US/World News

Top Democrats want to slow down sale of F-35s to UAE

(JTA) – Top Senate Democrats introduced a bill that would slow down the sale of F-35 stealth combat aircraft to the United Arab Emirates, part of the deal closed by the Trump administration as an incentive to normalize relations with Israel. Critics of the sale say it undercuts Israel’s “qualitative military edge” in the region. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., longtime former chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, on Friday, April 16, introduced legislation that would mandate congressional oversight to ensure that the transfer of the aircraft complied with U.S. law upholding Israel’s qualitative military edge in the Middle East.c“I remain concerned with the implications of a sale of our most advanced fighter jet given numerous outstanding, unanswered questions about the implications of this sale for U.S. national security, our technology interests, and implications for regional stability including the legal parameters of Israel’s Qualitative Military Edge,” Menendez said.c

An official of AIPAC, the main pro-Israel lobby, said the group had not taken a position on the bill.

President Joe Biden froze the sale, prompting criticism from Republicans that he was undercutting the normalization agreement, aka the Abraham Accords. He unfroze the sale last week. Israel at first opposed the sale but relented after lobbying by top Trump officials. Several pro-Israel Democrats nonetheless remained wary about selling the state-of-the-art aircraft.

The oversight according to the bill would considerably delay any sale, and a provision that would require showing “the recipient country has not committed or enabled human rights violations” would likely be onerous for the UAE, which human rights NGOs score low. The bill also fires a warning shot not to sell the aircraft to Saudi Arabia.

Main Photo: An Israeli Air Force F-35 fighter jet flies during an aerial show at the Hatzerim Air Base in the Negev Desert, Dec. 29, 2016. (Miriam Alster/Flash90)

SHARE
RELATED POSTS
International hacking group threatens Israel
Israel opens industrial park in Nazareth
10 worst antisemitic incidents of 2018

Leave Your Reply