print-icon
print-icon
Add ZeroHedge as a preferred source on Google

Congress Blocks Amendment To Stop Integration of U.S. And Israeli Militaries

blueapples's Photo
by blueapples
Wednesday, Jul 01, 2026 - 11:30

blueapples on X | ashesofacacia.substack.com


Facing backlash over a war with Iran that has led to President Donald J. Trump’s approval rating return to the lowest level of his second term at just 34%, the tone of some senior officials in his administration has shifted toward uncharacteristic criticism of Israel. The abrupt change of posture led by Vice President J.D. Vance has left Americans questioning whether or not that new position signals a paradigm shift in U.S. foreign policy or if it is nothing more than empty rhetoric aimed at appeasing the masses who have become increasingly disenfranchised by the administration over its virtually unconditional support for the Jewish state. A decision from Congress blocking a bipartisan amendment introduced by representatives Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna that would have removed the controversial provision from the National Defense Authorization Act (”NDAA”) integrating the U.S. and Israeli militaries answered that lingering question by showing that unfettered support for Israel remains business as usual in Washington, D.C., despite any empty political posturing to the contrary.

The amendment introduced by Massie and Khanna sought to remove Section 219 (formerly Section 224) from this year’s NDAA. That provision is poised to establish a United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative which expands cooperation between the two nations in a manner that opponents have raised criticisms about over how it effectively integrates their two militaries. In the wake of public support in the U.S. declining to record lows, the revelation of Section 219 has been met with vitriol from U.S. taxpayers who have come to view Israel as a pariah on the world stage, a stark departure from the long-standing sentiment inculcated into the American public that the country serves as its greatest ally. Representatives Massie and Khanna harnessed that shifting sentiment by drafting an amendment to the NDAA that would have removed Section 219 from the text of the proposed legislation, only to have their effort blocked by the House Rules Committee after it chose to exclude it from a list of amendments made in order. In doing so, the committee ensured the amendment would not receive any debate or a recorded vote on the House floor.

In addition to excluding the amendment put forward by Massie and Khanna, the House Rules Committee also excluded another introduced by Democratic representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez that sought to rein in U.S. arms sales to Israel. The amendment introduced by Ocasio-Cortez would have imposed conditions for offensive and defensive military aid to Israel. Those conditions would have required U.S. foreign military aid to comply with international law by banning the transfer of weapons to countries blocking U.S. or United Nations' humanitarian aid to civilians.

The House Rules Committee utilized this mechanism to preserve Section 219 of the NDAA in the face of widespread bipartisan condemnation of the provision. When announcing his intent to offer an amendment striking the provision from the NDAA, Massie highlighted how its passage would further undermine U.S. sovereignty. Massie’s position was echoed across the aisle by Khanna, who ultimately introduced the amendment, which was co-sponsored by other Democratic representatives Jim McGovern, Jesús G. García, and Rashida Tlaib. Their bipartisan effort, though blocked, reflected the popular will of the American people who reached out to lawmakers from both parties to compel them to remove Section 219 from the NDAA after the once-obscure provision fell into the spotlight over the discourse surrounding the proposed legislation. When discussing the provision, Massie succinctly summarized that position felt by U.S. citizens, stating, “If Section 219 is signed into law, the American people should see it as Congress fully capitulating our nation’s autonomy to foreign influence.”

In contrast, proponents of Section 219 have downplayed the criticisms raised by the likes of Massie and Khanna by characterizing the provision as a mechanism to improve efficiency and coordination between the militaries of the U.S. and Israel, rather than one to fully integrate them. Ranking Member of the House Committee on Armed Services, Democratic representative Adam Smith of Washington, aimed to dispel the narrative put forward by Massie and Khanna by highlighting how the U.S. already has three existing cooperative programs with Israel to develop new technologies, adding that the United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative created under Section 219 of the NDAA does not create any new programs. “To say that this is us bowing to the bidding of Israel on this is completely inaccurate. The reason we’re doing this is because we benefit from that technology development,” Smith stated. Republican representative Mike Rogers of Alabama, Chair of the Armed Services Committee, attacked Massie’s characterization that the initiative undermines U.S. sovereignty by stating “Claims that this provision somehow cedes authority to a foreign government are simply ridiculous.”

Although the House Rules Committee has ultimately struck down the lone attempt to remove Section 219 from the NDAA, that measure has done little to ease concerns over its ramifications. The nonprofit watchdog group Human Rights Watch highlighted how the data fusion and intelligence streams integrated by the United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative raise serious human rights concerns due to the impact they would have on amplifying the Israel Defense Forces (”IDF”) targeting systems. Those systems have faced international condemnation over the massive civilian casualties that have fallen into the crosshairs of the IDF in the Gaza Strip, West Bank, Lebanon, and other theaters of war.

Other policy critics have highlighted how further integration of the U.S. and Israeli militaries poses an inherent national security risk by exposing sensitive U.S. systems to foreign penetration risks due to blurring the lines between foreign and domestic defense infrastructure. American political action committee A New Policy, which was founded in 2024 with the mission of reshaping U.S. policymaking toward Israel and Palestine, highlighted the litany of risks posed by Section 219 of the NDAA in their an examination of the provision. In their examination, A New Policy raised significant concerns over how the provision “exposes sensitive U.S. capabilities to counterintelligence risk, normalizes technologies developed in contexts of occupation and civilian harm, disadvantages U.S. defense companies ability to compete with Israeli competitors, deepens U.S. legal and reputational exposure without clear strategic necessity, and aims to hide continuing U.S. military support to Israel from Congressional and public transparency.”

Ultimately, those warnings have fallen upon deaf ears in the U.S. House of Representatives following the actions of its rules committee, which will now bring a vote on the NDAA to the floor without any possibility of removing Section 219 from the text of the legislation. With the NDAA’s passage with Section 219 intact being a fait accompli in the House, the only remaining hope that the provision will be struck down lies in the hands of the Senate. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has been the lone voice in the Senate expressing disapproval of Section 219 and has urged Congress to remove the provision from the proposed legislation. Unlike the House of Representatives, the U.S. Senate has no equivalent to the House Rules Committee that could block any vote on an amendment to remove Section 219 from the NDAA, leaving the fate of any such proposal to fall on a floor vote. However, placing the fate of any such amendment on the Senate, which votes more uniformly in support of Israel on average than the House, renders its passage virtually as impossible.

As the NDAA advances towards its inevitable passage with the inclusion of Section 219, the voices of those amplifying criticism of Israel in Washington, D.C. can be divided into two camps. The first of those contains the few within the U.S. government who have fought to decouple the U.S. from Israel. The second is one whose rhetoric is performative in the face of mounting criticism over Israel in the fallout from the U.S.’ war in Iran. The inner machinations of Washington’s political machine showcased by the House Rules Committee’s decision to block the amendment striking Section 219 from the NDAA show that the sudden change in tone of how U.S. leadership views Israel is not indicative of any shift of principle, let alone policymaking. Instead, it is nothing more than another act of political theater that continues to veil how leadership in Washington, D.C. continues to put the interests of Israel ahead of Americans while draping itself in the American flag.

With that being the status quo in Washington, D.C. on the eve of the 250th anniversary of the United States’ founding, Americans are left to reconcile how they can truly commemorate their independence when it has become clear their government continues to serve a foreign nation, making the nation’s semiquincentennial less of a celebration and more of an eulogy.

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.
0
Loading...