US lawmaker looks to block first major Saudi arms deal under Biden

Congress has the authority to stop these sales, says Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar

Saudi military officers walk past F-15 fighter jets, GBU bombs and missiles displayed during a ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of the creation of the King Faisal Air Academy at King Salman airbase in Riyadh in 2017. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON:

Democratic US Representative Ilhan Omar filed legislation on Friday seeking to block the sale of $650 million air-to-air missiles to Saudi Arabia, the first major arms sale to the kingdom during President Joe Biden's administration.

Omar said she filed the measure, known as a joint resolution of disapproval, because of Saudi Arabia's role in Yemen's civil war, considered one of the world's war humanitarian disasters, and its human rights record.

The Biden administration announced on Nov 4 that it had approved the sale of missiles valued at up to $650 million.

Raytheon Technologies makes the missiles.

Also read: Biden ends US support for Saudi Arabia in Yemen, says war 'has to end'

"We certainly should not be doing so in the midst of a humanitarian crisis they are responsible for. Congress has the authority to stop these sales, and we must exercise that power," Omar said in a statement.

The measure's prospects for stopping the sale are slim, since it would have to pass the US Senate and survive a likely veto. But Omar's action underscores continuing wariness about weapons sales to Riyadh among some lawmakers, despite the Biden administration's intention to limit weapons sales to the kingdom to "defensive" equipment.

While Saudi Arabia is an important partner in the Middle East, US lawmakers have refused to approve many military sales for the kingdom without assurances US equipment would not be used to kill civilians.

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