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441557


Date: September 24, 2024 at 11:55:11
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: This is proof of Blinken’s *willful* complicity in Israel’s war crimes

URL: https://x.com/AssalRad/status/1838615931599360343


Brett Murphy

"Leaked docs: While Gaza starved, USAID and State's refugees bureau came
to a legally explosive conclusion — Israel had deliberately prevented food &
medicine from getting in

But Blinken told congress the exact opposite, so the arms could keep flowing."
"It’s at least the second report of Blinken covering for Israel in Congress and
violating US laws, by sending Israel weapons despite evidence of gross human
rights violations and deliberately blocking aid."

https://x.com/AssalRad/status/1838615931599360343


Responses:
[441558] [441561] [441563]


441558


Date: September 24, 2024 at 11:59:05
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: ProPublica: Israel Deliberately Blocked Humanitarian Aid to Gaza...

URL: https://www.propublica.org/article/gaza-palestine-israel-blocked-humanitarian-aid-blinken


this fucker should be arrested NOW.

by Brett Murphy, Sept. 24

Israel Deliberately Blocked Humanitarian Aid to Gaza, Two Government Bodies
Concluded. Antony Blinken Rejected Them.

"Blinken told Congress, “We do not currently assess that the Israeli government
is prohibiting or otherwise restricting” aid, even though the U.S. Agency for
International Development and others had determined that Israel had broken
the law.

The U.S. government’s two foremost authorities on humanitarian assistance
concluded this spring that Israel had deliberately blocked deliveries of food and
medicine into Gaza.

The U.S. Agency for International Development delivered its assessment to
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and the State Department’s refugees bureau
made its stance known to top diplomats in late April. Their conclusion was
explosive because U.S. law requires the government to cut off weapons
shipments to countries that prevent the delivery of U.S.-backed humanitarian
aid. Israel has been largely dependent on American bombs and other weapons
in Gaza since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks.

But Blinken and the administration of President Joe Biden did not accept either
finding. Days later, on May 10, Blinken delivered a carefully worded statement to
Congress that said, “We do not currently assess that the Israeli government is
prohibiting or otherwise restricting the transport or delivery of U.S.
humanitarian assistance.”

Prior to his report, USAID had sent Blinken a detailed 17-page memo on Israel’s
conduct. The memo described instances of Israeli interference with aid efforts,
including killing aid workers, razing agricultural structures, bombing
ambulances and hospitals, sitting on supply depots and routinely turning away
trucks full of food and medicine.


Lifesaving food was stockpiled less than 30 miles across the border in an Israeli
port, including enough flour to feed about 1.5 million Palestinians for five
months, according to the memo. But in February the Israeli government had
prohibited the transfer of flour, saying its recipient was the United Nations’
Palestinian branch that had been accused of having ties with Hamas.

Separately, the head of the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees
and Migration had also determined that Israel was blocking humanitarian aid
and that the Foreign Assistance Act should be triggered to freeze almost $830
million in taxpayer dollars earmarked for weapons and bombs to Israel,
according to emails obtained by ProPublica.

The U.N. has declared a famine in parts of Gaza. The world’s leading
independent panel of aid experts found that nearly half of the Palestinians in
the enclave are struggling with hunger. Many go days without eating. Local
authorities say dozens of children have starved to death — likely a significant
undercount. Health care workers are battling a lack of immunizations
compounded by a sanitation crisis. Last month, a little boy became Gaza’s first
confirmed case of polio in 25 years.

The USAID officials wrote that because of Israel’s behavior, the U.S. should
pause additional arms sales to the country. ProPublica obtained a copy of the
agency’s April memo along with the list of evidence that the officials cited to
back up their findings.

USAID, which is led by longtime diplomat Samantha Power, said the looming
famine in Gaza was the result of Israel’s “arbitrary denial, restriction, and
impediments of U.S. humanitarian assistance,” according to the memo. It also
acknowledged Hamas had played a role in the humanitarian crisis. USAID,
which receives overall policy guidance from the secretary of state, is an
independent agency responsible for international development and disaster
relief. The agency had for months tried and failed to deliver enough food and
medicine to a starving and desperate Palestinian population.

It is, USAID concluded, “one of the worst humanitarian catastrophes in the
world.”

In response to detailed questions for this story, the State Department said that
it had pressured the Israelis to increase the flow of aid. “As we made clear in
May when [our] report was released, the US had deep concerns during the
period since October 7 about action and inaction by Israel that contributed to a
lack of sustained delivery of needed humanitarian assistance,” a spokesperson
wrote. “Israel subsequently took steps to facilitate increased humanitarian
access and aid flow into Gaza.”


Government experts and human rights advocates said while the State
Department may have secured a number of important commitments from the
Israelis, the level of aid going to Palestinians is as inadequate as when the two
determinations were reached. “The implication that the humanitarian situation
has markedly improved in Gaza is a farce,” said Scott Paul, an associate director
at Oxfam. “The emergence of polio in the last couple months tells you all that
you need to know.”

The USAID memo was an indication of a deep rift within the Biden
administration on the issue of military aid to Israel. In March, the U.S.
ambassador to Israel, Jack Lew, sent Blinken a cable arguing that Israel’s war
cabinet, which includes Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense
Minister Yoav Gallant, should be trusted to facilitate aid shipments to the
Palestinians.

Lew acknowledged that “other parts of the Israeli government have tried to
impede the movement of [humanitarian assistance,]” according to a copy of his
cable obtained by ProPublica. But he recommended continuing to provide
military assistance because he had “assessed that Israel will not arbitrarily
deny, restrict, or otherwise impede U.S. provided or supported” shipments of
food and medicine.

Lew said Israeli officials regularly cite “overwhelming negative Israeli public
opinion against” allowing aid to the Palestinians, “especially when Hamas
seizes portions of it and when hostages remain in Gaza.” The Israeli
government did not respond to a request for comment but has said in the past
that it follows the laws of war, unlike Hamas.

In the months leading up to that cable, Lew had been told repeatedly about
instances of the Israelis blocking humanitarian assistance, according to four
U.S. officials familiar with the embassy operations but, like others quoted in this
story, not authorized to speak about them. “No other nation has ever provided
so much humanitarian assistance to their enemies,” Lew responded to
subordinates at the time, according to two of the officials, who said the
comments drew widespread consternation.

“That put people over the edge,” one of the officials told ProPublica. “He’d be a
great spokesperson for the Israeli government.”

A second official said Lew had access to the same information as USAID
leaders in Washington, in addition to evidence collected by the local State
Department diplomats working in Jerusalem. “But his instincts are to defend
Israel,” said a third official.

“Ambassador Lew has been at the forefront of the United States’ work to
increase the flow of humanitarian assistance to Gaza, as well as diplomatic
efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement that would secure the release of
hostages, alleviate the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza, and bring an end to the
conflict,” the State Department spokesperson wrote.

The question of whether Israel was impeding humanitarian aid has garnered
widespread attention. Before Blinken’s statement to Congress, Reuters reported
concerns from USAID about the death toll in Gaza, which now stands at about
42,000, and that some officials inside the State Department, including the
refugees bureau, had warned him that the Israelis’ assurances were not
credible. The existence of USAID’s memo, Lew’s cable and their broad
conclusions were also previously reported.

But the full accounting of USAID’s evidence, the determination of the refugees
bureau in April and the statements from experts at the embassy — along with
Lew’s decision to undermine them — reveal new aspects of the striking split
within the Biden administration and how the highest-ranking American
diplomats have justified his policy of continuing to flood Israel with arms over
the objections of their own experts.

Stacy Gilbert, a former senior civil military adviser in the refugees bureau who
had been working on drafts of Blinken’s report to Congress, resigned over the
language in the final version. “There is abundant evidence showing Israel is
responsible for blocking aid,” she wrote in a statement shortly after leaving,
which The Washington Post and other outlets reported on. “To deny this is
absurd and shameful.


“That report and its flagrant untruths will haunt us.”

The State Department’s headquarters in Washington did not always welcome
that kind of information from U.S. experts on the ground, according to a person
familiar with the embassy operations. That was especially true when experts
reported the small number of aid trucks being allowed in.

“A lot of times they would not accept it because it was lower than what the
Israelis said,” the person told ProPublica. “The sentiment from Washington was,
‘We want to see the aid increasing because Israel told us it would.’”


Aid trucks wait in Egypt at the border with Gaza on Sept. 9. Credit: AFP/Getty
Images
While Israel has its own arms industry, the country relies heavily on American
jets, bombs and other weapons in Gaza. Since October, the U.S. has shipped
more than 50,000 tons of weaponry, which the Israeli military says has been
“crucial for sustaining” the Israel Defense Forces’ “operational capabilities
during the ongoing war.”

The U.S. gives the Israeli government about $3.8 billion every year as a
baseline and significantly more during wartime — money the Israelis use to buy
American-made bombs and equipment. Congress and the executive branch
have imposed legal guardrails on how Israel and other partners can use that
money.

One of them is the Foreign Assistance Act. The humanitarian aid portion of the
law is known as 620I, which dates back to Turkey’s embargo of Armenia during
the 1990s. That part of the law has never been widely implemented. But this
year, advocacy groups and some Democrats in Congress brought it out of
obscurity and called for Biden to use 620I to pressure the Israelis to allow aid
freely into Gaza.

In response, the Biden administration announced a policy called the National
Security Memorandum, or NSM-20, to require the State Department to vet
Israel’s assurances about whether it was blocking aid and then report its
findings to lawmakers. If Blinken determined the Israelis were not facilitating aid
and were instead arbitrarily restricting it, then the government would be
required by the law to halt military assistance.

Blinken submitted the agency’s official position on May 10, siding with Lew,
which meant that the military support would continue.

In a statement that same day, Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., criticized the
administration for choosing “to disregard the requirements of NSM-20.”

“Whether or not Israel is at this moment complying with international standards
with respect to facilitating humanitarian assistance to desperate, starving
citizens may be debatable,” Van Hollen said. “What is undeniable — for those
who don’t look the other way — is that it has repeatedly violated those
standards over the last 7 months.”


As of early March, at least 930 trucks full of food, medicine and other supplies
were stuck in Egypt awaiting approval from the Israelis, according to USAID’s
memo.

The officials wrote that the Israeli government frequently blocks aid by
imposing bureaucratic delays. The Israelis took weeks or months to respond to
humanitarian groups that had submitted specific items to be approved for
passage past government checkpoints. Israel would then often deny those
submissions outright or accept them some days but not others. The Israeli
government “doesn’t provide justification, issues blanket rejections, or cites
arbitrary factors for the denial of certain items,” the memo said.

Israeli officials told State Department attorneys that the Israeli government has
“scaled up its security check capacity and asserted that it imposes no limits on
the number of trucks that can be inspected and enter Gaza,” according to a
separate memo sent to Blinken and obtained by ProPublica. Those officials
blamed most of the holdups on the humanitarian groups for not having enough
capacity to get food and medicine in. USAID and State Department experts
who work directly with those groups say that is not true.

In separate emails obtained by ProPublica, aid officials identified items in trucks
that were banned by the Israelis, including emergency shelter gear, solar lamps,
cooking stoves and desalination kits, because they were deemed “dual use,”
which means Hamas could co-opt the materials. Some of the trucks that were
turned away had also been carrying American-funded items like hygiene kits,
the emails show.

In its memo to Blinken, USAID also cited numerous publicly reported incidents
in which aid facilities and workers were hit by Israeli airstrikes even sometimes
after they had shared their locations with the IDF and received approval, a
process known as “deconfliction.” The Israeli government has maintained that
most of those incidents were mistakes.

USAID found the Israelis often promised to take adequate measures to prevent
such incidents but frequently failed to follow through. On Nov. 18, for instance, a
convoy of aid workers was trying to evacuate along a route assigned to them by
the IDF. The convoy was denied permission to cross a military checkpoint —
despite previous IDF authorization.

Then, while en route back to their facility, the IDF opened fire on the aid
workers, killing two of them.

Inside the State Department and ahead of Blinken’s report to Congress, some
of the agency’s highest-ranking officials had a separate exchange about
whether Israel was blocking humanitarian aid. ProPublica obtained an email
thread documenting the episode.

On April 17, a Department of Defense official reached out to Mira Resnick, a
deputy assistant secretary at the State Department who has been described as
the agency’s driving force behind arms sales to Israel and other partners this
year. The official alerted Resnick to the fact that there was about $827 million in
U.S. taxpayer dollars sitting in limbo.

Resnick turned to the Counselor of the State Department and said, “We need to
be able to move the rest of the” financing so that Israel could pay off bills for
past weapons purchases. The financing she referenced came from American
tax dollars.

The counselor, one of the highest posts at the agency, agreed with Resnick. “I
think we need to move these funds,” he wrote.


But there was a hurdle, according to the agency’s top attorney: All the relevant
bureaus inside the State Department would need to sign off on and agree that
Israel was not preventing humanitarian aid shipments. “The principal thing we
would need to see is that no bureau currently assesses that the restriction in
620i is triggered,” Richard Visek, the agency’s acting legal adviser, wrote.

The bureaus started to fall in line. The Middle East and human rights divisions
agreed and determined the law hadn’t been triggered, “in light of Netanyahu’s
commitments and the steps Israel has announced so far,” while noting that they
still have “significant concerns about Israeli actions.”

By April 25, all had signed off but one. The Bureau of Population, Refugees and
Migration was the holdout. That was notable because the bureau had among
the most firsthand knowledge of the situation after months of working closely
with USAID and humanitarian groups to try to get food and medicine to the
Palestinians.

“While we agree there have been positive steps on some commitments related
to humanitarian assistance, we continue to assess that the facts on the ground
indicate U.S. humanitarian assistance is being restricted,” an official in the
bureau wrote to the group.

It was a potentially explosive stance to take. One of Resnick’s subordinates in
the arms transfer bureau replied and asked for clarification: “Is PRM saying
620I has been triggered for Israel?”



Afraid to Seek Care Amid Georgia’s Abortion Ban, She Stayed at Home and
Died
Yes, replied Julieta Valls Noyes, its assistant secretary, that was indeed the
bureau’s view. In her email, she cited a meeting from the previous day between
Blinken’s deputy secretary and other top aides in the administration. All the
bureaus on the email thread had provided talking points to the deputy
secretary, including one that said Israel had “failed to meet most of its
commitments to the president.” (None of these officials responded to a request
for comment.)

But, after a series of in-person conversations, Valls Noyes backed down,
according to a person familiar with the episode. When asked during a staff
meeting later why she had punted on the issue, Valls Noyes replied, “There will
be other opportunities,” the person said.

The financing appears to have ultimately gone through.

Less than two weeks later, Blinken delivered his report to Congress.

Do you have information about how the U.S. arms foreign partners? Contact
Brett Murphy on Signal at 508-523-5195 or by email at
brett.murphy@propublica.org.

Mariam Elba contributed research."


Responses:
[441561] [441563]


441561


Date: September 24, 2024 at 15:06:07
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: USAID & State Dept refugee bureau both said Israel blocked aid to Gaza

URL: https://x.com/prem_thakker/status/1838606344296800270


Prem Thakker

This is a huge scandal.
USAID & State Department refugee bureau both said Israel blocked aid to
Gaza. But Blinken told Congress the opposite, so
they wouldn't have to heed US law that'd force cutting off weapons to Israel.
As in, the Biden-Harris admin is complicit in war crimes.


Responses:
[441563]


441563


Date: September 24, 2024 at 15:35:53
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Blinken should be impeached

URL: https://x.com/mehdirhasan/status/1838610223377846619


then arrested.

Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan
Blinken should be impeached.


Responses:
None


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