By Barbara Ferguson
WASHINGTON: Congressional supporters of Israel are
considering this week to go over President Bush’s head
and give Israel additional military aid. These
Congressmen are currently deliberating on how they can
get funds from the president’s $27.1 billion emergency
appropriations request for homeland security, economic
recovery and the global war on terrorism.
Rep. Nita Lowey, New York, the ranking subcommittee
Democrat, said efforts were underway to increase
funding to Israel. "I think there are enough people
who believe that this money is important so that we
will work to include it," she said after a hearing.
"The issue is a touchy one given the emotions in the
Arab world. Some in Congress say privately that a US
military aid bonus for Israel could enrage anti-Israel
groups in the Middle East and even threaten the
security of US embassies," reported Dan Morgan in the
Washington Post.
Israel has certainly grown fat on US aid. The 2002
foreign aid program that Bush signed into law in
January provides Israel with $2.04 billion in military
aid and $730 million in financial assistance, nearly
one-fifth of total US aid to the world.
According to Sara Powell, researcher at the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs: "The amount of aid
given to Israel is $3 billion in direct aid, and $3
billion in indirect aid, which equals a $14,630 sum
annually to each Israeli citizen."
Israel’s intimidating lobbyists have been quietly
pushing the idea throughout Congress for additional
military aid. But officials from the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) are refusing to
comment to the press about the issue.
But Lewis Roth, assistant executive director for the
Washington-based Americans for Peace Now, says the
question of more funding, "didn’t come up over night,
this has been going back and forth between the US and
Israel for several months."
Roth says the money is to fulfill a commitment made by
President Clinton for Israel’s withdrawal from South
Lebanon. "The genesis of the request is that President
Clinton promised former Israeli President Ehud Barak
$800 million to help pay for the withdrawal from
southern Lebanon and for additional missile defense
systems," said Roth.
"Congress never completed the process for providing
the $800 million, which Israel considered to be a very
solid pledge.
"Israel did get $28 million not too long ago to
replenish to supply of robots to dismantle bombs, so
the administration was not going to press it. Congress
said it would. It looks like there’s some momentum
now," said Roth.
From Ummahnews (Arab News)
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Terbitan : 29 April 2002
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