Legally, the U.S. can’t cut Israel off completely. Since 2008, the U.S. has had to weigh all arms sales to Israel and other countries in the region against the requirement that Israel maintains a “qualitative military edge” against all enemies, both state and non-state actors.
The Biden administration in late April decided to pause a shipment of 3,500 “dumb” — aka, unguided — munitions that officials expected Israel to use in Rafah: 1,800 of those were 2,000-pound bombs and 1,700 of those were 500-pound bombs. U.S. officials were particularly concerned about the 2,000-pound bombs and the impact the massive weapon would have in a dense urban setting.
In announcing the pause, Biden for the first time acknowledged that civilians had been killed by these weapons in Gaza.
“Civilians have been killed in Gaza as a consequence of those bombs and other ways in which they go after population centers,” Biden said on CNN, referring to 2,000-pound bomb. “I’ve made it clear to Bibi and the war cabinet: They’re not going to get our support, if in fact they go on these population centers.”
The bombs were approved by Congress in 2021. They had been licensed by the administration, manufactured, and ready to be shipped when the order came down to pause the movement.
They don’t have to pass a bill to do that. Biden can’t block sales over a certain amount, which is why he could only delay the most recent one.
Which statute says so? What ties Biden’s hands?
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/05/15/biden-israel-weapons-policy-00158210
So Biden had a red line that he knew Netanyahu could cross without consequence?
That wasn’t the question, nor was that implied. Nice narrative you’re building there.
I asked an additional question. I get that you hate those.
You asked a loaded question.
I can rephrase it as a statement you can’t refute instead of a question you can’t answer if you’d like.
K.