From the AF Times:
“$1B Iron Dome fund stripped
from new continuing resolution”
A proposal to send Israel $1
billion for the Iron Dome air defense system has been cut out of a stopgap
government funding bill, meant to avoid a government shutdown after Sept. 30,
in order to ease its passage in the House. House Democrats introduced the bill
Tuesday with the Iron Dome proposal in it, alongside $6.3 billion in emergency
funding to resettle Afghan refugees and other Pentagon-friendly provisions.
However, the lron Dome funding had to be cut because it created an internal
schism for Democrats, who must unify to overcome Republican opposition to the
broader bill, according to a source familiar with the matter. The continuing
resolution would run through Dec. 3. By Tuesday afternoon, House Appropriations
Committee Chair Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., had introduced a revised version of the
continuing resolution, due for House floor consideration later in the day, according
to a committee staffer. Appropriators intend to include Iron Dome in the final,
bipartisan, bicameral defense spending bill for 2022. The funding would allow
Washington to make good on President Joe Biden’s pledge earlier this year to
replenish Israel’s Iron Dome system after Israeli forces used it against rocket
attacks by Hamas in May.
What is a continuing
resolution? A CR usually means the regular process of passing 12
appropriations bills by the start of the fiscal year has failed. The
hiccup underscores the complicated path to passing the continuing resolution
because Democrats included language to suspend the country’s debt limit for
another year. Raising the prospect of a government shutdown, Senate GOP leader
Mitch McConnell of Kentucky warned Monday that Republicans won’t vote for a
debt ceiling hike, but do favor a “clean continuing resolution that included
appropriate disaster relief and targeted Afghan assistance.” House
Appropriations Committee ranking member Kay Granger, R-Texas, on Tuesday said
House Republicans will oppose a debt ceiling hike as well.
The bill’s marquee provision to
support Afghan evacuees would pay to temporarily house evacuees at American
facilities overseas as well as screen them and resettle eligible evacuees in
the U.S., according to a bill summary. The bill would also require a report on
the disposition of property, equipment and supplies that were destroyed, were
taken out of Afghanistan or are still in Afghanistan in connection with the
U.S. military withdrawal. In the Taliban’s takeover of the country, the
militant group recovered U.S.-supplied guns, ammunition, helicopters and other
modern military equipment from Afghan forces who surrendered it.
Meant to buy time for spending
negotiations for 2022, the bill includes provisions aimed at government
functions beyond defense. “It is critical that Congress swiftly pass this
legislation to support critical education, health, housing and public safety programs
and provide emergency help for disaster survivors and Afghan evacuees,” DeLauro
said Tuesday. Another provision $885
million in Air Force research funding would continue the Strategic
Microelectronic Supply program, backing the defense budget request’s emphasis
on cutting-edge defense technologies. A separate measure would protect the
Pentagon’s efforts to field jam-resistant GPS equipment. If lawmakers don’t
include anomalies like these, continuing resolutions typically only continue
spending at the prior year’s level and prevent new-start programs from moving
forward. Following a call from the Biden administration for the inclusion of
added funds, the continuing resolution contains $28.6 billion in disaster
relief funding. Of that, it offers $565 million for the Navy and $330 million
for the Air Force to repair facilities damaged by natural disasters in 2020 and
2021. The bill also extends the authority for the Defense Department to
obligate funds during the period of the continuing resolution for military
construction projects that first received funding in fiscal 2017.
^ The US needs to send the promised
Iron Dome funds to Israel. The violence and death last May has shown just how
much Israel has to deal with (a multi-front war.) The Hamas Terrorist Group in Gaza
attacking them by land (through their tunnels) and by air (with their missiles,
drones and weaponized balloons. The Palestinians in the West Bank attacking them
with bombs. The Palestinians inside Israel attacking them with bombs and their
cars. The Syrians (and the Hezbollah Terrorists) attacking them by land and by
air. The Palestinians attacking them from Jordan by land and by air. Iron Dome
has done a lot to keep Israel the only Democracy in the Middle East. The US
also got 2 Iron Dome systems from Israel. We don’t want Biden to renege on
another of his promises to our Allies -
especially one which would cost innocent men, women and children their lives. ^
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