Netanyahu wants to wean Israel off US military support, he tells CBS

Netanyahu wants to wean Israel off US military support, he tells CBS

May 10 (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hopes to wean Israel off ‌U.S. military support within a decade ‌as his country pushes to strengthen ties with ​Gulf states, he said in an interview that aired on Sunday.

Reuters

"I want to draw down to zero the American financial support, the ‌financial component ⁠of the military cooperation that we have," Netanyahu told CBS News' "60 ⁠Minutes" program.

Israel receives about $3.8 billion of U.S. military aid a year, he said. The ​U.S. has ​agreed to provide ​a total of $38 billion ‌in military aid to Israel from 2018 to 2028.

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But it is "absolutely" the right time to possibly reset the U.S.-Israeli financial relationship, Netanyahu said.

"I don't want to wait for the ‌next Congress," he told ​CBS. "I want to start ​now."

While Israel ​has long had bipartisan consensus within ‌the U.S. Congress for ​military aid, ​support from lawmakers and the public has frayed since the outbreak of war ​in Gaza ‌in October 2023.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel ​in New York; Editing by Sergio ​Non and Paul Simao)

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