Biden Administration Advances $1 Billion Arms
Sale to Israel
The notification of the deal to Congress even as the
president holds up the delivery of other weapons shows the fine line the
administration is trying to walk with its longtime ally.
Robert
Jimison
By Robert
Jimison
Published
May 14, 2024
Updated May
15, 2024, 12:40 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/14/us/politics/biden-arms-sale-israel.html
The Biden
administration has told Congress that it intends to move forward with a plan
for the United States to sell more than $1 billion in new weapons to Israel,
according to three congressional aides familiar with the deal.
The
notification of the sale, which would include new tactical vehicles and
ammunition, comes as President Biden has withheld a shipment of bombs to
Israel, hoping to prevent U.S.-made weapons from being used in a potential
invasion of the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Last week, Mr. Biden said he would
block the delivery of weapons such as bombs and missiles that could be fired
into the densely populated area where more than a million Palestinians are
sheltering.
The
potential arms transfer illustrated the narrow path the Biden administration is
walking with Israel, trying to prevent an assault on Rafah and limit civilian
casualties in Gaza but continuing to supply a longtime ally that the president
has said has a right to defend itself. One congressional aide said Congress had
been aware of the arms deal for months, and suggested that the administration
had simply waited for a foreign aid package with more aid for Israel to pass
before moving forward with the required congressional notification process.
When asked
about the package, which was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal, the
State Department referred to recent comments from Jake Sullivan, the White
House national security adviser, citing a continued commitment to supply Israel
with military assistance to defend itself from threats in the region.
“The
president was clear he would not supply certain offensive weapons for such an
operation, were it to occur,” Mr. Sullivan said. “It has not yet occurred. And
we are still working with Israel on a better way to ensure the defeat of Hamas
everywhere in Gaza, including in Rafah.”
The
administration has been pushing for a cease-fire deal in which Hamas would
release at least some of the hostages it took on Oct. 7, when it attacked
Israel and began the war. But the prime minister of Qatar, a key player in the
talks, said on Tuesday that they were at “almost a stalemate.”
Mr. Biden
initially embraced Israel after the Oct. 7 attack, which killed an estimated
1,200 people, but has increasingly found himself at odds with its conduct of
the war, which has killed more than 34,000 people in Gaza, according to the
health authorities there.
Still, even
as he issued his threat to withhold additional weapons last week, he made clear
that the United States would supply arms to ensure its ally’s security,
including for its Iron Dome missile defense system and for its “ability to
respond to attacks” like the one Iran launched in April.
The State
Department’s informal notification of the arms transfer to the required
congressional committees begins a multistep process for top foreign affairs
lawmakers to informally consider the terms of the weapons transfer and
deliberate with the department in private. Congress as a whole will then
consider the package.
Edward Wong
contributed reporting.
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