Joe Biden opposes cutting military aid to Israel: 'gigantic mistake'

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders said on Monday that the aid could be used as leverage on the Israeli government

Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the 2019 Second Step Presidential Justice Forum at Benedict College in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S. October 26, 2019 (photo credit: REUTERS/SAM WOLFE)
Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the 2019 Second Step Presidential Justice Forum at Benedict College in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S. October 26, 2019
(photo credit: REUTERS/SAM WOLFE)
WASHINGTON – Former vice president and Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden sharply criticized some of his fellow candidates for offering to use military aid to Israel as leverage, calling the idea “outrageous.”
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said on Monday that the aid could be used as leverage on Jerusalem. “I would use the leverage of $3.8 billion – it is a lot of money – and we cannot give it ‘carte blanche’ to the Israeli government or for that matter to any government at all. We have a right to demand respect for human rights and democracy,” he said at J Street’s annual conference in Washington. “Some of that $3.8 billion should go right now into humanitarian aid in Gaza,” he added.
South Bend, Indiana mayor and presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg addressed the issue as well, saying that the US has mechanisms to ensure that American taxpayer support for Israel “does not get turned into US taxpayer support for a move like annexation.”
When asked if he would also try to put pressure on Israel to change its settlements through cutting US military assistance, Biden told The Wall Street Journal that he won’t be the person to do such a thing. “Not me,” was his reply.
“I have been on record from very early on opposed to the settlements, and I think it’s a mistake, he clarified. “And [Prime Minister] Netanyahu knows my position. But the idea that we would draw military assistance from Israel, on the condition that they change a specific policy, I find to be absolutely outrageous.”
“Anyway, no. I would not condition it, and I think it’s a gigantic mistake. And I hope some of my candidates who are running with me for the nomination; I hope they misspoke, or they were taken out of context.”