Soldiers salute the U.S. flag during a
recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance at a welcome home ceremony for
soldiers returning from a deployment in Afghanistan, at Fort. Carson,
Colo., Wednesday Dec. 5, 2012. Nearly 300 soldiers of the 4th Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, returned home after a tour of duty
that began in February. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
U.S.
officials said the United States would sign a record 10-year
multibillion-dollar security assistance deal with Israel on Wednesday —
“the single largest pledge of bilateral military assistance in U.S.
history.”The State Department confirmed the deal Tuesday, without placing a dollar figure on the aid package. But sources close to the deal said it was valued at $38 billion. The current 10-year package, which expires in 2018, is valued at $31 billion. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu originally sought $4.5 billion annually.
Negotiations leading to the deal were largely concluded weeks ago. But the package was delayed over a dispute between the Obama administration and a key U.S. lawmaker, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who had argued for a more generous and less restrictive aid package.
The Washington Post reported Sunday that the dispute centered on disagreement about funds for Israeli missile defense. The Obama administration insisted on limiting missile defense spending to $500 million a year, and on including that sum in the annual aid disbursement. Graham, whose Senate appropriations subcommittee oversees foreign aid, wanted to retain the practice that allowed Israel to lobby Congress for ad hoc disbursements earmarked for missile defense.
U.S. lawmakers in recent years have provided Israel with up to $600 million in discretionary funding for missile defense
source: citizentv