[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 5, 2024)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1100-S1101]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Israel
Mr. WELCH. Mr. President, every day we are reminded of the worsening
humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Most of the infrastructure in the
territory has been destroyed. Thousands of apartment buildings,
schools, mosques, hospitals, shops, and markets have been reduced to
piles of twisted metal and rubble, under which the bodies of an unknown
number of people are buried.
Of the world's many humanitarian crises, the situation in Gaza is
among the worst. This is due in large measure to the onerous
impediments by the Netanyahu government to the delivery of sufficient
food, water, medicines, shelter, and fuel.
Getting aid to those who are suffering and preventing starvation
should be our most immediate and highest priority, along with obtaining
the release of the hostages.
As I said when I spoke out for a cease-fire in November, an immediate
and indefinite cease-fire is the only way to achieve these goals. I am
very heartened by Vice President Harris's call for an immediate--if
temporary--cease-fire to get aid in and hostages out, because the
reality is, the supply of lifesaving aid has dwindled to a trickle.
Last week, the depth of the humanitarian emergency in Gaza exploded
with the deaths of dozens of Palestinian civilians as they frantically
tried to reach food supplies from aid trucks that were guarded by
Israeli soldiers. People were trampled, people were run over by trucks,
and they were shot.
It was a horrifying scene and a direct result of the Netanyahu
government's failure to put in place workable procedures for the
delivery of sufficient aid to starving people. As others have said,
there is no legal or security justification for restricting
humanitarian aid to civilians who are caught in the middle of an armed
conflict.
The more desperate people become, the more chaotic and precarious the
security situation, the more likely there will be other senseless
tragedies just like this.
I recently introduced a resolution, along with 15 of my colleagues,
calling for the urgent delivery of sufficient humanitarian aid.
The Biden administration has repeatedly called for greater access for
more aid trucks to Gaza, but the number getting through remains far
below prewar levels. And I am encouraged, nevertheless, that President
Biden has directed the United States to begin airdropping aid in--a
decision made with the understanding that, while not enough by any
means, it could save lives.
Israel now occupies Gaza. It has an obligation under international
law--not to mention the moral responsibility--to feed and shelter
Palestinians under its occupation.
Beyond the moral imperative, the path to peace, security, and
stability would be enhanced dramatically by facilitating the delivery
of essentials for survival to the Palestinian people whose fate is
imperiled. But as we saw last week, that is not happening.
The Netanyahu government's rejection of U.S. and international
appeals to meet the basic needs of innocent Palestinians trapped in
Gaza and the resulting loss of innocent lives, is really the latest in
a pattern that we have seen for years.
The United States has long supported--and the United States will
always support--Israel as a free and Jewish democratic state. But
candor requires acknowledging that we have an ongoing, serious
difference with Israeli leadership.
It is the longstanding U.S. policy that the Middle East conflict can
only be solved through negotiations to create two independent states of
Israel and Palestine. President Biden has reaffirmed this.
But Prime Minister Netanyahu has publicly rejected a two-state
solution, and he has even credited himself for actively working to
prevent the creation of a Palestinian state. I will use his words. He
couldn't have been more clear. He said:
I will not compromise on full Israeli security control over
the entire area in the west of Jordan--and this is contrary
to a Palestinian state.
The United States opposes settlements and the destruction of
Palestinian homes, orchards, schools, and other infrastructure in the
West Bank. It violates international law and is a severe obstacle to
peace. Secretary of State Blinken has reaffirmed this.
Yet Prime Minister Netanyahu embraced the settlements. In 2017, he
said:
We will deepen our roots, build, strengthen and settle.
In 2019, he said:
With God's help we will extend Jewish sovereignty to all
the settlements as part of the land of Israel, as part of the
state of Israel.
Under his leadership, settlements have expanded exponentially.
Settlements bring extremist settler violence, some of it with firearms
financed by American taxpayers.
Shootings of West Bank Palestinians, threats laced with hateful
messages that if they don't leave their homes, they will be killed, and
the destruction of land and other property have surged--surged--in
recent months, including, in some instances, with Israeli soldiers
passively standing by and watching.
It is the longstanding U.S. policy, codified by the Leahy law, that
units of foreign security forces that violate human rights are not
eligible for U.S. training or equipment or other assistance.
And according to multiple reports, that law has not been applied to
the Israeli Defense Forces, despite numerous cases of shootings of
Palestinian civilians.
We must face the contradiction of what we are doing. We are
airdropping food to famine-stricken Gaza today and supplying bombs for
Israel to drop on devastated Gaza tomorrow.
We call for humanitarian relief, but how can that call be meaningful
when aid workers are killed in their effort to deliver it and
Palestinians are killed in their effort to retrieve it?
It is time for us to acknowledge--all of us to acknowledge--what the
entire world knows: It is impossible to deliver humanitarian aid in a
very active war zone.
Israel is a great country, Jewish and democratic. Israel has been--
and remains--our closest ally in the Middle East. For decades, Israel
has been under attack by those who have sought to destroy it.
President Biden--and so many of us--understand the history of Israel
and the history of the Jewish people. October 7 was the worst attack on
the Jewish people since the Holocaust. And we cannot ever let that
happen again.
But both of our countries right now are on a wrong path. Israel must
stop its indiscriminate attacks that are killing so many Palestinian
civilians--women and children, the majority among them who perished.
And the United States must end its unconditional support when Israeli
policies are wrong that are unjustified; that are causing so much
suffering; and that, in the view of many of us, are doomed to fail in
the goal of achieving lasting peace.
How many times do we have to be repudiated by Prime Minister
Netanyahu on the use of indiscriminate force; on the recklessness of
expanding West Bank settlements; on impeding the delivery of aid; on
advocating an endless Israeli post-conflict occupation of Gaza? How
long and how often will Prime Minister Netanyahu reject our policies
but take our money before we say, ``Enough''?
How many more than the 30,000 Palestinians already killed and the
70,000
[[Page S1101]]
wounded before we say to Prime Minister Netanyahu, ``Enough''? How many
more homes and shops and schools and childcare centers and hospitals
must be destroyed before we say to Prime Minister Netanyahu,
``Enough''?
Israel must--and Israel always will--make its own decisions as to who
will be its political leaders. Israel must and Israel always will make
its own decisions as to when and how to defend itself. It is their
right.
But the United States, too, must make its own decisions consistent
with our values, with our judgment, and with what we believe to be in
our national interest. The Biden administration has taken important
steps to bring accountability through diplomacy by issuing a national
security memorandum that builds on the Leahy law, but it is time for
us--and I include all of us in the U.S. Congress--to stop accommodating
the Netanyahu government. It has consistently shown it does not share
our goal of achieving peaceful coexistence between the Israeli and
Palestinian people.
Our failure to act damages the authority, credibility, and reputation
of the United States, not to mention our foreign policy and security
interests. In my view, it undermines the security interests of Israel,
which is increasingly isolated in the international community.
Opposition to the disproportionate use of force in Gaza is widespread,
including in our own country. So, too, regrettably, is the rise of
anti-Semitism, which we must always condemn, and Islamophobia,
likewise, which we must always condemn.
It has been said many times before: U.S. aid is not a blank check.
When it comes to the Netanyahu government, it has, for many years,
across Democratic and Republican administrations, been a blank check.
It is long past time for the United States to stop supporting by
commission and omission actions that are inconsistent with our
principles and our policies, and which make peace between Israelis and
Palestinians ever more elusive, ever more difficult to achieve.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.