Current:Home > ContactThe US is expected to block aid to an Israeli military unit. What is Leahy law that it would cite? -RiskWatch
The US is expected to block aid to an Israeli military unit. What is Leahy law that it would cite?
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:54:51
WASHINGTON (AP) — Israel expects its top ally, the United States, to announce as soon as Monday that it’s blocking military aid to an Israeli army unit over gross human rights abuses in the Israeli-occupied West Bank before the war in Gaza began six months ago.
The move would mark the first time in the decades-long partnership between the two countries that a U.S. administration has invoked a landmark 27-year-old congressional act known as the Leahy law against an Israeli military unit.
It comes as the U.S.-Israeli relationship is under growing strain over civilian deaths and suffering in Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza.
Here’s a look at the Leahy law and how it could be invoked:
WHAT IS THE LEAHY LAW?
Former Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy championed legislation that became the Leahy law in the 1990s, saying the U.S. needed a tool to block American military aid and training to foreign security units guilty of extrajudicial killings, rapes, torture and other flagrant human rights abuses.
One of the first targets of the 1997 law was typical of the kind of renegade units that Congress had in mind: a Colombian army unit accused of knowingly killing thousands of civilians in part to get bonuses that were then being offered for killing militants.
Other U.S. laws are supposed to deal with other circumstances in which abuses would obligate blocking military support. Those include a February 2023 order by President Joe Biden dictating that “no arms transfer will be authorized” when the U.S. finds that more likely than not a foreign power would use them to commit serious violations of the laws of war or human rights or other crimes, including “serious acts of violence against children.”
HOW DOES THE LEAHY LAW WORK?
The law requires an automatic cutoff of aid to a military unit if the State Department finds credible evidence that it has committed gross abuses. A second Leahy law says the same for Defense Department training of foreign militaries.
Rights groups long have accused U.S. administrations, including Biden’s, of shirking rigorous investigations of allegations of Israeli military killings and other abuses against Palestinians to avoid invoking such laws aimed at conditioning military aid to lawful behavior by foreign forces.
Israel says its security forces investigate abuses and its courts hold offenders accountable.
HOW OFTEN IS THE LEAHY LAW INVOKED?
Regularly when it comes to U.S. security assistance to countries in the former Soviet Union and in Central and South America and Africa. Not often when it comes to strategically vital U.S. allies.
In 2022, for instance, the U.S. found sufficient evidence of abuses to trigger the Leahy law for police and other forces in Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico and the Caribbean nation of Saint Lucia.
The administration also has the option of notifying Congress of Leahy law incidents in classified settings to avoid embarrassing key partners.
Administration veterans vouch that no U.S. government has previously invoked it against Israel, says Sarah Elaine Harrison, a former Defense Department attorney who worked on Leahy law issues and now is a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group.
WHAT CAN ISRAEL DO ABOUT THE CUTOFF?
Harrison points to a 2021 treaty in which Israel stipulated it wouldn’t share U.S. military aid with any unit that the U.S. had deemed credibly guilty of gross human rights abuses.
U.S. law points to one way out for an offender: A secretary of state can waive the Leahy law if he or she determines the government involved is taking effective steps to bring the offenders in the targeted unit to justice.
The U.S. still sends billions of dollars of funding and arms to Israel, including a new $26 billion package to support Israel’s defense and and provide relief for the growing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. The Senate is expected to pass that this week and Biden says he will sign.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- On ‘João’, Brazilian singer Bebel Gilberto honors her late father, bossa nova giant João Gilberto
- Adam Sandler's Sweet Bond With Daughters Sadie and Sunny Is Better Than Shampoo and Conditioner
- Legal fight expected after New Mexico governor suspends the right to carry guns in public
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Amazon to require some authors to disclose the use of AI material
- Queen Elizabeth II remembered a year after her death as gun salutes ring out for King Charles III
- From leaf crisps to pudding, India’s ‘super food’ millet finds its way onto the G20 dinner menu
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- IRS targets 1,600 millionaires who owe at least $250,000
Ranking
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Pelosi announces she'll run for another term in Congress as Democrats seek to retake House
- US, Canada sail warships through the Taiwan Strait in a challenge to China
- Pakistani police detain relatives of the man wanted in the death probe of his daughter in UK
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Tribal nations face less accurate, more limited 2020 census data because of privacy methods
- Team USA loses to Germany 113-111 in FIBA World Cup semifinals
- Kim Jong Un hosts Chinese and Russian guests at a parade celebrating North Korea’s 75th anniversary
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Travis Barker Returns to Blink-182 Tour After Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian's Emergency Surgery
Coco Gauff plays Aryna Sabalenka in the US Open women’s final
How to watch NFL RedZone: Stream providers, start time, cost, host, more
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
On ‘João’, Brazilian singer Bebel Gilberto honors her late father, bossa nova giant João Gilberto
Queen Elizabeth II remembered a year after her death as gun salutes ring out for King Charles III
Huawei is releasing a faster phone to compete with Apple. Here's why the U.S. is worried.