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Tucker Carlson claims Israel is a burden on the US. It reveals profound strategic ignorance

The security mechanism with the Jewish state directly serves the American interest and, in practice, saves American lives, soldiers and civilians alike

December 18, 2025 15:18
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Israeli F-35i and F-15i aircraft fly alongside a US B-52 strategic bomber in a joint military exercise (Image: IDF)
6 min read

Earlier this month, in an interview conducted at the Doha Forum, Tucker Carlson – one of the most influential media figures on the American right and a political actor closely aligned with President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance – called for a downgrading of Israel’s place in US strategy in favour of the Gulf states. Speaking with Ghida Fakhry, a veteran international journalist who hosted and moderated the forum, Carlson argued that the six energy-rich GCC states offer “very obvious benefits to the United States” and that these relationships are “infinitely more important” than America’s ties to Israel. He summed up his view by saying that the US relationship with Qatar alone is “so much more important” than its relationship with Israel.

Carlson did not merely argue that the Gulf states matter more. He went further, portraying Israel itself as a net burden on the United States. He described Israel as “a completely insignificant country,” with “no resources” and a population of just nine million, arguing that it has relevance only because Washington provides it with a security guarantee. Carlson claimed the US has “no overriding strategic interest” in Israel and dismissed the relationship in blunt terms: “What are we getting out of this? Nothing. It’s only cost.”

This is a striking assertion about a state that has just signed a $32 billion gas deal with Egypt, sits atop vast offshore energy reserves, and possesses one of the most formidable concentrations of human capital on the planet as a global high-tech and defence power.

Of course, the United States has vital interests in strong relations with the Gulf states. But Carlson presents this as a zero-sum choice, as though cooperation with Israel somehow excludes partnership with the GCC. In reality, Washington has long maintained close ties with both – a strategy that reached new heights under the Trump administration, with the US-brokered Abraham Accords and Gulf states themselves expanding strategic and military ties with Israel, including a multibillion-dollar weapons deal between the UAE and Israel.

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