A Guide to the Fight Over Iron Dome Funding
Posted by Alex Kane
Last week, Congress was consumed by a debate over
whether the United States should give Israel an additional $1 billion in
military funds to restock the country’s anti-rocket Iron Dome system following
the May conflagration in Israel/Palestine. On September 23rd, after the funding
request sparked clashes between
progressive and establishment Democrats and fueled claims by
Republicans that the Democrats had become an anti-Israel party, the House of
Representatives voted 420
to 9, with two members voting “present,” to give Israel the additional money.
This $1 billion is on top of the $3.8 billion in weapons funding that the
US gives Israel annually—a
number that includes $500 million every year for the Israeli counter-missile
systems David’s Sling and Arrow 3, as well as Iron Dome. Now the funding
request will go to the Senate, where it’s expected to pass easily.
The House vote surfaced tensions between
Democrats, focused attention on Iron Dome, and raised questions about why the
US was gifting Israel another billion dollars in military aid. As we followed
these developments, we asked our
readers to send us their questions about the vote and its political context.
Here are answers to some of those questions.
What is Iron Dome, and why does the US pay for it?
Iron Dome is an
anti-rocket system made jointly by the Israeli weapons company Rafael Advanced
Defense Systems and the American weapons company Raytheon. First deployed in
2011, Iron Dome uses radar
to detect rockets fired by Palestinian groups toward Israel and then launches
its own missiles to blow the incoming rockets out of the sky before they can
hit populated areas within Israel. During Israel’s 2012, 2014, and 2021
assaults on Gaza, Iron Dome shielded many Israelis from rocket attacks while
Israeli bombs killed people who had no anti-missile system to protect them; the
cumulative Palestinian death toll from these assaults surpassed 2,500
Israel paid for the development and construction of
Iron Dome, but most of
the funding in the ensuing years has come from the US, which began financing Iron
Dome in 2011, and has since given Israel $1.6 billion to maintain the system.
(In 2011, an Israeli official said Israel
planned to invest $1 billion in Iron Dome in the years ahead, but it’s unclear
how much money Israel has contributed to the system’s upkeep.) American
officials say funding Iron Dome is necessary to protect Israel from rocket
threats. On the House floor last week, Rep. Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut
Democrat who chairs the House Appropriations Committee, explained her support
as fulfilling “our moral imperative to protect the lives of innocent
civilians.”
There are two other reasons why the US funds Iron
Dome: The money subsidizes Raytheon, a politically powerful American
weapons company; it has also allowed Israel to test a system that the US
military is interested in using itself, to combat potential threats from cruise
missiles and other projectiles. In 2019, the US army bought two
Iron Dome batteries (which house the missiles and their launchers). The army
conducted its first test of the Iron Dome system in August 2021, but the
Pentagon has not yet deployed the system.
Is Iron Dome a defensive technology?
For Israeli citizens, Iron Dome is undoubtedly a
defensive technology, which has saved the lives of countless people from
rockets fired by Palestinian groups.
But some analysts have complicated this understanding.
In a recent piece for the Middle East Institute, scholar Khaled Elgindy asked whether Iron
Dome, “when used in the service of maintaining Israel’s occupation or its
ongoing blockade of Gaza,” and when it “allow[s] Israeli leaders to
indefinitely defer a political settlement,” still qualifies as “defensive.”
Iron Dome certainly allows Israel to continue the occupation and blockade, as
well as the bombing of Gaza and killing of
Palestinian protesters, with very limited consequences. As a result, in any
escalations of violence between Israel and Palestinian militant groups, the
casualties are inevitably asymmetrical. For instance, in May’s violent
escalation, Israeli airstrikes killed 260 Palestinians, while Palestinian
rockets killed 12 Israelis.
Why did Israel say it needs $1 billion for Iron Dome now?
During the 11 days of fighting between Israel and
Palestinian militant groups in May, Iron Dome fired an estimated 1,500 times to
destroy rockets launched by Palestinian groups. Immediately after Israel and
Hamas announced a ceasefire, Israeli officials told US
Senator Lindsey Graham they would need $1 billion to “replenish” the
shield.
But there are unresolved questions about why Israel
needs $1 billion, which amounts to about 60% of the total American funding that
has already gone to Israel for Iron Dome in the past decade. Each Iron Dome
interceptor costs somewhere between $40,000 and $80,000,
which would suggest that Israel needs $120 million at most to restock its
system, as analyst Yousef Munayyer pointed out in
a series of tweets. Munayyer wrote, “Either the Israelis are lying about the
efficiency of the Iron Dome”—meaning Israel actually fired a lot more
interceptors at rockets than it claims, leading to a less successful
interception rate than the reported 90%—or “they are lying about what this is
really going to be used for. Either way, US taxpayers are being duped.”
What did Congress do last week on the Iron Dome issue?
After Israel made its funding request, the Biden
administration publicly backed its ally. This was no surprise given that, in
the wake of Israel’s May assault on Gaza, President Biden said that
he had assured then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “of my full support to
replenish Israel’s Iron Dome system to ensure its defenses and security in the
future.” But the request didn’t find its way into a Congressional bill until
last week when House Democratic leadership inserted it into a measure to
temporarily fund US government operations.
When the addition became public, a group of
progressive lawmakers revolted, objecting that the funding was included at the
last minute, with no notice given to the Democratic caucus. In the past, Iron
Dome funding has enjoyed broad bipartisan support. But this year, progressives
told House leadership they would not vote for the government funding bill, also
known as a “continuing resolution,” if it meant voting for the Iron Dome money.
Because every Republican planned to vote no on funding the government, House
leadership could only afford to lose three votes and was forced to strip the
military aid from the legislation.
The decision to remove the funding gave Republicans an
opening to accuse the Democratic Party of betraying Israel. “While Dems
capitulate to the antisemitic influence of their radical members, Republicans
will always stand with Israel,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said on
Twitter. In response, Democratic Majority Leader Steny Hoyer led an effort to
call a standalone vote on the funding. Hoyer’s push put the progressive wing of
the party in a vulnerable political position, forcing them to choose between
responding to Palestinian rights advocates, who pressed them to vote against
the funding and falling in line with party leadership and most mainstream
Jewish groups.
One senior aide to a progressive Democratic
legislator, who requested anonymity to protect their job, argued that the
Democratic leadership should have foreseen the bill’s potential to “expose
divisions in the party and humiliate progressives.” The aide added: “That’s
obviously what AIPAC wants, but it’s not what Steny Hoyer should want if he’s a
leader in the party.” Another Democratic staffer criticized Hoyer’s push for
subjecting the group of progressive Democrats known as “the Squad,” who have
been outspoken in their criticism of Israel’s human rights abuses—and who have
frequently been targets of racist harassment—to
a new round of threats and abuse.
On Thursday, after a heated floor debate, the House
voted 420 to 9, with two votings “present,” to approve the legislation.
What divides did the funding debate surface among Democrats, and why did the
funding ultimately receive the support of most progressive Democrats?
In recent years, a small group of progressive
Democrats has changed the traditional debate over
Israel by pushing for US military aid to be “conditioned”—that is, provided on
the condition that Israel does not use it to fund the abuse of Palestinian
human rights. Democratic leadership has opposed this
push and continued to support aid without human rights conditions. Confronted
with the question of whether Israel should receive another billion dollars to
restock Iron Dome, on top of the $3.8 billion in military funding that the
country receives annually, a handful of progressives objected.
The debate on the House floor also revealed a sharp
divide between Democratic leadership and the party’s left-wing over how to talk
about Israel. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the only Palestinian American member of
Congress, said she
opposed the Iron Dome funding because she didn’t want to send more money to an
“apartheid regime.” That prompted Rep. Ted Deutsch, the Democratic chair of the
House Foreign Affairs Middle East subcommittee, to say Tlaib
was engaging in antisemitism.
Because this kind of debate over Iron Dome funding was
unprecedented, it also revealed previously unseen fault lines between
progressive Democrats. Only eight Democrats—Reps. Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna
Pressley, Cori Bush, Andre Carson, Marie Newman, Raul Grijalva, and Chuy
Garcia—ultimately voted “no” on the bill. (The ninth “no” vote came from
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie, who opposes all foreign aid.)
Scrutiny from Palestinian rights activists focused in
particular on Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who initially voted “no” but
switched her vote to “present” at the last minute. (Rep. Hank Johnson also
voted present.) In a letter to
her constituents, Ocasio-Cortez said she opposed the extra funding for Iron
Dome and criticized the US for giving “unconditional aid to the Israeli
government while doing nothing to address or raise the persistent human rights
abuses against the Palestinian people.” She also lambasted Democratic
leadership for what she called a “reckless decision” to rush a vote that
“created a tinderbox of vitriol, disingenuous framing, deeply racist
accusations, and depictions, and lack of substantive discussion on this matter.”
But she did not explain why she switched her vote, nor why she voted
“present.”
Though Ocasio-Cortez’s vote received the most
attention, in reality, almost every member of the Congressional Progressive
Caucus (CPC) voted for the funding. The office of Rep. Mark Pocan, the former
co-chair of the CPC, told Jewish Currents that “the Iron Dome
is a way to de-escalate the situation and save lives.” Rep. Betty McCollum, one
of the most outspoken critics of Israel in Congress, explained she
voted for the bill “because it is intended to save lives,” though her statement
also raised concern over the fact that “Palestinians have no ‘Iron Dome’ to
defend themselves against Israeli human rights abuses.” These answers
underscore the perception of Iron Dome as a purely defensive system, and the
challenge this poses to Palestinian rights advocates seeking to undermine its
support in the US.
Alex Kane is a senior reporter at Jewish
Currents.
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