US approved more bombs to Israel on day of strike on Gaza food charity: Report

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April 4, 2024 United States, Delaware, Felton 26

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The United States approved the transfer of more bombs to Israel on the same day when an Israeli airstrike on World Central Kitchen, a food charity in Gaza, killed seven aid workers, a Washington Post report said on Thursday.


 


Over a thousand more bombs were approved for transfer to Israel by the Biden administration, three US officials told the Washington Post. Seven aid workers, including a dual citizen of the United States and Canada, were killed in the Israeli strike.


 


The White House had described President Joe Biden as "outraged and heartbroken" by the attack in Gaza. Biden was likely to bring up the need for better protection for humanitarian workers and for an increase in food shipments in Gaza, a US official said.


 


"They were providing food to hungry civilians in the middle of a war," Biden said. "They were brave and selfless."


 


Over 1,000 MK82 500-pound bombs, 1,000 small-diameter bombs, and fuses for MK80 bombs, were approved for transfer to Israel. The authorisation for these arms was made several years before the recent Israel-Hamas war, the US officials told the newspaper.


 


The transfer of these weapons took place sometime "prior" to the Israeli airstrike on the Gaza food charity, run by celebrity chef Jose Andres.


 


It is not clear what type of ammunition was approved for transfer to Israel, but according to Josh Paul, an ex-US arms expert, the small-diameter bombs given to Israel by the US are "certainly comparable".


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