By far the more pertinent consideration is whether India's friendly relations with Israel on the one hand, and growing ties with the United States on the other hand, augur the formation of new trilateral links. Indian Americans have long been great admirers of the powerful lobby which in the US advances Israel's interests, spearheaded by the American Israel Political Action Committee (AIPAC), the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee, and other organizations, and leaders of the Indian American community remain convinced that they are uniquely positioned to learn from the Israel lobby as well as represent India's interests in Washington and state capitols. Just as significantly, on a state visit to India in 2004, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Israel, Silvan Shalom, suggested that "an axis in the abstract sense exists between the United States, Israel and India." This axis, however, is not altogether abstract: however unwilling politicians may be to admit it, the axis is also fuelled by the sentiment shared by all three nations that "Islamic fanatics" must be shelled into submission and decisively defeated.
One of the more unsavory aspects of India's present emulation of Israel is that it cannot be reconciled with the extraordinarily rich civilizational ties that India forged with Jewish people. Though the very early history of the Jewish people in India remains somewhat uncertain, their presence in India for over a millennium, greatly diminished since the creation of Israel in 1948, remains well-documented. All historians of Jewish history in India are in complete agreement that India remains singular in the worldwide Jewish experience. Nathan Katz, author of the recent scholarly study, Who are the Jews of India? (2000), is unequivocal in his assessment: "Jews navigated the eddies and shoals of Indian culture very well. They never experienced anti-Semitism or discrimination." As Katz goes on to suggest, the Jewish experience in India is something of a model for the world: "Indians Jews lived as all Jews should have been allowed to live: free, proud, observant, creative and prosperous, self-realized, full contributors to the host country." India's civilizational ties with Jewish people, far from constituting (as some people have supposed) any historical evidence for why India should now forge strong links with Israel, suggest something quite to the contrary, namely the moral and political necessity of retaining the distinction between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. One of the supreme tragedies of both American and Israeli politics is that this even this elementary distinction is no longer observed much less recognized.