There is still time to stop the $735 million arms sale to Israel
The breadth of support for blocking the bomb sale shows that opposition to uncritical military support for Israel is growing.
The breadth of support for blocking the bomb sale shows that opposition to uncritical military support for Israel is growing.
Selling war and death should be no joy for any country, so halting it is a goal well worth fighting for.
Azerbaijan is just one of many client governments whose war crimes the U.S. ignores to keep military assistance flowing.
Foreign Affairs Chair Gregory Meeks said he wanted to review the deal but acquiesced to a White House briefing instead.
El Beblawi is one of Egypt’s most notorious human rights abusers, and yet arms sales to Cairo seem to come first.
The president seems fine with keeping the Middle East awash in US arms, one of many strikes against this $23B UAE deal.
US arms sales that prop up the war in Yemen are just the tip of the iceberg.
It may be temporary, but now’s the time for critics to start throwing up road blocks while they have the chance.
Defense Minister Benny Gantz was in Washington this week asking for an upgrade to maintain Israel’s regional military edge.
While Britain is meant to be acting as a steadfast defender of human rights, it appears to be doing the opposite when it comes to the Gulf’s oil-rich monarchies.
The U.S. has made over $11 billion in major arms offers since the beginning of March, including to repressive regimes like the Philippines, Egypt, and the UAE.
Philippine strongman Rodrigo Duterte is using the pandemic to crush his opposition — and the U.S. is poised to arm him to the teeth.
Despite the need to focus on combating the coronavirus, the Trump administration is moving forward with arms sales that can provide both the tools for and the tacit acceptance of, repressive regimes around the world.