The writer says Donald Trump still sees Israel as an important partner, a military power, a technological ally, an intelligence source and a barrier to Iranian expansion. But Trump’s transactional style, according to the piece, means alliances are judged by immediate returns. It recalls that his first term brought favorable moves for Israel, including recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, the Abraham Accords and maximum pressure on Iran. Still, the article argues that Trump wants a fast, visible political win, especially on Iran, because a deal with Tehran could reduce regional escalation, protect oil markets and shipping lanes, and free U.S. resources for competition with China.
The article stresses that the United States sees Iran mainly through nuclear proliferation, maritime security, energy balance and great-power rivalry, while Israel sees Iran as an existential threat involving nuclear ambitions, ballistic missiles, regional militias, terror funding and strategic encirclement. It warns that Washington cannot ask Israel to suspend its own judgment about survival based on promises that can change with U.S. elections or shifting priorities. It also says Trump may view Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a political obstacle to his own story of ending endless wars, and that Israel’s freedom of action in Lebanon, Syria and against Iran may now be seen in Washington as a risk to U.S. diplomacy.
The conclusion is that the danger is not necessarily an outright rupture, but a change in the nature of the alliance. The piece says U.S. partners elsewhere are watching whether American guarantees still hold under pressure, and warns that if support becomes a tool of political leverage, the result is not a stronger alliance but a deeper dependence.