The end of the Cold War in 1990 stripped the special relationship of its old rationale. Israel would nowhave to invent a new one to continue to sell itself as a strategic asset. It would now market itself as thebarrier, the break-water, against the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism. For many years, the chiefopposition to the corrupt and repressive regimes in the Arab world, whether dictatorships or monarchies, hadtaken Islamist forms. Pro-Israeli apologists in the media and academia - mostly Jewish neoconservatives andMiddle East experts - argued that the West now faced a new Islamic threat, global in its scope, which hatedthe freedoms, secular values and prosperity of the West. Bernard Lewis, the "doyen" of Middle East expertsand a passionate Zionist, solemnly intoned in 1993 that this was nothing less than a "clash ofcivilizations." This was a clever move, but also a necessary one, to convert Israel’s conflict with theArabs into a new Crusade, the war of the West (read: United States) against Islam. It was clever move alsobecause it had support from Christian fundamentalists, who were now a strong force in the Republican party.