J.D. Vance Condemned Neocons—Then Called for the Same Middle East Policy
The close Trump ally tried to argue that more aggressive U.S. policy in the Middle East would help the U.S. get out of the Middle East.

Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio.) believes that American neoconservatives have caused 40 years of "disasters" in the Middle East. But he's doubling down on exactly the vision they've had all along: an alliance of Israel and Sunni Muslim–led states, backed by U.S. military power, to "police" the region.
At a Thursday conference hosted by the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft—where I worked as a researcher several years ago—and The American Conservative, the senator laid out his idea of a "foreign policy for the middle class." Vance, who is on Donald Trump's shortlist for vice president, attacked the "tired old slogans" that have become consensus in Washington and called for a more "realist" approach.
But Vance also tried to argue that U.S. support for Israel and its Sunni allies is quite different from the kind of "endless war" policies he opposes elsewhere. He pointed to Israeli developments in missile defense as a potential benefit of U.S. support to Israel.
"By combining the Abraham Accords approach with the enduring defeat of Hamas," the United States will ensure that "Israel, with the Sunni nations, can actually police their region of the world. That allows us to spend less time and less resources in the Middle East," Vance said.
The Abraham Accords were a set of 2020 agreements between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain. The Trump administration sweetened the deal with several offers of U.S. support, such as a sale of advanced American fighter jets to the UAE.
The accords have allowed these countries "to push for even greater U.S. military entanglements" in the region, including a U.S.-led air defense alliance, according to a Quincy Institute report on Emirati lobbying. Saudi Arabia is currently demanding a formal U.S. defense pact in order to join the accords.
Last month, during a round of Israeli-Iranian fighting, the U.S. military and Arab nations reportedly shot down most of the Iranian missiles and drones before they entered Israel's airspace.
At the conference, Vance complained that the Biden administration was not bringing enough American weapons into the Middle East. An unnamed Israeli official told him that Washington had "forced the Israelis to empty their munitions stockpile and give it all to the Ukrainians," which Vance claimed "prolonged the war in Gaza in service of prolonging the war in Ukraine."
"That's absolute bullshit," says Josh Paul, a former U.S. State Department official in charge of weapons exports and a nonresident fellow at the nonprofit Democracy for the Arab World Now. "I think if that happened at all, the [Israeli official] was referring to the effort to transfer 155mm ammo from the U.S. stocks prior to October 7."
The United States keeps large amounts of ammunition in the War Reserve Stock Allies-Israel, a cache of weapons that are owned by the U.S. military weapons but located in Israel for rapid deployment to the region. Last year, the Biden administration began supplying the Ukrainian army from the stockpile. After the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas, the administration canceled shipments to Ukraine and asked Congress to give the Israeli army unlimited access to the war reserve.
Vivek Ramaswamy, another pro-Trump speaker at the Thursday conference, similarly argued that Israel is "a more important ally to the United States in advancing our interests in the Middle East than Ukraine." However, he argued that Washington should sell Israel weapons rather than give them away at the taxpayer's expense.
Vance wouldn't be the first to try selling a U.S.-Israeli-Sunni alliance as a way to lighten America's load. In 1996, a group of prominent neoconservatives wrote the "Clean Break" report, calling on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to adopt a policy of Israeli "self-reliance." The authors envisioned Israel working together with Sunni states to "contain, destabilize, and roll-back" Iranian, Syrian, and Palestinian threats.
"Israel can under these conditions better cooperate with the U.S. to counter real threats to the region and the West's security," the report stated. "Mr. Netanyahu can highlight his desire to cooperate more closely with the United States on anti-missile defense in order to remove the threat of blackmail which even a weak and distant army can pose to either state."
Several of the authors—Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, and David Wurmser—later served in the Bush administration and pushed for the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
In addition to his belief in the "hard-nosed strategic argument" for his Middle Eastern policy, Vance said that it aligned with the "moral intuitions of American citizens," especially Christian Americans.
"A majority of people in this country—and I myself am Christian—believe their savior was born, died, and resurrected in that narrow little strip of territory on the Mediterranean," he argued. "The idea that there is ever going to be an American foreign policy that doesn't care about that slice of the world is preposterous."
Vance differentiated himself from neocons by denouncing their attempts to "spread democracy" by force. Pointing to the demise of ancient Iraqi Christian communities after the Iraq War, he argued that "traditional neoconservative foreign policy keeps on leading to the genocide of Christians."
Last month, right-wing talk show host Tucker Carlson made a similar point about the fate of Iraqi Christians—although with a subtle difference. "When there's a war abroad that the United States is funding, it is Christians who tend to die disproportionately," Carlson said during an interview with Palestinian Lutheran pastor Munther Isaac about his community's treatment by the Israeli government.
"Many Christian churches in the United States, particularly evangelical churches, support" the Israeli war effort, Carlson said. "But there is virtually never a word about the Christians who live there, the ancient Christian community in Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel proper. So, because no one has said a word, there has been great suffering among the Christian population in that region."
Indeed, Isaac told Carlson that it would be a mistake to see Israel as a "protector" of Christianity and that Palestinian Christians have been "disproportionately" impacted by the war in Gaza.
Vance may believe that he has found an innovative solution to pro-Israel noninterventionists' dilemma. Instead, he's stuck on the well-worn path that neoconservatives once took—one that will neither keep the United States out of Middle Eastern wars nor assuage American Christians' moral feelings.
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What do you expect from a guy who is too lazy to shave?
Kind of like an ostensibly libertarian publication that endorsed Biden in 2020 that afterwards chaffed and redirected to provide cover for many of the unlibertarian outcomes as a result of his term in office.
I'm glad that MY career doesn't depend on lying to the public, keeping myself in the spotlight and toadying up to bloviating demagogues. Although I stop short of actually sympathizing with lawyers who are too incompetent to successfully maintain a legal career anywhere outside of government. But perhaps their irresistible craving for power is deep-seated and "rooted" in the small size (or lack of) their members ...
I remember how the US policy of obliterating entire villages in Vietnam led to our resounding win of both the war and the hearts and minds of the people. Now, just 50 years later, Vietnam is producing a significant portion of US consumer goods and the people are living the good life under their democratic capitalist government.
So, I'm thinking Vance must be right. If we help Israel and Sunni Muslim nations bomb those pesky Shia in Iran, Iraq, and Azerbaijan and those stateless Palestinians to smithereens, peace will break out and the Middle East will once again be the land of milk and honey. Amen.
"US policy of obliterating entire villages in Vietnam"
What planet are you from?
The one where the US obliterated entire villages in Vietnam.
…under their democratic capitalist government.
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam is an authoritarian state ruled by a single party, the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) led by General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, and President Truong Tan Sang.
My comment was facetious.
"Vance may believe that he has found an innovative solution to pro-Israel noninterventionists' dilemma."
These solutions may ensure Vance a seat on the Israel lobby gravy train, but he's delusional if he thinks continuing the policies of the past 7 decades will bring peace and stability to the region. Israel's anti-missile defense shield has already proven ineffective against a well telegraphed missile retaliation - when Iran successfully landed and exploded missiles on Israel's most important air bases. It hasn't stopped the Party of God in Lebanon from attacking Israel every day since Oct, or Hamas from gaining strength and influence in the region.
It sounds like Vance is effectively right. Some of the specific criticisms here are undermined by facts presented in the same article.
We get it. You hate Trump and anyone right-leaning. Try writing an article that rationally considers the facts rather than just appealing to TDS to spread your distaste for the subject
Vance is "effectively" a hypocrite. That was the point of the article.
"Some of the specific criticisms here are undermined by facts presented in the same article."
I see skepticism over neocon and American Christians' willingness to sacrifice the lives of Middle East Christians in a delusional belief that an American alliance with Israel and neighboring Muslim states will bring peace and stability to the region. If Trump is lunatic enough to sign on to this agenda, he deserves all the criticism that comes his way.
Contrast with Russia's approach. Syria is home to one of the largest Orthodox Christian communities in the world. Russia didn't join an alliance with America, Saudi, al Qaeda, Israel, in some lunatic hope that this would protect Syria's Christians, but sent in troops directly to do so.
What about J.G. Wentworth?
877-CASH-NOW!
I’m puzzled. Are you suggesting we should finance our foreign policy with payday loans on structured settlements promoted by opera singers?
🙂
😉
It beats how we're currently financing it.
In the last near-35 years, pretty much everything we've done militarily in the Middle East has turned into a fucking disaster that costs American taxpayers trillions and makes the region worse every time we escalate. The only thing that's really worked is establishing economic and diplomatic agreements that allow allied or cooperative nations to remake their landscapes in more westernized images, such as the big cities of the GCC countries. But anyone trying to establish secular "democracy" isn't going to do anything except foment factional discord in regions that rely on the oversight of ethno-royalists to keep everyone in line. And it definitely doesn't help that the modern Middle Eastern states are nothing more than arbitrary puzzle pieces that were drawn up for the nominal benefit of Great Britain and France after World War II.
You'll find that most of the borders in the world were drawn up by England and France. Find a border dispute and it's likely it's a border imposed by outsiders. See the Bolivia/Chile dispute or India/Pakistan/China/Kashmir/Bangladesh/Myanmar.
The Middle East have their own idea of democracy which differs from our own.
Auda abu Tayi: I am Auda abu Tayi! Does Auda serve?
Howeitat tribesmen: NO!
Auda abu Tayi: Does Auda abu Tayi serve?
Howeitat tribesmen: NO!
Auda abu Tayi: [to Lawrence] I carry twenty-three great wounds, all got in battle. Seventy-five men have I killed with my own hands in battle. I scatter, I burn my enemies’ tents. I take away their flocks and herds. The Turks pay me a golden treasure, yet I am poor! Because I am a river to my people!
The Howeitat are still getting fucked over:
"On 6 October 2020, The Independent reported that ancient Saudi Arabia's tribe Howeitat was in danger because of the $500bn (£385bn) hi-tech city project called Neom. In recent months the Saudi authorities allegedly arrested, harassed, hounded and even killed members of the tribe on being questioned for their plans and denied the sale of their land to the state. According to a London-based activist and spokesperson of the tribe, Alya Alhwaiti, and members of the tribe called the United Nations to investigate the matter. Alhwaiti claimed that the kingdom's crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman promised the tribe in 2016 to be a part of the Neom project along with a share in the development and improvement of the area. However, in 2020 the Howeitat tribe was instead forced to leave their land without a place to stay in exchange.[7] In May of 2023, the Saudi Arabian government convicted six members of the Howeitat tribe of terrorism due to their opposition to the planned city's development. Three of the convicted men received the death penalty, while the other three received sentences ranging 27 to 50 years."
JD Vance is trying to dick ride Trump into a VP or Secretary of ______ appointment. He will do or say anything to get more power from the Trump camp.
He's far from being alone in that.
Why does anyone think the Sunni nations are any better than Shia Iran?
As long as any flavor of Islam is an official State Religion of any nation, no one on Earth is safe! That nation is duty-bound to make all of Planet Earth under Islam and will try when it gets the chance!