“Our government should not sell a single bullet to the UAE, much less billions of dollars in deadly military equipment.”
Following the Senate’s failure earlier this week to block President Donald Trump’s $23 billion weapons sale to the United Arab Emirates, President-elect Joe Biden is facing pressure from anti-war organizations and activists to put a stop to the deal upon taking office to prevent further U.S. complicity in the slaughter of civilians in Yemen and Libya.
Announced last month after Trump claimed credit for brokering a “peace deal” between the UAE and Israel, the agreement would send 50 F-35 fighter jets, more than a dozen Reaper drones, and billions of dollars worth of munitions to the UAE—part of the U.S.-backed Saudi-led coalition whose assault on Yemen has created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.