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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBiden Memorandum says countries receiving U.S. weapons must adhere to international law
The memo comes after prominent Democratic lawmakers raised concerns about Israels military campaign in Gaza
By Yasmeen Abutaleb and Liz Goodwin
February 8, 2024 at 8:27 p.m. EST
President Biden on Thursday issued a memorandum that lays out the standards countries that receive U.S. weapons must adhere to and, for the first time, requires the administration to submit an annual report to Congress about whether countries are meeting the requirements.
The national security memorandum comes after prominent Democratic lawmakers have raised concerns about Israels military campaign in Gaza and whether the country, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars worth of U.S. weapons, has adhered to international law. Nearly half of Senate Democrats have supported a measure that would ensure Israel and other countries are held accountable for meeting those standards. The memorandum does not include new guidelines or conditions but instead calls for the State Department to receive written assurances from countries receiving U.S. weapons that they will abide by existing U.S. standards. Those include abiding by international law and facilitating transport of U.S. humanitarian assistance.
The memorandum comes just as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the Israeli military will continue its Gaza campaign in Rafah, where more than 1 million Palestinians have fled for safety under Israeli guidance. On Thursday, White House spokesman John Kirby said any Israeli operation in Rafah under the current circumstances would be a disaster for those people, and we would not support it.
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) has led a push to amend the foreign aid bill to state that any country receiving the aid must follow international law, which has attracted 18 co-sponsors, including senators representing purple states such as Georgia and Wisconsin. He will pull support for that amendment, avoiding a vote that could look like a rebuke of how the Biden administration has handled its ally during the war.
The memorandum goes farther than Van Hollens amendment in that it includes an enforcement mechanism of sorts, where the president must take action if the secretary of state informs him a country is not in compliance. That action could include suspending military aid, but could also be a less drastic step.
Van Hollen and other Democratic senators have raised alarms about the way Netanyahu has prosecuted the war, as thousands of civilians have been killed in what Biden once described as indiscriminate bombing, and aid into the devastated region has been stalled by the Israeli government.
I believe this will give more leverage [to Biden] to ensure all recipients of U.S. military assistance, including the Netanyahu government, will abide by international humanitarian law and cooperate more in the delivery of humanitarian assistance, he said.
The memorandum also requires the State Department and Department of Defense to make an assessment of whether any country is using weapons in a way not consistent with best practices for reducing civilian harm. The first report is due to Congress in about three months, and then reports will be due once a year.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/02/08/biden-memo-weapons-international-law/
malaise
(297,909 posts)Rec
Tetrachloride
(9,702 posts)i want to trade my hearts for something better than a memo
BannonsLiver
(20,847 posts)Basic LA
(2,047 posts)While dropping U.S. bombs on
starving children cornered in Rafah.
Donkees
(33,745 posts)72 senators vote against measure in 100-member chamber, defeating efforts to force State Department report on IDF conduct in war against Hamas in Gaza following Oct. 7
17 January 2024
The vote, forced by progressive senator Bernie Sanders, sought to freeze all US security aid to Israel unless this report was produced, tapping for the first time a decades-old law that requires that any arms or military aid must be used in accordance with international human rights accords. While senators have voted to try to halt foreign arms sales to other countries in the past, this was an untested mechanism.
The resolution was voted down 72 to 11, with Democratic Sens. Jeff Merkley, Bernie Sanders, Chris Van Hollen, Martin Heinrich, Laphonza Butler, Ed Markey, Ben Ray Lujan, Mazie Hirono, Peter Welch and Elizabeth Warren and Republican Rand Paul voting for it. Sanders is an independent who caucuses with Democrats.
Sanders resolution was filed under the Foreign Assistance Act, which allows Congress to direct a State to provide a human rights report and other information on any country that received US security assistance.
The 1961 Act was amended after the Nixon era, enabling Congress to provide oversight of US military assistance abroad. It requires that any arms or military aid must be used in accordance with international human rights accords.
If the resolution had passed, it would have required the State Department to provide a report to Congress within 30 days. After receiving the report, Congress could consider another resolution proposing changes to security assistance to Israel.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/senate-rejects-bernie-sanders-bid-to-condition-aid-to-israel-on-human-rights-record/
Sorry. Its kind of ironic given our history. Im glad Biden is taking a stand, though.
Response to Donkees (Original post)
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