Republicans in the United States House of Representatives announced on Wednesday, a vote on a military aid package for Ukraine, including billions of dollars allocated to Taiwan and Israel. 

The Republican leader in the House of Representatives announced Wednesday a vote on a massive new military aid package that includes some $61 billion in long-delayed support for Ukraine, as well as billions for Israel and Taiwan.

Along with the $61 billion for Ukraine, the bills allocate more than $26 billion for Israel as it wages war against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip and squares up against regional foe Iran and its proxies.

They also include $8 billion for self-ruled Taiwan, which China sees as part of its territory and has vowed to retake — by force if necessary.

For months Johnson has faced massive pressure from the White House and much of Congress to allow the lower house to vote on aid to Ukraine and Israel that was already approved in the Senate. Johnson had refused to allow a vote on that $95 billion package in the House.

Instead, he is pushing this separate package — which the White House has appeared to give the cautious nod to, even as Biden has said he needs to study it more closely. It remains unclear if Johnson’s aid bills would pass the House or the Democratically controlled Senate.

The speaker’s majority is razor-thin, and he is facing a potential Republican revolt over his complex plan, as conservatives complain over the billions in aid already spent.

Loyalists to Donald Trump, who has forcefully opposed more direct aid to Ukraine, hold the balance of power in the House. Without the near-total backing of his party, Johnson would be left to rely on Democratic votes to pass the aid bills.

That would infuriate his own party’s hard-right faction, some of whom have already spoken out against the new package — forcing Johnson to insist on Tuesday that he would not resign.

Investing in America

The announcement by Johnson came shortly after Biden described Ukraine and Israel as two US allies desperate for help in their conflicts.

They both “depend on American assistance, including weaponry, to do it. And this is a pivotal moment,” Biden wrote in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal.

“It shouldn’t be held hostage any longer by a small group of extreme Republican House members,” he said.

Biden argued in the Journal that the aid is needed to help Ukraine, which is running out of ammunition, and Israel in the wake of last weekend’s mass Iranian drone attack.

“Mr. Putin wants to subjugate the people of Ukraine and absorb their nation into a new Russian Empire. The government of Iran wants to destroy Israel forever — wiping the world’s only Jewish state off the map,” Biden wrote.

The weaponry for Ukraine would be built in US factories, he said.

“We’d be investing in America’s industrial base, buying American products made by American workers, supporting jobs in nearly 40 states, and strengthening our own national security. We’d help our friends while helping ourselves,” Biden said.

He also sought to allay concerns about the aid to Israel within his own Democratic party, where growing numbers of members oppose arming Israel during its devastating war against Hamas in civilian-packed Gaza.

Biden praised the Senate bill’s inclusion of funding to “continue delivering urgent humanitarian aid for the people of Gaza.”

 

with AFP