Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Military Veteran Rios Challenging Costa for Congress in 2026

24 hours ago

OpenAI to Release Web Browser in Challenge to Google Chrome

24 hours ago

Fuel Shortage Threatens to Turn Gaza’s Biggest Hospital Into Graveyard, Doctors Say

24 hours ago

Why Measure C Is Not Measured

1 day ago

California Highway Patrol Makes 1,311 DUI Arrests During Independence Day Weekend

1 day ago

Death Toll Reaches at Least 119 in Texas Floods, With 173 Missing

1 day ago

Nathan Magsig: Why Our Second Amendment Resolution Matters to the People of the Central Valley

1 day ago

Horse Racing May Be Out at Fresno Fair, but New Events Promise to Pack Grandstands

1 day ago

Wall Street Shakes off Tariff Concerns, Nvidia Leaps to $4 Trillion

1 day ago

Who Will Dyer Support as His Successor? We Asked Him.

1 day ago
Ex-State Department Official: Israeli Military Gets Preferential Treatment on Abuses
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 1 year ago on
April 25, 2024

A former senior U.S. official who until recently helped oversee human-rights compliance by foreign militaries receiving American military assistance said Wednesday that he repeatedly observed Israel receiving “special treatment” from U.S. officials. (AP/Ariel Schalit)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

WASHINGTON — A former senior U.S. official who until recently helped oversee human-rights compliance by foreign militaries receiving American military assistance said Wednesday that he repeatedly observed Israel receiving “special treatment” from U.S. officials when it came to scrutiny of allegations of Israeli military abuses of Palestinian civilians.

Former U.S. Officials Statement Against the Biden Administration

The allegation comes as the Biden administration faces intense pressure over its ally’s treatment of Palestinian civilians during Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. And matters because of who said it: Charles O. Blaha. Before leaving the post in August, he was a director of a State Department security and human rights office closely involved in helping ensure that foreign militaries receiving American military aid follow U.S. and international humanitarian and human rights laws.

Blaha said his departure from the State Department after decades of service was not related to the U.S.-Israeli security relationship. He is the second senior State official involved in that relationship to assert that when it comes to Israel, the U.S. is reluctant to enforce laws required of foreign militaries receiving American aid.

“In my experience, Israel gets special treatment that no other country gets,” Blaha said. “And there is undue deference, in many cases, given” to Israeli officials’ side of things when the U.S. asks questions about allegations of Israeli wrongdoing against Palestinians, he added.

He spoke to reporters at an event where he and other members of an unofficial, self-formed panel of former senior U.S. civilian and military officials released a report pointing to civilian deaths in specific airstrikes in Gaza. They said there was “compelling and credible” evidence that Israeli forces had acted illegally.

Blaha’s comments echoed those of another State Department official and panel member, Josh Paul. Paul resigned as a director overseeing arms transfers to other countries’ militaries in October in protest of the U.S. rushing arms to Israel amid its war in Gaza.

Asked about the allegations from the two, a State Department spokesman, Vedant Patel, said “there is no double standard, and there is no special treatment.”

Israeli officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Israel consistently says it follows all laws in its use of U.S. military aid, investigates allegations against its security forces and holds offenders accountable.

Israel historically is the United States’ biggest recipient of military aid, and Biden on Wednesday signed legislation for an additional $26 billion in wartime assistance. But Biden has come under growing pressure over that support as Palestinian deaths mount.

The Findings of the October 7 Attack

The latest Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7, when Hamas and Islamic Jihad, two militant groups backed by Iran, carried out a cross-border attack that killed 1,200 people in Israel. Israel responded with an offensive in Gaza that has caused widespread devastation and killed more than 34,000 people, according to local health officials.

In coming days, the administration says it will announce its official findings from reviews it did into allegations of especially serious human rights abuses by specific Israeli military units. Those units would be barred from receiving U.S. military aid if the U.S. review confirms those allegations.

Separately, the Biden administration also is expected to disclose by May 8 whether it has verified assurances from Israel that the country is not using U.S. military aid in a way that violates international or human rights law. Both Israel’s written assurance and the U.S. verification were mandated by a new presidential national security memo that Biden issued in February.

The February agreement was negotiated between the Biden administration and members of his own Democratic Party, who had been pushing for the U.S. to begin conditioning military aid to Israel on improving treatment of Palestinian civilians.

Panel members released their report Wednesday to urge the U.S. to scrutinize specific attacks in Gaza that the former officials argued should lead to a conclusion that Israel was wrong when it confirmed it was complying with the laws. If that determination is made, the U.S. could then suspend military aid.

Wednesday’s unofficial report points to 17 specific strikes on apartments, refugee camps, private homes, journalists and aid workers for which the former U.S. officials and independent experts allege there’s no evidence of the kind of military target present to justify the high civilian death tolls.

They include an Oct. 31 airstrike on a Gaza apartment building that killed 106 civilians, including 54 children. Israeli officials offered no reason for the strike, and a Human Rights Watch probe found no evidence of a military target there, the officials said. Israel has said in many of the instances that it is investigating.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Israeli Strike Kills Children Near Gaza Clinic With No Immediate Truce in Sight

DON'T MISS

Judge Blocks Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Despite Supreme Court Ruling

DON'T MISS

Churches Can Endorse Political Candidates to Congregations, IRS Says

DON'T MISS

US Lawmakers Renew Concerns About GenScript’s Ties to China

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Man Sentenced to 13 Years in Fiery DUI Crash That Killed One, Injured Several

DON'T MISS

‘Hollywood-Level Scares’ at Immersive Horror Attraction Coming to Fresno This Halloween

DON'T MISS

Hiker Rescued by Helicopter After Injury on Pacific Crest Trail in Kern County

DON'T MISS

US Military Delivering Some Weapons to Ukraine After Pause

DON'T MISS

Qantas Confirms Personal Data of Over a Million Customers Leaked in Breach

DON'T MISS

US Sanctions UN Expert Critical of Israel’s War in Gaza

UP NEXT

Judge Blocks Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Despite Supreme Court Ruling

UP NEXT

Churches Can Endorse Political Candidates to Congregations, IRS Says

UP NEXT

US Lawmakers Renew Concerns About GenScript’s Ties to China

UP NEXT

Fresno County Man Sentenced to 13 Years in Fiery DUI Crash That Killed One, Injured Several

UP NEXT

‘Hollywood-Level Scares’ at Immersive Horror Attraction Coming to Fresno This Halloween

UP NEXT

Hiker Rescued by Helicopter After Injury on Pacific Crest Trail in Kern County

UP NEXT

US Military Delivering Some Weapons to Ukraine After Pause

UP NEXT

Qantas Confirms Personal Data of Over a Million Customers Leaked in Breach

UP NEXT

US Sanctions UN Expert Critical of Israel’s War in Gaza

UP NEXT

Madera County Structure Fire Spreads to Vegetation in Coarsegold Area, Evacuations Ordered

Bitcoin Hits Fresh Record High

32 minutes ago

Froot Loops Maker WK Kellogg Agrees to $3.1 Billion Deal From Italy’s Ferrero

1 hour ago

China Signals Willingness to Sell Fighter Jets as Iran Eyes J-10 Aircraft

2 hours ago

Tulare County Man Arrested in Ivanhoe Shooting, Second Suspect Still at Large

2 hours ago

Tiger-Striped Trixie Is a Pro When It Comes to Taking Cozy Naps

2 hours ago

Democrats Release Texts, Emails to Boost Claims Trump Nominee Urged Defiance of Courts

2 hours ago

Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help in Finding Missing 16-Year-Old Girl

2 hours ago

Ford Recalls More Than 850,000 Vehicles in US Over Fuel Pump Defect

2 hours ago

Walmart Recalls Ozark Trail Bottles After Three Reported Injuries, US Agency Says

2 hours ago

FEMA Is Holding Up $2.4 Billion in Grants to Fight Terrorism, States Say

2 hours ago

US Health Department Widens Immigrant Benefit Restrictions

WASHINGTON – The Trump administration is widening its interpretation of a law banning most immigrants living in the United States from...

4 minutes ago

A person walks outside of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services building after it was reported that the HHS will cut about 10,000 full-time jobs and close half of its regional offices, a major overhaul of the department under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 27, 2025. (Reuters/Leah Millis)
4 minutes ago

US Health Department Widens Immigrant Benefit Restrictions

Joshua White was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after allegedly stabbing a man multiple times in northeast Fresno. (Fresno PD)
15 minutes ago

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect in Stabbing That Left Man Critically Injured

20 minutes ago

Madera County Authorities Seek Next of Kin for North Fork Man

Representations of the Bitcoin cryptocurrency are seen in this illustration picture taken June 7, 2021. (Reuters File)
32 minutes ago

Bitcoin Hits Fresh Record High

Kellogg's Frosted Flakes, owned by Kellogg Company, is seen for sale in a store in Queens, New York City, U.S., February 7, 2022. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

Froot Loops Maker WK Kellogg Agrees to $3.1 Billion Deal From Italy’s Ferrero

2 hours ago

China Signals Willingness to Sell Fighter Jets as Iran Eyes J-10 Aircraft

Tulare County deputies arrested Sotero Flores, 47, of Ivanhoe, in connection with a shooting in Ivanhoe that injured a man, while a second suspect, Rigoberto Lopez, 32, of Ivanhoe, remains at large. (Tulare County SO)
2 hours ago

Tulare County Man Arrested in Ivanhoe Shooting, Second Suspect Still at Large

2 hours ago

Tiger-Striped Trixie Is a Pro When It Comes to Taking Cozy Naps

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend