Senate rejects effort from Bernie Sanders to block some weapons for
Israel over Gaza deaths
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[November 21, 2024]
By ELLEN KNICKMEYER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Wednesday rejected attempts by Sen.
Bernie Sanders Wednesday to block sales of offensive weapons to Israel
for its war in Gaza over mounting civilian deaths there.
The Vermont lawmaker and a small group of Democrats sought to put
legislation up for a Senate vote that would block the sale of some tank
and mortar rounds and smart-bomb kits to Israel. The first attempt to
block the sales was rejected overwhelmingly, and two more efforts also
went down to defeat.
Sanders, in making the case for stopping the sales, said Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government “has not simply waged war
against Hamas. It has waged an all-out war against the Palestinian
people.”
Known as joint resolutions of disapproval, the measures would have had
to pass both houses of Congress and withstand any presidential veto to
become binding. Congress has never succeeded in blocking any arms sales
with the joint resolutions. But the vote served as a test of broader
frustration among Democrats at the war and President Joe Biden's
handling of relations with Israel.
Lawmakers' move comes after a 30-day Biden administration deadline came
and went earlier this month for Netanyahu to meet specific U.S. targets
to improve its treatment of Palestinian civilians in Gaza trapped in the
war. U.S. demands included that Israel lift a near-total ban on delivery
of aid to hard-hit north Gaza for starving civilians there.
Leading global aid organizations say Israel — which is heavily dependent
on U.S. arms and military aid — fell far short of meeting the U.S.
demand to allow in an adequate number of aid trucks, and in some other
ways worsened conditions for civilians.
That includes Israeli lawmakers newly banning the main U.N. agency that
provides aid to Palestinians.
U.N. officials said as the end of the U.S. deadline neared that the
entire population of north Gaza is now at imminent risk of dying from
famine, airstrikes or other threats.
“We would expect that there be some consequences when things get even
worse,” Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland said in the run-up to the vote
on the measures. Fellow Democratic Sens. Jeff Merkley of Oregon and
Peter Welch of Vermont also joined Sanders in the appeal.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on the Senate floor that he
will “strongly oppose” the measures.
“Israel needs to protect itself not just today, but also tomorrow and
next year and beyond,” Schumer said. “It has been a cornerstone of
American policy to give Israel the resources it needs to defend against
its enemies. We should not stray from that policy today.”
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Sen. Ben Cardin, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, read
what he said was a message from the White House urging lawmakers to
defeat the measures.
The move to block arms to the U.S. ally came at a delicate time in
Middle East cease-fire negotiations and would “put wind in the sails
of Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas at the worst possible moment,” Cardin
quoted the White House as warning.
Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham also argued for defeat of the bills.
“This signal will be seen by the enemies of Israel, and the enemies
of peace, that if they just stick with it they will win,” he said.
Centrist and progressive Democratic lawmakers and Sanders have made
repeated runs during the more than 1-year-old war at convincing the
White House and Congress to condition U.S. arms shipments to Israel
on improved treatment of Palestinian civilians in the offensive.
The Biden administration has increased its warnings and appeals to
Netanyahu to do more to spare civilians in airstrikes and other
attacks, and to allow more aid to reach Gaza. The Oct. 7, 2023,
Hamas-led attacks that started the war killed about 1,200.
The death toll of Gazans killed since then was nearing 44,000 on
Wednesday. Health officials in Gaza do not distinguish between
civilians and combatants in tracking deaths.
Other than pausing one planned shipment of 2,000-pound bombs, Biden
— at 82, a stalwart supporter of Israel since its modern founding —
has rejected calls to limit military support to Israel.
Sanders, on the Senate floor, said the continuing flow of U.S. arms
to Israel for the war violated U.S. law and undermined U.S. standing
in the world.
Other governments will say to Americans, “'Don’t give us advice,
don’t criticize us, when you have supported the mass starvation of
children with your tax dollars,” he said.
Republicans have stood firmly behind Netanyahu and will control both
chambers of Congress next year as President-elect Donald Trump takes
office.
The U.S.'s roughly $18 billion in military support for Israel during
the war was a politically divisive issue in the U.S. presidential
campaign, with Republicans vowing to keep up undiminished backing
for Israel.
Trump has vowed strong support for Israel and has called on
Netanyahu to bring the Gaza war to a quick close. He has offered few
specifics on his plans on that.
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