U.S. provides millions in Lebanese military aid
Nearly two-thirds came from 2007 Iraq, Afghanistan supplemental
Sign up for daily e-mail newsletter |
![]() |
|
William Hartung, an arms researcher with the New School in New York, says that even without any new assistance, the U.S. has provided the Lebanese government with $885.5 million in assistance of all kinds. More than $313 million of that was for military aid, known as Foreign Military Financing, with an additional $5.5 million for military training, International Military Education and Training (IMET) funds.
“Almost two-thirds of the $885.5 million came from the fiscal year 2007 supplemental for Iraq and Afghanistan, $585.5 million in all. This includes $300 million in military aid, the vast bulk of the $313.3 million received for the entire period of 2001 to 2008,” Hartung noted. “So aside from a steady flow of Economic Support Funds (averaging about $35 million a year throughout the period), Lebanon had been virtually ignored on the aid front until after the Israeli conflict in 2006.”
The Lebanese have spent the money on small arms, ammunition, Humvees, five-ton trucks, vehicle repair parts, small-arm repair parts, individual soldier equipment, protective vests, helmets and boots, as well as repair on equipment, helicopters and land vehicles, according to the State Department.
“It’s all fighting equipment,” said Hartung. “It’s not for display.”
The most recent request comes as the Lebanese army is bombing and battling Fatah al-Islam, described as linked to al-Qaida, although U.S. intelligence is not certain just how strong those links are. Sean McCormack, the State Department spokesman, would not detail what was in the request, but said it was similar to what the U.S. government has provided in the past.
“They have a request in, and we’re going to take a look at it,” he said.
Hartung says providing so much military assistance to a volatile, even unstable country, could be counterproductive.
“You’re going to tear apart Lebanon,” said Hartung, director of arms sales monitoring at the New School’s World Policy Institute. “You never know where this will wind up.
“Some will fall into the hands of Hezbollah and Hamas. Some will fall into the hands of al-Qaida. There is enough weaponry in these requests to keep a civil war going for years.”
Hartung says the U.S. has been pumping arms into Lebanon for the past two years, as Israel has battled Hezbollah, catching the Lebanese army in the middle.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM NIGHTLY NEWS WITH BRIAN WILLIAMS |
| Add Nightly News with Brian Williams headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide


