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 | The 2013 US Budget: Difficult Cuts for Americans, Gravy for Israel By Josh Ruebner Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011 
 
 As part of its budget request, the White House released a 205-page document detailing the cuts, consolidations and savings the Obama administration is proposing. These proposed cuts include 5 million dollars to the US Department of Agriculture to analyse food-borne pathogens, potentially making the US food supply even less safe than it already is after 30 people died last year as a result of eating listeria-infected cantaloupe; a 359-million-dollar cut to the Environmental Protection Agency to provide grants to states for water infrastructure projects when an estimated 1.7 million Americans shockingly lack access to basic water and sanitation services, according to the Water Infrastructure Network; and a whopping 360-billion-dollar cut over 10 years in Medicare, Medicaid and other health programmes, even though the World Health Organization rates the US health system as only 37th globally in health care performance. Given these “difficult cuts” to the budget, it is easy to agree with 
	  Israeli journalist Ran Dagoni, who
	  
	  wrote last year in the Israeli business newspaper Globes, 
	  that the “time has come to bid goodbye to the military aid that the US 
	  extends to Israel, that generous package that enables the Israeli taxpayer 
	  to share the cost of procuring equipment for the IDF [Israel Defense 
	  Forces] with the US taxpayer”. After all, Israel – the 28th wealthiest 
	  country in the world in 2011, with a per capita gross domestic product
	  
	  greater than South Korea and Saudi Arabia, according to the 
	  International Monetary Fund – hardly needs US charity more than we need 
	  safe food, clean water and health care. 
 Were Israel using these weapons for legitimate purposes and to further US foreign policy objectives, then perhaps a persuasive case could be constructed for why the United States does not need to make any budgetary “tough choices” when it comes to Israel. However, Israel misuses US weapons, in violation of US laws, to commit grave and systematic human rights abuses against Palestinians in furtherance of its 44-year military occupation of the Palestinian West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, and its illegal colonization of the West Bank and East Jerusalem. From 2000 to 2009, the United States provided Israel with more than 24 billion dollars of military aid and delivered more than 670 million weapons, rounds of ammunition, and related military equipment. During that same period, according to the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem, Israel killed at least 2,969 Palestinians “who did not take part in the hostilities and were killed by Israeli security forces (not including the objects of targeted killings)." Israel often kills Palestinians with these same US weapons provided at 
	  taxpayer expense. Such was likely the case last December when an Israeli 
	  soldier fired a 
	  high-velocity tear gas canister at 28-year-old Mustafa Tamimi, a 
	  resident of the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, who was protesting 
	  against Israeli settlers seizing land on which his village’s natural 
	  spring is located. The canister, fired from an Israeli armoured vehicle, 
	  struck the activist in the face. He died the next day from his wounds. 
	  Strong evidence exists that the tear gas canister that killed Mustafa was 
	  made by Combined 
	  Systems, Inc. of Jamestown, Pennsylvania, and likely could have been 
	  one of more than 595,000 tear gas canisters and other “riot control” 
	  equipment, valued at more than 20.5 million dollars, which were funded by 
	  US taxpayers and given to the Israeli military between 2000 and 2009. Josh Ruebner is the National Advocacy Director of the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation and a former Analyst in Middle East Affairs at Congressional Research Service. 
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