PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
State of Israel
Geography
Area: 20,330 sq. km.1 (7,850 sq.
mi.); about the size of New Jersey.
Cities: Capital--Jerusalem.2
Other cities--Tel Aviv, Haifa.
Terrain: Plains, mountains, desert, and coast.
Climate: Temperate, except in desert areas.
People
Population (2005 est.): 6.35 million.
Annual population growth rate (2005 est.): 1.2%.
Ethnic groups: Jews, 76.2%; Arabs, 19.5%; other,
4.3%.
Religions: Judaism, Islam, Christianity, Druze.
Languages: Hebrew (official), Arabic (official),
English, Russian.
Education: Years compulsory--11.
Literacy--96.9% (female 95.6%; male
98.3%).
Health: Infant mortality rate (2005
est.)--7.03/1,000 births. Life expectancy at
birth--79.32 years; female, 81.55 years,
male 77.21 years.
Work force (2.68 million; Central Bureau for
Statistics, 2004): Agriculture--2.1%;
manufacturing--16.2%; electricity and
water supply--0.8%; construction--5.4%;
trade and repair of motor vehicles--3.6%;
accommodation services and restaurants--4.3%;
transport, storage, and communication--6.5%;
banking, insurance, and finance--3.3%;
business activities--13.4%; public
administration--4.7%; education--12.7%;
health, welfare, and social services--10.7%;
community, social, and personal services--4.6%;
services for households by domestic personnel--1.6%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Independence: May 14, 1948.
Constitution: None; however, the Declaration of
Establishment (1948), the Basic Laws of the
parliament (the Knesset), and the Israeli
citizenship law fill many of the functions of a
constitution.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state); prime minister (head of government).
Legislative--unicameral Knesset. Judicial--Supreme
Court.
Political parties: Labor, Likud, Kadima, and
various other secular and religious parties,
including some wholly or predominantly supported
by Israel's Arab citizens. A total of 12 parties
are represented in the 17th Knesset, elected
March 2006.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (2005 est.): $140.1 billion.
Annual growth rate (2005): 5.2%.
Per capita GDP (2005): $17,800.
Currency: Shekel, (4.58 shekels = 1 U.S. dollar;
2005 est.).
Natural resources: Copper, phosphate, bromide,
potash, clay, sand, sulfur, bitumen, manganese.
Agriculture: Products--citrus and other
fruits, vegetables, beef, dairy, and poultry
products.
Industry: Types--high-technology projects
(including aviation, communications,
computer-aided design and manufactures, medical
electronics, fiber optics), wood and paper
products, potash and phosphates, food,
beverages, tobacco, caustic soda, cement,
construction, plastics, chemical products,
diamond cutting and polishing, metal products,
textiles, and footwear.
Trade: Exports (2005 est.)--$40.14
billion. Exports include polished diamonds,
electronic communication, medical and scientific
equipment, chemicals and chemical products,
electronic components and computers, machinery
and equipment, transport equipment, rubber,
plastics, and textiles. Imports
(excluding defense imports, 2005 est.)--$43.19
billion: raw materials, diamonds, energy ships
and airplanes, machinery, equipment, land
transportation equipment for investment, and
consumer goods. Major partners--U.S.,
U.K., Germany; exports--U.S., Belgium,
Hong Kong; imports--U.S., Belgium,
Germany, Switzerland, U.K.
1Including Jerusalem
2Israel proclaimed Jerusalem as its
capital in 1950. The United States, like nearly
all other countries, maintains its embassy in
Tel Aviv.
PEOPLE
Of the approximately 6.35 million Israelis in
2005, about 4.86 million were counted as Jewish,
though some of those are not considered Jewish
under Orthodox Jewish law. Since 1989, nearly a
million immigrants from the former Soviet Union
have arrived in Israel, making this the largest
wave of immigration since independence. In
addition, almost 50,000 members of the Ethiopian
Jewish community have immigrated to Israel,
14,000 of them during the dramatic May 1991
Operation Solomon airlift. 35.3% of Israelis
were born outside of Israel.
The three broad Jewish groupings are the
Ashkenazim, or Jews who trace their ancestry to
western, central, and eastern Europe; the
Sephardim, who trace their origin to Spain,
Portugal, southern Europe, and North Africa; and
Eastern or Oriental Jews, who descend from
ancient communities in Islamic lands. Of the
non-Jewish population, about 68% are Muslims,
about 9% are Christian, and about 7% are Druze.
Education is compulsory from age 6 to 16 and
is free up to age 18. The school system is
organized into kindergartens, 6-year primary
schools, 3-year junior secondary schools, and
3-year senior secondary schools, after which a
comprehensive examination is offered for
university admissions. There are seven
university-level institutions in Israel, a
number of regional colleges, and an Open
University program.
With a population drawn from more than 100
countries on 5 continents, Israeli society is
rich in cultural diversity and artistic
creativity. The arts are actively encouraged and
supported by the government. The Israeli
Philharmonic Orchestra performs throughout the
country and frequently tours abroad. The
Jerusalem Symphony and the New Israel Opera also
tour frequently, as do other musical ensembles.
Almost every municipality has a chamber
orchestra or ensemble, many boasting the talents
of gifted performers from the countries of the
former Soviet Union.
Israel has several professional ballet and
modern dance companies, and folk dancing, which
draws upon the cultural heritage of many
immigrant groups, continues to be very popular.
There is great public interest in the theater;
the repertoire covers the entire range of
classical and contemporary drama in translation
as well as plays by Israeli authors. Of the
three major repertory companies, the most
famous, Habimah, was founded in 1917.
Active artist colonies thrive in Safed,
Jaffa, and Ein Hod, and Israeli painters and
sculptors exhibit works worldwide. Israel boasts
more than 120 museums, including the Israel
Museum in Jerusalem, which houses the Dead Sea
Scrolls along with an extensive collection of
regional archaeological artifacts, art, and
Jewish religious and folk exhibits. Israelis are
avid newspaper readers, with more than 90% of
Israeli adults reading a newspaper at least once
a week. Major daily papers are in Hebrew; others
are in Arabic, English, French, Polish, Yiddish,
Russian, Hungarian, and German.
HISTORY
The creation of the State of Israel in 1948 was
preceded by more than 50 years of efforts to
establish a sovereign nation as a homeland for
Jews. These efforts were initiated by Theodore
Herzl, founder of the Zionist movement, and were
given added impetus by the Balfour Declaration
of 1917, which asserted the British Government's
support for the creation of a Jewish homeland in
Palestine.
In the years following World War I, Palestine
became a British Mandate and Jewish immigration
steadily increased, as did violence between
Palestine's Jewish and Arab communities.
Mounting British efforts to restrict this
immigration were countered by international
support for Jewish national aspirations
following the near-extermination of European
Jewry by the Nazis during World War II. This
support led to the 1947 UN partition plan, which
would have divided Palestine into separate
Jewish and Arab states, with Jerusalem under UN
administration.
On May 14, 1948, soon after the British quit
Palestine, the State of Israel was proclaimed
and was immediately invaded by armies from
neighboring Arab states, which rejected the UN
partition plan. This conflict, Israel's War of
Independence, was concluded by armistice
agreements between Israel, Egypt, Jordan,
Lebanon, and Syria in 1949 and resulted in a 50%
increase in Israeli territory.
In 1956, French, British, and Israeli forces
engaged Egypt in response to its nationalization
of the Suez Canal and blockade of the Straits of
Tiran. Israeli forces withdrew in March 1957,
after the United Nations established the UN
Emergency Force (UNEF) in the Gaza Strip and
Sinai. This war resulted in no territorial
shifts and was followed by several years of
terrorist incidents and retaliatory acts across
Israel's borders.
In June 1967, Israeli forces struck targets
in Egypt, Jordan, and Syria in response to
Egyptian President Nasser's ordered withdrawal
of UN peacekeepers from the Sinai Peninsula and
the buildup of Arab armies along Israel's
borders. After 6 days, all parties agreed to a
cease-fire, under which Israel retained control
of the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights, the
Gaza Strip, the formerly Jordanian-controlled
West Bank of the Jordan River, and East
Jerusalem. On November 22, 1967, the Security
Council adopted Resolution 242, the "land for
peace" formula, which called for the
establishment of a just and lasting peace based
on Israeli withdrawal from territories occupied
in 1967 in return for the end of all states of
belligerency, respect for the sovereignty of all
states in the area, and the right to live in
peace within secure, recognized boundaries.
The following years were marked by continuing
violence across the Suez Canal, punctuated by
the 1969-70 war of attrition. On October 6,
1973--Yom Kippur (the Jewish Day of Atonement),
the armies of Syria and Egypt launched an attack
against Israel. Although the Egyptians and
Syrians initially made significant advances,
Israel was able to push the invading armies back
beyond the 1967 cease-fire lines by the time the
United States and the Soviet Union helped bring
an end to the fighting. In the UN Security
Council, the United States supported Resolution
338, which reaffirmed Resolution 242 as the
framework for peace and called for peace
negotiations between the parties.
In the years that followed, sporadic clashes
continued along the cease-fire lines but guided
by the U.S., Egypt, and Israel continued
negotiations. In November 1977, Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat made a historic visit to
Jerusalem, which opened the door for the 1978
Israeli-Egyptian peace summit convened at Camp
David by President Carter. These negotiations
led to a 1979 peace treaty between Israel and
Egypt, pursuant to which Israel withdrew from
the Sinai in 1982, signed by President Sadat of
Egypt and Prime Minister Menahem Begin of
Israel.
In the years following the 1948 war, Israel's
border with Lebanon was quiet relative to its
borders with other neighbors. After the
expulsion of Palestinian fighters from Jordan in
1970 and their influx into southern Lebanon,
however, hostilities along Israel's northern
border increased and Israeli forces crossed into
Lebanon. After passage of Security Council
Resolution 425, calling for Israeli withdrawal
and the creation of the UN Interim Force in
Lebanon peacekeeping force (UNIFIL), Israel
withdrew its troops.
In June 1982, following a series of
cross-border terrorist attacks and the attempted
assassination of the Israeli Ambassador to the
U.K., Israel invaded Lebanon to fight the forces
of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO). The PLO withdrew its forces
from Lebanon in August 1982. Israel, having
failed to finalize an agreement with Lebanon,
withdrew most of its troops in June 1985 save
for a residual force which remained in southern
Lebanon to act as a buffer against attacks on
northern Israel. These remaining forces were
completely withdrawn in May 2000 behind a
UN-brokered delineation of the Israel-Lebanon
border (the Blue Line). Hizballah forces in
Southern Lebanon continued to attack Israeli
positions south of the Blue Line in the Sheba
Farms/Har Dov area of the Golan Heights.
The victory of the U.S.-led coalition in the
Persian Gulf War of 1991 opened new
possibilities for regional peace. In October
1991, the United States and the Soviet Union
convened the Madrid Conference, in which
Israeli, Lebanese, Jordanian, Syrian, and
Palestinian leaders laid the foundations for
ongoing negotiations designed to bring peace and
economic development to the region. Within this
framework, Israel and the PLO signed a
Declaration of Principles on September 13, 1993,
which established an ambitious set of objectives
relating to a transfer of authority from Israel
to an interim Palestinian authority. Israel and
the PLO subsequently signed the Gaza-Jericho
Agreement on May 4, 1994, and the Agreement on
Preparatory Transfer of Powers and
Responsibilities on August 29, 1994, which began
the process of transferring authority from
Israel to the Palestinians.
On October 26, 1994, Israel and Jordan signed
a historic peace treaty, witnessed by President
Clinton. This was followed by Israeli Prime
Minister Rabin and PLO Chairman Arafat's signing
of the historic Israeli-Palestinian Interim
Agreement on September 28, 1995. This accord,
which incorporated and superseded previous
agreements, broadened Palestinian
self-government and provided for cooperation
between Israel and the Palestinians in several
areas.
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
assassinated on November 4, 1995, by a
right-wing Jewish radical, bringing the
increasingly bitter national debate over the
peace process to a climax. Subsequent Israeli
governments continued to negotiate with the PLO
resulting in additional agreements, including
the Wye River and the Sharm el-Sheikh memoranda.
However, a summit hosted by President Clinton at
Camp David in July 2000 to address permanent
status issues--including the status of
Jerusalem, Palestinian refugees, Israeli
settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, final
security arrangements, borders, and relations
and cooperation with neighboring states--failed
to produce an agreement.
Following the failed talks, widespread
violence broke out in Israel, the West Bank, and
Gaza in September 2000. In April 2001 the Sharm
el-Sheikh Fact Finding Committee, commissioned
by the October 2000 Middle East Peace Summit and
chaired by former U.S. Senator George Mitchell,
submitted its report, which recommended an
immediate end to the violence followed by
confidence-building measures and a resumption of
security cooperation and peace negotiations.
Building on the Mitchell report, In April 2003,
the Quartet (the U.S., UN, European Union (EU),
and the Russian Federation) announced the
"roadmap," a performance-based plan to bring
about two states, Israel and a democratic,
viable Palestine, living side by side in peace
and security.
Despite the promising developments of spring
2003, violence continued and in September 2003
the first Palestinian Prime Minister, Mahmoud
Abbas (Abu Mazen), resigned after failing to win
true authority to restore law and order, fight
terror, and reform Palestinian institutions. In
response to the deadlock, in the winter of
2003-2004 Prime Minister Sharon put forward his
Gaza disengagement initiative, proposing the
withdrawal of Israeli settlements from Gaza as
well as parts of the northern West Bank.
President Bush endorsed this initiative in an
exchange of letters with Prime Minister Sharon
on April 14, 2004, viewing Gaza disengagement as
an opportunity to move towards implementation of
the two-state vision and begin the development
of Palestinian institutions. In a meeting in May
2004 the Quartet endorsed the initiative, which
was approved by the Knesset in October 2004.
The run-up to disengagement saw a flurry of
diplomatic activity, including the February 2005
announcement of Lieutenant William Ward as U.S.
Security Coordinator; the March 2005
Sharon-Abbas summit in Sharm el-Sheikh; the
return of Egyptian and Jordanian ambassadors to
Israel; and the May 2005 appointment of former
World Bank president James D. Wolfensohn as
Special Envoy for Gaza Disengagement to work for
a revitalization of the Palestinian economy
after disengagement. Wolfensohn’s direct
involvement spurred Israeli-Palestinian
agreement on the Gaza ‘crossings" at Karni and
Erez, on the demolition of settler homes, water,
electricity, and communications infrastructure
issues, as well as other issues related to the
Palestinian economy.
On August 15, 2005, Israel began implementing
its
disengagement from the Gaza Strip, and the
Israeli Defense Forces completed their
withdrawal, including the dismantling of 17
settlements, on September 12. After broad
recognition for Prime Minister Sharon’s
accomplishment at that fall’s UN General
Assembly, international attention quickly turned
to efforts to strengthen Palestinian governance
and the economy in Gaza. The United States
brokered a landmark Agreement on Movement and
Access between the parties in November 2005 to
facilitate further progress on Palestinian
economic issues. However, the terrorist
organization Hamas--building on popular support
for its "resistance" to Israeli occupation and a
commitment to clean up the notorious corruption
of the Palestinian Authority--took a majority in
the January 2006 Palestinian legislative
elections. The Israeli leadership pledged not to
work with a Palestinian government in which
Hamas had a role, while the Quartet made clear
that, to receive international support, a new
Palestinian government would have to renounce
terror and violence, recognize Israel, and
accept previous obligations and agreements,
including the roadmap. The new government,
however, rejected these principles when it was
seated on April 1, 2006.
GOVERNMENT
Israel is a parliamentary democracy. Its
governmental system is based on several basic
laws enacted by its unicameral parliament, the
Knesset. The president (chief of state) is
elected by the Knesset for a 5-year term.
The prime minister (head of government)
exercises executive power and has in the past
been selected by the president as the party
leader most able to form a government. Between
May 1996 and March 2001, Israelis voted for the
prime minister directly. (The legislation, which
required the direct election of the prime
minister, was rescinded by the Knesset in March
2001.) The members of the cabinet must be
collectively approved by the Knesset.
The Knesset's 120 members are elected by
secret ballot to 4-year terms, although the
prime minister may decide to call for new
elections before the end of the 4-year term.
Voting is for party lists rather than for
individual candidates, and the total number of
seats assigned each party reflects that party's
percentage of the vote. Successful Knesset
candidates are drawn from the lists in order of
party-assigned rank. Under the present electoral
system, all members of the Knesset are elected
at large.
The independent judicial system includes
secular and religious courts. The courts' right
of judicial review of the Knesset's legislation
is limited. Judicial interpretation is
restricted to problems of execution of laws and
validity of subsidiary legislation. The highest
court in Israel is the Supreme Court, whose
judges are approved by the President.
Israel is divided into six districts,
administration of which is coordinated by the
Ministry of Interior. The Ministry of Defense is
responsible for the administration of the
occupied territories.
Principal Government Officials
President--Moshe Katsav
Prime Minister--Ehud Olmert (Kadima)
Foreign Minister--Tzipi Livni (Kadima)
Ambassador to the United States--Daniel Ayalon
Ambassador to the United Nations--Dan Gillerman
Israel maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 3514 International Drive
NW, Washington DC, 20008 (tel. 202-364-5500).
There also are consulates general in Atlanta,
Boston, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami,
New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
From the founding of Israel in 1948 until the
election of May 1977, Israel was ruled by
successive coalition governments led by the
Labor alignment or its constituent parties. From
1967-70, the coalition government included all
of Israel's parties except the communist party.
After the 1977 election, the Likud bloc, then
composed of Herut, the Liberals, and the smaller
La'am Party, came to power forming a coalition
with the National Religious Party, Agudat
Israel, and others. As head of Likud, Menachem
Begin became Prime Minister. The Likud retained
power in the succeeding election in June 1981,
and Begin remained Prime Minister. In the summer
of 1983, Begin resigned and was succeeded by his
Foreign Minister, Yitzhak Shamir.
After Prime Minister Shamir lost a Knesset
vote of confidence early in 1984, new elections
in July provided no clear winner, with both
Labor and Likud considerably short of a Knesset
majority and unable to form even narrow
coalitions. After several weeks of difficult
negotiations, they agreed on a government of
national unity, including the rotation of the
office of Prime Minister and the combined office
of Vice Prime Minister and Foreign Minister
midway through the government's 50-month term.
During the first 25 months of unity
government rule, Labor's Shimon Peres served as
Prime Minister, while Likud's Shamir held the
posts of Vice Prime Minister and Foreign
Minister, until they switched positions in
October 1986. In November 1988 elections, Likud
edged Labor out by one seat but was unable to
form a coalition, producing another national
unity government in January 1989. Yitzhak Shamir
became Prime Minister, and Shimon Peres became
Vice Prime Minister and Finance Minister. This
government fell in March 1990, however, in a
vote of no confidence precipitated by
disagreement over the government's response to
U.S. Secretary of State Baker's initiative in
the peace process. Labor Party leader Peres was
unable to attract sufficient support among the
religious parties to form a government. Yitzhak
Shamir then formed a Likud-led coalition
government, including members from religious and
right-wing parties.
Shamir's government took office in June 1990,
and held power for 2 years. In the June 1992
national elections, the Labor Party reversed its
electoral fortunes, taking 44 seats. Labor Party
leader Yitzhak Rabin formed a coalition with
Meretz (a group of three leftist parties) and
Shas (an ultra-Orthodox religious party). The
coalition included the support of two
Arab-majority parties. Rabin became Prime
Minister in July 1992, presiding over the
signing of the Oslo accords with the Palestine
Liberation Organization. However, Rabin was
assassinated by a right-wing Jewish radical on
November 4, 1995. Peres, then Deputy Prime
Minister and Foreign Minister, once again became
Prime Minister and immediately proceeded to
carry forward the peace policies of the Rabin
government and to implement Israel's Oslo
commitments, including military redeployment in
the West Bank and the holding of historic
Palestinian elections on January 20, 1996.
Enjoying broad public support and anxious to
secure his own mandate, Peres called for early
elections after just 3 months in office. (They
would have otherwise been held by the end of
October 1996.) In late February and early March,
a series of suicide bombing attacks by
Palestinian terrorists took some 60 Israeli
lives, seriously eroding public support for
Peres and raising concerns about the peace
process. Increased fighting in southern Lebanon,
which also brought Katyusha rocket attacks
against northern Israel, also raised tensions
and weakened the government politically a month
before the May 29 elections.
In those elections--the first and only direct
election of a Prime Minister in Israeli
history--Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu won by
a narrow margin, having sharply criticized the
government's peace policies for failing to
protect Israeli security. Netanyahu subsequently
formed a right-wing coalition government
publicly committed to pursuing the peace
process, but with an emphasis on security and
reciprocity. In 1999, with a shrunken coalition
and facing increasing difficulty passing
legislation and defeating no-confidence motions,
Netanyahu dissolved parliament and called for
new elections. This time, the Labor
candidate--Ehud Barak--was victorious. Barak
formed a mixed coalition government of secular
and religious parties, with Likud in the
opposition. In May 2000, Barak fulfilled one of
his major campaign promises by withdrawing
Israeli forces from Southern Lebanon. However,
by mid-autumn, with the breakdown of the Camp
David talks and the worsening security situation
caused by the new intifada, Barak's coalition
was in jeopardy. In December, he resigned as
Prime Minister, precipitating a new prime
ministerial election.
In a special election on February 6, 2001,
after a campaign stressing security and the
maintenance of Israeli sovereignty over
Jerusalem, Likud leader Ariel Sharon defeated
Barak by over 20 percentage points. As he had
promised in his campaign, Sharon formed a broad
unity government that included the Labor and
Likud parties, the far-right parties, some
smaller secular parties, and several religious
parties. The unity government collapsed in late
2002, and new elections were held in January
2003. Sharon again won, and formed a new
government consisting of his own Likud party,
the right-wing National Religious Party and
National Union party, and centrist Shinui.
The summer of 2004 saw renewed instability in
the government, as disagreement over the Gaza
disengagement plan resulted in Sharon’s firing
two ministers of the National Union Party and
accepting the resignation of a third from the
National Religious Party in order to secure
cabinet approval of the plan (it was endorsed on
June 6, 2004). Continuing divisions within the
Likud on next steps then prompted Ariel Sharon
to leave the party in November 2005 to form the
Kadima ("Forward") party and call new elections
for March 2006. However, Sharon was unexpectedly
incapacitated in January 2006 due to a severe
stroke and leadership of Kadima shifted to
Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who on March
28 led the party to 29 seats in the Knesset.
Labor came in second with 19 seats, and Shas and
Likud tied with 12. After intensive coalition
negotiations, a new, Kadima-led government, with
Labor as "senior partner", was sworn in on May
4, 2006.
ECONOMY
Israel has a diversified, technologically
advanced economy with substantial but decreasing
government ownership and a strong high-tech
sector. The major industrial sectors include
high-technology electronic and biomedical
equipment, metal products, processed foods,
chemicals, and transport equipment. Israel
possesses a substantial service sector and is
one of the world's centers for diamond cutting
and polishing. It also is a world leader in
software development and, prior to the violence
that began in September 2000, was a major
tourist destination.
Israel's strong commitment to economic
development and its talented work force led to
economic growth rates during the nation's first
two decades that frequently exceeded 10%
annually. The years after the 1973 Yom Kippur
War were a lost decade economically, as growth
stalled and inflation reached triple-digit
levels. The successful economic stabilization
plan implemented in 1985 and the subsequent
introduction of market-oriented structural
reforms reinvigorated the economy and paved the
way for rapid growth in the 1990s.
A wave of Jewish immigration beginning in
1989, predominantly from the countries of the
former U.S.S.R., brought nearly a million new
citizens to Israel. These new immigrants, many
of them highly educated, now constitute some 13%
of Israel's 6.7 million inhabitants. Their
successful absorption into Israeli society and
its labor force forms a remarkable chapter in
Israeli history. The skills brought by the new
immigrants and their added demand as consumers
gave the Israeli economy a strong upward push
and in the 1990s, they played a key role in the
ongoing development of Israel's high-tech
sector.
During the 1990s, progress in the Middle East
peace process, beginning with the Madrid
Conference of 1991, helped to reduce Israel's
economic isolation from its neighbors and opened
up new markets to Israeli exporters farther
afield. The peace process stimulated an
unprecedented inflow of foreign investment in
Israel, and provided a substantial boost to
economic growth in the region over the last
decade. The onset of the intifada beginning at
the end of September of 2000, the downturn in
the high-tech sector and Nasdaq crisis, and the
slowdown of the global economy--particularly the
U.S. economy--have all significantly affected
the Israeli economy during the past three years.
Israeli companies, particularly in the
high-tech area, have in the past enjoyed
considerable success raising money on Wall
Street and other world financial markets; Israel
ranks second to Canada among foreign countries
in the number of its companies listed on U.S.
stock exchanges. Israel’s tech market is very
developed, and in spite of the pause in the
industry’s growth, the high-tech sector is
likely to be the major driver of the Israeli
economy. Almost half of Israel’s exports are
high tech. Most leading players, including
Intel, IBM, and Cisco have a presence in Israel,
and it is worth noting that even during the
downturn in the macroeconomic situation in
Israel these large players as well as others did
not withdraw from the Israeli market.
Growth was an exceptional 6.2% in 2000, due
in part to a number of one-time high tech
acquisitions and investments. This exceptional
year was followed by two years of negative
growth of -0.9% and -1%, respectively, in 2001
and 2002. As a result of the security situation
and the associated downturn in the economy,
there was a significant rise in unemployment and
wage erosion. This led to a decline in private
consumption in 2002, the first time that there
had been negative private consumption since the
early 1980s. However, following growth rates of
1.7% in 2003 and 4.4% in 2004, the Israeli
economy entered into a period of stabilization
and recovery after the deep recession of 2001
and 2002. Since then, the Israeli economy seems
to have returned to a trend of consistent
growth. According to preliminary Central Bureau
of Statistics (CBS) data released on January 1,
2006, the Israeli economy grew by 5.2% in 2005
and GDP per capita (U.S. $17,800) increased by
3.3%.
Exports of goods and services in Israel grew
by 7% in 2005. Service and agricultural exports
each increased by more than 10% in 2005, whereas
exports increased by 5.6% and imports rose to
4.4%. Tourism revenues increased by 22.7% as a
result of the dramatic increase following the
intifada’s subsidence.
Israel’s private consumption increased by 4%
in 2005. The largest growth in private
consumption was in the purchase of clothing,
footwear, and personal effects, which increased
by 10.2%, following an increase of 5.4% in 2004.
Consumption of consumer durables grew much more
slowly than in 2004, with an increase of only
3.4%, compared with 14.3% the previous year.
In the Israeli business sector, business GDP
grew by 6.6% in 2005. According to CBS
statistics, the transportation, storage, and
communications industries grew by 9.2%,
following growth of 6.6% in 2004. The GDP of the
wholesale, retail, restaurant, and hotel sector
increased by 8.1%, up from 6.1% in 2004. The GDP
of the finance and business services sector in
2005 increased by 6.4%, up from the previous
year’s 6.1% growth rate.
The general consensus among economists is
that Israel’s economy is very strong and that
its growth potential is in the 4% to 5% range.
The United States is Israel's largest trading
partner. In 2005, two-way trade totaled some
$26.6 billion, up 12% from 2004. The U.S. trade
deficit with Israel was $7.1 billion in 2005, up
33% from 2004, due largely to rising Israeli
exports to the U.S. U.S. exports to Israel rose
6.1% in 2005 to $9.7 billion, making Israel our
19th largest export market for goods.
The principal goods exported from the U.S.
include civilian aircraft parts,
telecommunications equipment, semiconductors,
civilian aircraft, electrical apparatus, and
computer accessories. Israel's chief exports to
the U.S. include diamonds, pharmaceutical
preparations, telecommunications equipment,
medicinal equipment, electrical apparatus, and
cotton apparel. The two countries signed a free
trade agreement (FTA) in 1985 that progressively
eliminated tariffs on most goods traded between
the two countries over the following 10 years.
An agricultural trade accord signed in November
1996 addressed the remaining goods not covered
in the FTA but has not entirely erased barriers
to trade in the agricultural sector. Israel also
has trade and cooperation agreements in place
with the European Union, Canada, Mexico, and
other countries.
Best prospect industry sectors in Israel for
U.S. exporters are electricity and gas
equipment, defense equipment, medical
instruments and disposable products, industrial
chemicals, telecommunication equipment,
electronic components, building
materials/construction industries (DIY and
infrastructure), safety and security equipment
and services, non-prescription drugs, travel and
tourism services, and computer software.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
In addition to seeking an end to hostilities
with Arab forces, against which it has fought
five wars since 1948, Israel has given high
priority to gaining wide acceptance as a
sovereign state with an important international
role.
Before 1967, Israel had established
diplomatic relations with a majority of the
world's nations, except for the Arab states and
most other Muslim countries. UN Security Council
resolutions provided the basis for cease-fire
and disengagement agreements concerning the
Sinai and the Golan Heights between Israel,
Egypt, and Syria and for promoting the Camp
David accords and the Egyptian-Israeli Peace
Treaty. The Soviet Union and the communist
states of eastern Europe (except Romania) broke
diplomatic relations with Israel during the 1967
war, but those relations were restored by 1991.
The landmark October 1991 Madrid conference
recognized the importance of Security Council
Resolutions 242 and 338 in resolving regional
disputes, and brought together for the first
time Israel, the Palestinians, and the
neighboring Arab countries, launching a series
of direct bilateral and multilateral
negotiations. These talks were designed to
finally resolve outstanding security, border,
and other issues between the parties while
providing a basis for mutual cooperation on
issues of general concern, including the status
of refugees, arms control and regional security,
water and environmental concerns, and economic
development.
Today, Israel has diplomatic relations with
161 states. Following the signing of the
Israel-PLO Declaration of Principles on
September 13, 1993, Israel established or
renewed diplomatic relations with 35 countries.
Most important are its ties with Arab states.
Israel has full diplomatic relations with Egypt,
Jordan, and Mauritania. In addition, on October
1, 1994, the Gulf States publicly announced
their support for a review of the Arab boycott,
in effect abolishing the secondary and tertiary
boycotts against Israel.
Israel has diplomatic relations with nine
non-Arab Muslim states and with 32 of the 43
Sub-Saharan states that are not members of the
Arab League. Israel established relations with
China and India in 1992 and with the Holy See in
1993.
DEFENSE
Israel's ground, air, and naval forces, known as
the Israel Defense Force (IDF), fall under the
command of a single general staff. Conscription
is universal for Jewish men and women over the
age of 18, although exemptions may be made on
religious grounds. Druze, members of a small
Islamic sect living in Israel's mountains, also
serve in the IDF. Israeli Arabs, with few
exceptions, do not serve. During 1950-66, Israel
spent an average of 9% of GDP on defense. Real
defense expenditures increased dramatically
after both the 1967 and 1973 wars. Military
spending in 2005 totaled $9.45 billion, which is
equivalent to 7.7% of GDP, and represents 16.3%
of government expenditures. The United States
provides approximately $2.4 billion per year in
security assistance.
In 1983, the United States and Israel
established the Joint Political Military Group,
which meets twice a year. Both the U.S. and
Israel participate in joint military planning
and combined exercises, and have collaborated on
military research and weapons development.
U.S.-ISRAELI RELATIONS
Commitment to Israel's security and well being
has been a cornerstone of U.S. policy in the
Middle East since Israel's creation in 1948, in
which the United States played a key supporting
role. Israel and the United States are bound
closely by historic and cultural ties as well as
by mutual interests. Continuing U.S. economic
and security assistance to Israel acknowledges
these ties and signals U.S. commitment. The
broad issues of Arab-Israeli peace have been a
major focus in the U.S.-Israeli relationship.
U.S. efforts to reach a Middle East peace
settlement are based on UN Security Council
Resolutions 242 and 338 and have been based on
the premise that as Israel takes calculated
risks for peace the United States will help
minimize those risks.
On a bilateral level, relations between the
United States and Israel are continually
strengthening in every field. In addition to the
Joint Political-Military Group described above,
there are: bilateral science and technology
efforts (including the Binational Science
Foundation and the Binational Agricultural
Research and Development Foundation); the
U.S.-Israeli Education Foundation, which
sponsors educational and cultural programs; the
Joint Economic Development Group, which
maintains a high-level dialogue on economic
issues; the Joint Counterterrorism Group,
designed to enhance cooperation in fighting
terrorism; and a high-level Strategic Dialogue
that meets biannually.
Principal U.S. Officials
U.S. Embassy
Ambassador--Richard
H. Jones
Deputy Chief of Mission--Gene Cretz
Political Affairs--Norman Olsen
Economic Affairs--William Weinstein
Management--Brian McIntosh
Consular Affairs--Richard Beer
Public Affairs--Helena K. Finn
Commercial Affairs--Ronald Soriano
Science Attaché--Robert Tansey
Defense Attaché--Col. Bill Clark
Legal Attaché--Michael Steinbach
The
U.S. Embassy in Israel is located at 71
Hayarkon Street, Tel Aviv (tel. 03-519-7575).
U.S. Consulate General
Consul General--Jacob Walles
Deputy Principal Officer--Chris Stevens
Chief, Consular Section--Stuart Patt
The
U.S.
Consulate General in Jerusalem has offices
at 18 Agron Road (tel. 02-622-7230) and on
Nablus Road (tel. 02-622-7230). The Consulate
General in Jerusalem is an independent U.S.
mission, established in 1928, whose members are
not accredited to a foreign government.
U.S. Consular Agent
The U.S. Consular Agent in Haifa is located
at 26 Ben Gurion Boulevard (tel.
972-4-853-1470), and reports to the Embassy in
Tel Aviv. The Consular Agent can provide routine
and emergency services in the north.