US Rep. Ilhan Omar moves to block $650 million Saudi arms sale
US Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) on Friday introduced a
joint resolution to block a $650 million sale of air-to-air missiles proposed
by the Biden administration for Saudi Arabia.
The sale was notified to Congress last week and billed by
the State Department as part of the Biden administration’s efforts to continue
providing defensive aid to Saudi Arabia amid a pledge to cut off support for
the kingdom’s war in Yemen.
The administration said last week the proposed sale of 280
Raytheon-made AIM-120C missiles would help the Royal Saudi Air Force continue
to defend the Gulf country against drone attacks launched by Yemen’s Houhti
rebels.
The proposed sale is “fully consistent with the
administration’s pledge to lead with diplomacy to end the conflict in Yemen
while also ensuring Saudi Arabia has the means to defend itself from
Iranian-backed Houthi air attacks,” a State Department spokesperson said last
week.
But Omar, a leading progressive voice among Democrats,
called the proposed arms transfer “simply unconscionable” in a statement on
Friday.
“It is simply unconscionable to sell weapons to Saudi Arabia
while they continue to slaughter innocent people and starve millions in Yemen,
kill and torture dissidents and support modern-day slavery,” Omar said in a
statement, in apparent reference to recent allegations by French prosecutors
against a Saudi prince.
“We should never be selling human rights abusers weapons,
but we certainly should not be doing so in the midst of a humanitarian crisis
they are responsible for,” the Minnesota congresswoman said.
The joint resolution could hold up the sale of the missiles
and nearly 600 launchers if approved in the Senate.
Omar, who sits on the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
reintroduced a bill last week with Reps. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) and Sara Jacobs
(D-Calif) that would reform the House’s arms sale approval procedures to more
closely mirror those in the Senate.
The Arms Sale Oversight Act, first introduced in 2019, was
reintroduced last Wednesday in response to the Biden administration’s
announcement of plans to sell the air-to-air missiles to Saudi Arabia.
Bipartisan opposition to US arms sales to Saudi Arabia and
the UAE — core members of the Gulf military coalition's war effort in Yemen —
has gained steam in recent years amid growing revelations about the coalition's
human rights violations and Riyadh's violent repression of dissidents.
The Biden administration says it has ended support for
offensive Saudi operations in the conflict.
The US and the UN have urged Saudi Arabia to wind down the
conflict and lift the blockade of Yemen's ports – a major demand of the Houthi
rebels.
Reports this week of Saudi withdrawals from bases in Yemen,
though denied by Riyadh, have raised speculation that the Gulf's involvement in
the conflict may finally be winding down.
If Omar's resolution were to pass the Senate, it could face
presidential veto — a right exercised three times by former US President Donald
Trump in order to move forward with arms sales to Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.



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