Meeks says he’ll greenlight arms sale to Israel ‘when I get my questions answered’

Correction: This text was up to date to incorporate that Diana Shaw, the State Division’s performing inspector normal, left her place in April 2024.  

Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) mentioned he’ll greenlight President Trump’s request for a $1 billion arms sale to Israel when he’s snug with solutions the administration gives to his questions.

Meeks, the rating member of the Home Overseas Affairs Committee, didn’t element his considerations over the arms sale in a short dialog with The Hill, saying such discussions are categorized. 

However he mentioned his considerations overrode the Trump administration’s want to have a $1 billion weapons bundle ready throughout Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s go to to Washington this week. 

“This is not a situation — Biden, especially Trump — where a king comes in and says, ‘This is what I want,’ and you just do it automatically. … And in this case, because Prime Minister Netanyahu is here, you want to make it look like something,” Meeks mentioned. 

“No. I’m going to do the job that I took an oath to do. And what I have done, and continue to do, on a responsible manner — of reviewing … when I get my questions answered, then I’m fine.”

Trump had readied a $1 billion weapons bundle for Israel forward of Netanyahu’s go to. The bundle contains 4,700 1,000-pound bombs, price greater than $700 million, in addition to armored bulldozers constructed by Caterpillar, price greater than $300 million, The Wall Road Journal reported.

Meeks holds distinctive energy to delay the president from shifting ahead on arms gross sales over a sure greenback quantity. 

It’s long-standing apply for the State Division to informally notify the highest 4 lawmakers of the Senate Overseas Relations and Home Overseas Affairs committees of arms gross sales to different nations if the value tag exceeds a certain quantity. For presidency to authorities gross sales, that quantity is $14 million. This is step one in a two-step notification course of to Congress. 

If one of many leaders of the Senate or Home overseas committees raises questions, the State Division typically holds again on submitting a proper notification to Congress on the arms sale till the lawmaker is happy. 

“The Department generally will not formally notify an arms transfer if a member of Congress raises significant concerns by placing a hold during the informal review stage,” the State Division’s Workplace of Inspector Common (OIG) wrote in an August 2020 report. 

Meeks didn’t characterize his absence of a go-ahead on the arms sale as a “hold,” though that time period is utilized by lawmakers, congressional workers and U.S. officers.

“I am review[ing] and asking questions, and I want a response to my questions,” Meeks instructed The Hill when requested why he positioned a maintain.

There’s no timeline for Meeks to carry his maintain. Nonetheless, Trump could have choices to maneuver ahead. 

The OIG report mentioned the State Division “is not precluded from proceeding with an arms transfer subject to a congressional hold, the Department must still formally notify Congress of the proposed transfer, consistent with the requirements outlined in the AECA [Arms Export Control Act].”

In 2019, Trump overrode a congressional maintain on arms transfers to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — the transfer that triggered the OIG evaluate. 

The evaluate discovered, typically, that the administration adhered to the regulation however didn’t assess totally the dangers to human life or take acceptable mitigation measures. At the moment, the U.S. weapons had been being utilized by Saudi Arabia and the UAE in Yemen’s civil warfare. 

The method of the evaluate was mired in scandal. 

Trump fired the inspector normal on the time, Steve Linick, as he was enterprise the evaluate. Trump’s appointed inspector normal recused himself from the evaluate, and the report was accomplished by Diana Shaw, performing inspector normal.

Shaw served as performing IG till April 2024. 

Final month, Trump fired a number of inspector generals.

Mike Lillis contributed. 

Up to date at 6:55 p.m. EDT

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