Bombs, guns, treasure: What Israel wants, the US gives
Tel Aviv's exceptional status in American weapons
policy shields it from scrutiny over alleged human rights abuses
MAR 13, 2024
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-weapons-israel-2667495926/
This article was co-published with The New Arab.
Close watchers of Israel’s war in Gaza have faced a
question in recent months: If the U.S. is rushing weapons to Israel, then why
hasn’t the public heard of any arms sales besides two relatively small
transfers late last year?
The Washington Post delivered an answer last week.
Reporter John Hudson revealed that the Biden administration has approved
over 100 smaller
weapons packages for
Israel since Oct. 7 that fell under the $25 million threshold for formally
notifying Congress — and thus the public — about the transfers.
In total, these mini sales could add up to more than
$1 billion worth of U.S. military aid.
The decision to deliver U.S. aid in smaller packages
is far from unusual. The U.S. government has done so in the past for practical
and nefarious purposes alike; only about 2% of weapons
transfers occur above the threshold to notify Congress, according to former
officials.
But what is abnormal is the fact that many of those
weapons were likely pre-positioned on Israeli territory before the war. Unlike
other countries, Israel has a stockpile of American weapons on its soil to
which it has privileged access.
When a U.S.-made bomb slams into Gaza, there’s a real
chance that it started the day in an American facility, managed by American soldiers and governed by American
law.
“It’s clear that it’s been a major source of arms for
Israel,” said Josh Paul, a former State Department official who resigned in
protest of U.S. support for
Israel’s war. Unfortunately, Paul added, “it’s an opaque process, so it’s hard
to say exactly what weapons they’re getting” from the stockpile.
This cache of arms is just a small piece of the
puzzle. Taken as a whole, U.S. efforts to shield Israel from human rights
restrictions and guarantee its access to continued military aid go further than
for any other country, according to experts and former senior U.S. officials.
These advantages include modified human rights
vetting, special access to U.S. weapons, and a veto on American arms sales to
Israel’s neighbors. Up to this point, the State Department hasn’t carried out a formal assessment of Israel’s compliance with
the law in its Gaza war.
Experts claim these arms transfer cutouts have
continued or, in some areas, been expanded since Israel launched its campaign
in Gaza, which has left over 31,000 Palestinians dead and much of the strip’s population in famine or famine-like conditions. Even last month, as war crime accusations mounted,
the U.S. reportedly gave Israel at least 1,000 precision-guided munitions
and artillery shells.
“The bottom line is that either you have human rights
standards and legal standards or you don't,” Paul said. When U.S. officials
fail to hold Israel accountable for alleged abuses, “it not only creates an
exception for Israel, but it also undermines your diplomacy with other
countries,” he told Responsible Statecraft/ The New Arab.
“I have serious concerns that the continued transfer
of weapons to Israel is facilitating indiscriminate bombing that may violate
international humanitarian law,” Rep. Joaquin Castro told Responsible
Statecraft/ The New Arab in a statement. “Congress needs to push the Biden
administration to hold Benjamin Netanyahu accountable for any use of U.S.
security assistance that violates international law.”
State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller told
Responsible Statecraft/ The New Arab that all transfers to Israel since Oct. 7
have followed U.S. law and policy, including notifications to Congress.
“We have followed the procedures Congress itself has
specified to keep members well-informed and regularly brief members even when
formal notification is not a legal requirement,” Miller said in a statement,
adding that claims that the U.S. has cut up weapons packages in order to avoid
public scrutiny are “unequivocally false.”
The White House did not respond to a request for
comment.
Exceptions make the rules
When a Middle Eastern country asks the U.S. for
weapons, American officials’ minds go straight to Israel. Would Tel Aviv
approve of the transfer? Could new fighter jets give Egypt an edge over Israel
on the battlefield if their peace deal fell apart? Would Israeli officials come around
if we offer them better weapons to sweeten the pot?
This line of reasoning doesn’t have anything to do
with the personal opinions of U.S. officials. In fact, U.S. law
explicitly states that the U.S. must give Israel a “qualitative
military edge” over its neighbors to counter a threat from “any individual
state or possible coalition of states or [...] non-state actors.”
U.S. partners are starkly aware of — and unhappy about
— this reality, according to a former senior U.S. military official in Cairo
who requested anonymity to speak freely about his experience.
Egyptian officials would sometimes request high-tech
weapons just to “watch us squirm and come up with some way to say ‘no’ without
saying the Israelis won't approve it,” the former official recalled.
“This is another place where it’s very explicit that
Israel has a special status that no other country enjoys,” said John
Ramming-Chappell of the Center for Civilians in Conflict.
This qualitative advantage is enforced by the
quantitative side. Since World War II, Israel is far and
away the largest
recipient of U.S. military aid. Washington’s funding for the Israeli military,
which now totals $3.8 billion per year, makes up about 16% of its total budget, according to the
Congressional Research Service. Israel, which can spend part of its U.S. aid on
Israeli weapons, gets this cash in an interest-bearing account in New York,
making it one of only two states that get a multimillion-dollar tip on top of
baseline U.S. support.
When it comes to human rights, Israel also gets
special protections. Take the Leahy law, a statute that prevents specific units
of foreign militaries from receiving U.S. aid if American officials have
evidence they’ve committed “gross violations of human rights.”
For most countries, Leahy vetting happens before aid
is disbursed. Israel gets the equipment first, and the ensuing vetting
process looks
different than for
other countries. Lower-level State Department officials have found multiple
cases in which Israeli units should lose access to American weapons under U.S.
law, but those cases are consistently blocked by higher-ups in government who
usually don’t weigh in on such cases for other countries, according to
Paul.
The result is that, unlike Egypt and other U.S.
partners in the Middle East, no Israeli unit has ever been sanctioned under the
Leahy law despite numerous credible allegations of human rights abuses, a fact
that the statute’s namesake has loudly railed
against.
The State Department has previously justified this
disparity by pointing to Israel’s judicial system, which U.S. officials believe
is capable of handling human rights violations internally.
In recent weeks, congressional attention has focused
on whether Israel is violating a U.S. law that prevents countries from
receiving American weapons if they block U.S. humanitarian aid in whole or in
part. While the statute has rarely been enforced, the Biden administration
promised to hold states accountable to the law in a recent memorandum.
At this point, many experts and lawmakers believe Israel is in clear violation of this law given
how little aid now enters Gaza. Yet the White House has still not offered a
reason — or a formal waiver — to justify its failure to enforce its own
commitment.
“I really haven’t heard a good response to the
question of why we should not apply existing U.S. law [...] to ensure that U.S.
military assistance is used in accordance with our values,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.
“Given the evidence that Israel is intentionally
blocking the passage of humanitarian aid to Gaza, the Biden administration has
an obligation to enforce Humanitarian Aid Corridor Act and move towards
limitations on further offensive aid to Israel as long as the aid blockade
continues,” Rep. Castro said.
‘As supportive as possible’
When the White House moved to expedite weapons
transfers to Israel after Oct. 7, it faced an unusual problem. The president
already had more than enough authority to make this happen, but officials
wanted to signal that they were being “as supportive as possible.” The solution
was to further loosen laws around U.S. arms transfers, according to Paul, who
still worked in government at the time.
“It's not that those were things that we'd been
previously thinking about,” Paul said. “The previous position within government
had been [that] Israel already has more than you could possibly want in terms
of authorities and funding.”
Now, the Senate’s supplemental spending package for
Israel has provisions that would dramatically
expand the
secretive U.S. stockpile on Israeli soil while loosening public reporting requirements about transfers
from it. A bill with similar changes passed the House as well, signaling broad
support for the proposal in Congress.
Alongside already existing loopholes, these new
restrictions weaken America’s case that it is committed to protecting human
rights on the world stage, according to Ramming-Chappell.
“The exceptional status that Israel enjoys in U.S.
arms transfer policy and law, when taken in conjunction with the devastating
effects of Israel’s current campaign in Gaza, really undermines U.S. leadership
and claims to moral authority in the international sphere,” he said.
Connor Echols is a reporter for Responsible
Statecraft. He was previously an associate editor at the Nonzero Foundation,
where he co-wrote a weekly foreign policy newsletter. Echols received his
bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University, where he studied journalism and
Middle East and North African Studies.
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