Skip Navigation

‘A Good Day for World Peace’: Biden Signs Aid Bill for Ukraine and Israel

www.nytimes.com ‘A Good Day for World Peace’: Biden Signs Aid Bill for Ukraine and Israel

The $95.3 billion measure comes after months of gridlock in Congress that put the centerpiece of President Biden’s foreign policy in jeopardy.

Something something orwell

11
11 comments
  • Some good news - this is so on the nose that even the good liberal subscribers are not biting. Most upvoted comment atm:

    “It’s a good day for world peace,” - how utterly grotesque. I sometimes wonder if Joe Biden genuinely has no idea he’s going to lose in November.

    27
  • "Mr. Biden’s critics on the left are angry about his willingness to provide more weapons to Israel, though the legislation also includes $1 billion for humanitarian aid that the president said will be rushed to Gaza."

    In what world can ANYBODY spin this in a way that makes sense. This is the most positive take they could manage and they still are literally saying that the US is supplying aid for victims of the weapons that the US is supplying.

    You know what US let's call it even. Just stop sending any more weapons to Israel and we won't expect you to send any aid, let other countries handle that. There, you save billions!

    15
  • the legislation also includes $1 billion for humanitarian aid that the president said will be rushed to Gaza.

    How about letting in the dozens of food aid trucks sitting outside Gaza instead of wasting money on these breadcrumbs? Hmm?

    13
    • No kidding. Also, spending $1 billion on aid, and $60 billion on weapons to kill the same people, is insane on its face.

      14
  • Do you think the libs who scream "literally 1984" at anything even remotely socialist would ever recognise how blatant their own government is with this stuff?

    10
  • 94.3 b on weapon money

    but we sent 1b for the people that can be able to survive! we're good people!

    7
  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    President Biden signed a $95.3 billion package of aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan on Wednesday, reaffirming U.S. support for Kyiv in the fight against Russia’s military assault after months of congressional gridlock put the centerpiece of the White House’s foreign policy in jeopardy.

    The Senate voted overwhelmingly to approve the package on Tuesday night, a sign of bipartisan support after increasingly divisive politics raised questions on Capitol Hill and among U.S. allies over whether the United States would continue to back Kyiv.

    Mr. Biden’s critics on the left are angry about his willingness to provide more weapons to Israel, though the legislation also includes $1 billion for humanitarian aid that the president said will be rushed to Gaza.

    “The Russians have slowly but successfully taken more ground from the Ukrainians and pushed them back against their first, second and, in some places, their third line of defense,” John F. Kirby, a spokesman for Mr. Biden’s National Security Council, said on Tuesday on Air Force One.

    The White House strategy in recent months involved impressing upon members of Congress — and the American people — that Ukraine could lose the war without the desperately needed aid.

    Mr. Biden’s chief of staff, Jeffrey D. Zients, held daily strategy sessions with the president’s top aides, including Mr. Sullivan; Steve Ricchetti, a senior counselor; and Shuwanza Goff, the director of legislative affairs.


    The original article contains 880 words, the summary contains 229 words. Saved 74%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

    3
You've viewed 11 comments.