
Republican Says US Should End All Military Aid to Israel
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Republican Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky said Thursday night that the United States should stop all military aid to Israel, citing mounting civilian casualties in the Gaza Strip.
Newsweek reached out to Massie's office via email Thursday for comment.
Why It Matters
Tensions in the Middle East remain high despite ongoing ceasefire negotiations between the Israeli government and Hamas, with the U.S. acting as a key interlocutor. Tens of thousands of people in Gaza have died as a result of Israel's war against Hamas, which was launched in response to Hamas' attack in Israel on October 7, 2023.
President Donald Trump, meanwhile, has repeatedly suggested that the U.S. "take over the Gaza Strip," adding at a news briefing alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: "We'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and all of the other weapons on the site."
Asked about the possibility of sending U.S. troops into Gaza, Trump said: "As far as Gaza is concerned, we'll do what is necessary, if it's necessary, we'll do that."
Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY) is seen speaking to reporters following a series of votes at the U.S. Capitol on March 11, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by)
Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY) is seen speaking to reporters following a series of votes at the U.S. Capitol on March 11, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by)
What To Know
Massie's remarks about ceasing U.S. military aid to Israel come as the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) faces intense criticism over what critics describe as a chaotic approach to aid distribution.
Video footage and photos posted to social media have shown thousands of Palestinians scrambling for food amid reports of Israeli gunfire and multiple casualties.
In his post to X on Thursday, the Kentucky lawmaker said, "Nothing can justify the number of civilian casualties (tens of thousands of women and children) inflicted by Israel in Gaza in the last two years. We should end all U.S. military aid to Israel now."
Massie has long been outspoken about his views of Israel and was the only Republican to vote against a bill condemning antisemitism in 2022.
The Kentucky Republican later defended his vote on X, formerly Twitter, saying, "I don't hate anyone based on his or her ethnicity or religion."
"Legitimate government exists, in part, to punish those who commit unprovoked violence against others, but government can't legislate thought," Massie added. "This bill promoted internet censorship and violations of the 1st amendment."
In March 2024, Massie voted against a bill that would have forced then-President Joe Biden to approve more military assistance to Israel.
Last October, while Israel was carrying out its military campaign in Lebanon, Massie posted on X: "If Israel insists on destroying civilian targets in Lebanon, let them buy and build their own weapons. American taxpayers should not be funding this."
Massie is no stranger to criticism, including from members of his own party. He's repeatedly voted "no" on congressional budget proposals backed by the Republican Party. Most recently, he drew President Donald Trump's and senior GOP lawmakers' ire when he voted against the Trump-backed bill that recently passed the House of Representatives, arguing that it would balloon the national deficit.
Nothing can justify the number of civilian casualties (tens of thousands of women and children) inflicted by Israel in Gaza in the last two years. We should end all U.S. military aid to Israel now. — Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) May 30, 2025
This story is developing and will be updated as more information becomes available.

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CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Israel's plan to ‘conquer' Gaza is leaving Palestinians with little place to go: 5 maps show how
Even before Israel's war in Gaza started, the territory was one of the most densely populated places on the planet, described by United Nations officials as an 'open-air prison.' Now, Israeli forces are expanding their operations, cramming the population into an ever-shrinking patch of land. Israel's latest military offensive, named 'Gideon's Chariots,' aims to finally 'conquer' the territory, as one government minister put it. Almost 80% of the enclave has come under evacuation orders or been designated as a militarized zone since March 18 when Israel broke its ceasefire with Hamas, according to the UN. Since then, Israel has a declared policy – backed by the US – to encourage resettlement of Gaza's residents. As part of the 'intensified operation,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the whole population of Gaza – around 2 million people – will be displaced to the south of the 140 square-mile territory. The Israeli military claims the operation is aimed at destroying Hamas and freeing hostages. Meanwhile, Israel's far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the operation could lead to a complete takeover of the territory. 'We are finally going to conquer the Gaza Strip,' he said after Israel's security cabinet approved the expanded campaign. See what Israel's expanding operation means on the ground, in five maps. Some Gazans in the north say they have fled to the nearby coastline in a last-ditch effort to escape the renewed bombardment, exhausted by Israel's 19-month assault. Others are sleeping in tents surrounded by the rubble of their former homes, fearful to leave in case they are forced out of Gaza. Since Israel broke the ceasefire in mid-March, at least 2-3 kilometers (1.2-1.9 miles) into Gaza's land border is a no-go zone, which includes a 1 kilometer-wide (around 0.6 miles) buffer area next to Israeli territory where homes, factories and farmland have been systematically levelled. Access to the Mediterranean Sea to fish is all but banned. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), most fishing boats have been destroyed and Palestinians fishing meters from the shore have been targeted. Another militarized corridor was established in early April — the Israeli-demarcated 'Morag Corridor' in Rafah — with the stated intention of 'dividing the strip.' This is one of at least four routes established to control Gaza by the Israeli military who demolish and clear all buildings and cropland to make way for them. At least 31 evacuation orders have been issued by Israeli forces since March 18 this year covering large areas of the strip, sometimes at the rate of two a day. As a result, an estimated 600,000 people in Gaza have been displaced in that time (this figure includes people who may have been displaced multiple times), according to the United Nations-led Site Management Cluster. Evacuation orders aren't necessarily permanent, but Israel has not stated how long they are active. CNN has asked the Israeli military if the orders expire and how that information is shared with people in Gaza but has not received a reply. In northern Gaza, these orders have recently been accompanied by instructions to move south, despite ongoing attacks there too. This week, the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for most of southern Gaza with directives to head toward the Al-Mawasi area, ahead of what its spokesperson said would be an 'unprecedented attack.' Aid groups have criticized the use of these directives, branding them as confusing, often inaccurate and overly reliant on an internet connection which most people in Gaza only have intermittent access to. The delivery mechanism is varied, with some receiving text messages or phone calls ahead of an attack, while for others the first sign is incoming Israeli fire. On the ground, Gaza no longer looks familiar to residents, with most landmarks destroyed or damaged, including shops, trees and roads, making it much more difficult to navigate. In order to move around, people need to pass through heavily militarized checkpoints, usually on foot. 'There's no place for my children and me to sleep, and I don't know what to do,' Iman Al Agha, a mother of six who said she was forced out of the northern city of Beit Lahia when Israeli quadcopters started shooting at her and her family, told CNN last week. 'I've been on the street with my children for three days, and I can't find a place to settle,' she said. 'I wish for death at any moment. I don't know what to do with my children or where this life will take us. There is no solution.' Since Israel launched its war in Gaza following Hamas' deadly October 2023 attacks, Gazans have been displaced an average of six times – some up to 19 times – according to the Danish Refugee Council. For many, repeated displacement means reliving the trauma of generations uprooted by what Palestinians call al-Nakba, or 'the catastrophe,' when roughly 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their homes in historic Palestine, during the creation of Israel in 1948. Most of the remaining areas that are not under evacuation orders or militarized are heavily damaged. A assessment by the CUNY Graduate Center found 60% of buildings are destroyed while the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said 92% of homes have either been damaged or destroyed. According to the UN Satellite Centre, 68% of roads are also damaged, which adds to the complications of transporting aid around the strip. Of the agricultural land, a report published in the Journal of Science of Remote Sensing found around 80% of tree crops — such as olives and fruit trees — are likely damaged, as well as 65% of greenhouses used to grow food such as tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and strawberries. The FAO has also reported that all cropland in Rafah, and nearly all cropland in the northern governorates are not accessible. Al-Mawasi, where many people have been instructed to go by the Israeli military, is a narrow coastal strip in southern Gaza. Once rural farmland, by February it was the most populated area in Gaza with an estimated 116,000 people, almost 6% of the enclave's population, displaced there, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Sufficient shelter is now incredibly scarce in Gaza. Omar Alsaqqa, a Gaza resident who works for aid group Médecins Sans Frontières in Khan Younis, said in a statement provided to CNN that there are no tents left and no space for people to set up. 'I don't know what to answer when colleagues ask me where they can go with their children in the middle of the night. We are running out of options to stay alive,' he said. Nada Siyam, a displaced woman who gave birth in her tent in Gaza City last week, told CNN that there isn't even a bed for her newborn, Eid, to sleep on. 'My child is two days old and is suffering from the heat. There are many mosquitoes and rats all around us. We live in the streets amidst all this filth,' she said. Further south, aid workers say they are overstretched, burnt out and fearful that they won't be able to provide adequate care for a potential influx of more uprooted people. Beginning on March 2, an 11-week blockade stopped all humanitarian aid from entering the strip. In the past week, some aid has entered through the southern Kerem Shalom crossing, but humanitarian agencies say food has yet to reach the over half a million people currently facing starvation across Gaza. 'It remains far from enough to meet the soaring humanitarian needs,' UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said. Medical facilities are already experiencing critical shortages of 'almost all essential materials, from basic consumables to infection prevention and control, to life-saving medications,' Summer Al Jamal, who works at Nasser Hospital on the outskirts of Khan Younis for UK-based charity Medical Aid for Palestinians, told CNN last week. 'If military operations continue, the existing health facilities will simply not be able to cope with the numbers of displaced people,' Al Jamal said. They are also facing an 'overwhelming number of cases that require urgent, specialized medical care. Care that we can no longer provide,' Al Jamal added, while recalling how a 10-year-old boy who recently suffered head trauma in an airstrike that killed his family could not be treated as the medication he needed is no longer available in Gaza. 'If the situation remains unchanged, we do not expect to receive any medical supplies in the near future,' she said. As well as medical aid, experts say Israel's displacement plans will necessitate the significant restructuring of Gaza's water supply system, much of which has already been destroyed or damaged since the war began. 'By forcing the population to move around… will further complicate access to water because new water points will have to be set up, new routes, new water trucking,' Wim Zwijnenburg, who analyses the environmental impact of conflicts for the Dutch peace organization PAX, told CNN. In southern Gaza, the 140,000 litres of fuel needed weekly to maintain water supply operations was not received last week, leading to warnings from local officials of an imminent full-scale shutdown, the UN reported on May 21. 'The situation is especially dire in Al-Mawasi, which is not connected to the water network,' the UN said, adding that the area depends entirely on water being delivered via trucks. There are hundreds of truckloads worth of water, sanitation and hygiene supplies stuck outside of the strip ready to cross the border 'at any moment once allowed in,' UNICEF told CNN on Thursday. Israel's displacement plans have received international backlash in recent weeks, with the leaders of the United Kingdom, France, and Canada threatening to take 'concrete actions,' including sanctions, if Israel does not stop its latest military operations and continues to block aid from entering Gaza. Netanyahu has vowed to push forward with the fresh offensive: 'At the end of the operation all areas of the strip will be under Israeli security control,' he said last Wednesday. Meanwhile, despite everything, some Gazans plan to resist Israel's latest directives. 'This is our land, and we will not leave it. We will resist, and we live on our land,' Abdul Naser Siyam, who shares a makeshift tent with 22 other people in northern Gaza, told CNN. 'Just imagine how it would be if we left and went to the land of others.'


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Israel's plan to ‘conquer' Gaza is leaving Palestinians with little place to go: 5 maps show how
Even before Israel's war in Gaza started, the territory was one of the most densely populated places on the planet, described by United Nations officials as an 'open-air prison.' Now, Israeli forces are expanding their operations, cramming the population into an ever-shrinking patch of land. Israel's latest military offensive, named 'Gideon's Chariots,' aims to finally 'conquer' the territory, as one government minister put it. Almost 80% of the enclave has come under evacuation orders or been designated as a militarized zone since March 18 when Israel broke its ceasefire with Hamas, according to the UN. Since then, Israel has a declared policy – backed by the US – to encourage resettlement of Gaza's residents. As part of the 'intensified operation,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the whole population of Gaza – around 2 million people – will be displaced to the south of the 140 square-mile territory. The Israeli military claims the operation is aimed at destroying Hamas and freeing hostages. Meanwhile, Israel's far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the operation could lead to a complete takeover of the territory. 'We are finally going to conquer the Gaza Strip,' he said after Israel's security cabinet approved the expanded campaign. See what Israel's expanding operation means on the ground, in five maps. Some Gazans in the north say they have fled to the nearby coastline in a last-ditch effort to escape the renewed bombardment, exhausted by Israel's 19-month assault. Others are sleeping in tents surrounded by the rubble of their former homes, fearful to leave in case they are forced out of Gaza. Since Israel broke the ceasefire in mid-March, at least 2-3 kilometers (1.2-1.9 miles) into Gaza's land border is a no-go zone, which includes a 1 kilometer-wide (around 0.6 miles) buffer area next to Israeli territory where homes, factories and farmland have been systematically levelled. Access to the Mediterranean Sea to fish is all but banned. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), most fishing boats have been destroyed and Palestinians fishing meters from the shore have been targeted. Another militarized corridor was established in early April — the Israeli-demarcated 'Morag Corridor' in Rafah — with the stated intention of 'dividing the strip.' This is one of at least four routes established to control Gaza by the Israeli military who demolish and clear all buildings and cropland to make way for them. At least 31 evacuation orders have been issued by Israeli forces since March 18 this year covering large areas of the strip, sometimes at the rate of two a day. As a result, an estimated 600,000 people in Gaza have been displaced in that time (this figure includes people who may have been displaced multiple times), according to the United Nations-led Site Management Cluster. Evacuation orders aren't necessarily permanent, but Israel has not stated how long they are active. CNN has asked the Israeli military if the orders expire and how that information is shared with people in Gaza but has not received a reply. In northern Gaza, these orders have recently been accompanied by instructions to move south, despite ongoing attacks there too. This week, the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for most of southern Gaza with directives to head toward the Al-Mawasi area, ahead of what its spokesperson said would be an 'unprecedented attack.' Aid groups have criticized the use of these directives, branding them as confusing, often inaccurate and overly reliant on an internet connection which most people in Gaza only have intermittent access to. The delivery mechanism is varied, with some receiving text messages or phone calls ahead of an attack, while for others the first sign is incoming Israeli fire. On the ground, Gaza no longer looks familiar to residents, with most landmarks destroyed or damaged, including shops, trees and roads, making it much more difficult to navigate. In order to move around, people need to pass through heavily militarized checkpoints, usually on foot. 'There's no place for my children and me to sleep, and I don't know what to do,' Iman Al Agha, a mother of six who said she was forced out of the northern city of Beit Lahia when Israeli quadcopters started shooting at her and her family, told CNN last week. 'I've been on the street with my children for three days, and I can't find a place to settle,' she said. 'I wish for death at any moment. I don't know what to do with my children or where this life will take us. There is no solution.' Since Israel launched its war in Gaza following Hamas' deadly October 2023 attacks, Gazans have been displaced an average of six times – some up to 19 times – according to the Danish Refugee Council. For many, repeated displacement means reliving the trauma of generations uprooted by what Palestinians call al-Nakba, or 'the catastrophe,' when roughly 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their homes in historic Palestine, during the creation of Israel in 1948. Most of the remaining areas that are not under evacuation orders or militarized are heavily damaged. A assessment by the CUNY Graduate Center found 60% of buildings are destroyed while the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said 92% of homes have either been damaged or destroyed. According to the UN Satellite Centre, 68% of roads are also damaged, which adds to the complications of transporting aid around the strip. Of the agricultural land, a report published in the Journal of Science of Remote Sensing found around 80% of tree crops — such as olives and fruit trees — are likely damaged, as well as 65% of greenhouses used to grow food such as tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and strawberries. The FAO has also reported that all cropland in Rafah, and nearly all cropland in the northern governorates are not accessible. Al-Mawasi, where many people have been instructed to go by the Israeli military, is a narrow coastal strip in southern Gaza. Once rural farmland, by February it was the most populated area in Gaza with an estimated 116,000 people, almost 6% of the enclave's population, displaced there, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Sufficient shelter is now incredibly scarce in Gaza. Omar Alsaqqa, a Gaza resident who works for aid group Médecins Sans Frontières in Khan Younis, said in a statement provided to CNN that there are no tents left and no space for people to set up. 'I don't know what to answer when colleagues ask me where they can go with their children in the middle of the night. We are running out of options to stay alive,' he said. Nada Siyam, a displaced woman who gave birth in her tent in Gaza City last week, told CNN that there isn't even a bed for her newborn, Eid, to sleep on. 'My child is two days old and is suffering from the heat. There are many mosquitoes and rats all around us. We live in the streets amidst all this filth,' she said. Further south, aid workers say they are overstretched, burnt out and fearful that they won't be able to provide adequate care for a potential influx of more uprooted people. Beginning on March 2, an 11-week blockade stopped all humanitarian aid from entering the strip. In the past week, some aid has entered through the southern Kerem Shalom crossing, but humanitarian agencies say food has yet to reach the over half a million people currently facing starvation across Gaza. 'It remains far from enough to meet the soaring humanitarian needs,' UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said. Medical facilities are already experiencing critical shortages of 'almost all essential materials, from basic consumables to infection prevention and control, to life-saving medications,' Summer Al Jamal, who works at Nasser Hospital on the outskirts of Khan Younis for UK-based charity Medical Aid for Palestinians, told CNN last week. 'If military operations continue, the existing health facilities will simply not be able to cope with the numbers of displaced people,' Al Jamal said. They are also facing an 'overwhelming number of cases that require urgent, specialized medical care. Care that we can no longer provide,' Al Jamal added, while recalling how a 10-year-old boy who recently suffered head trauma in an airstrike that killed his family could not be treated as the medication he needed is no longer available in Gaza. 'If the situation remains unchanged, we do not expect to receive any medical supplies in the near future,' she said. As well as medical aid, experts say Israel's displacement plans will necessitate the significant restructuring of Gaza's water supply system, much of which has already been destroyed or damaged since the war began. 'By forcing the population to move around… will further complicate access to water because new water points will have to be set up, new routes, new water trucking,' Wim Zwijnenburg, who analyses the environmental impact of conflicts for the Dutch peace organization PAX, told CNN. In southern Gaza, the 140,000 litres of fuel needed weekly to maintain water supply operations was not received last week, leading to warnings from local officials of an imminent full-scale shutdown, the UN reported on May 21. 'The situation is especially dire in Al-Mawasi, which is not connected to the water network,' the UN said, adding that the area depends entirely on water being delivered via trucks. There are hundreds of truckloads worth of water, sanitation and hygiene supplies stuck outside of the strip ready to cross the border 'at any moment once allowed in,' UNICEF told CNN on Thursday. Israel's displacement plans have received international backlash in recent weeks, with the leaders of the United Kingdom, France, and Canada threatening to take 'concrete actions,' including sanctions, if Israel does not stop its latest military operations and continues to block aid from entering Gaza. Netanyahu has vowed to push forward with the fresh offensive: 'At the end of the operation all areas of the strip will be under Israeli security control,' he said last Wednesday. Meanwhile, despite everything, some Gazans plan to resist Israel's latest directives. 'This is our land, and we will not leave it. We will resist, and we live on our land,' Abdul Naser Siyam, who shares a makeshift tent with 22 other people in northern Gaza, told CNN. 'Just imagine how it would be if we left and went to the land of others.'


Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
Appeals court keeps block on Trump administration's downsizing of the federal workforce
SAN FRANCISCO — An appeals court on Friday refused to freeze a California-based judge's order halting the Trump administration from downsizing the federal workforce, which means that the Department of Government Efficiency-led cuts remain on pause for now. A split three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals found that the downsizing could have significant ripple effects on everything from the nation's food-safety system to veteran health care, and should stay on hold while a lawsuit plays out. The judge who dissented, however, said President Donald Trump likely does have the legal authority to downsize the executive branch and there is a separate process for workers to appeal. The Republican administration had sought an emergency stay of an injunction issued by U.S. Judge Susan Illston of San Francisco in a lawsuit brought by labor unions and cities, including San Francisco and Chicago, and the group Democracy Forward. The Justice Department has also previously appealed her ruling to the Supreme Court, one of a string of emergency appeals arguing federal judges had overstepped their authority. The judge's order questioned whether Trump's administration was acting lawfully in trying to pare the federal workforce. Trump has repeatedly said voters gave him a mandate to remake the federal government, and he tapped billionaire Elon Musk to lead the charge through the Department of Government Efficiency. Tens of thousands of federal workers have been fired, have left their jobs via deferred resignation programs, or have been placed on leave. There is no official figure for the job cuts, but at least 75,000 federal employees took deferred resignation, and thousands of probationary workers have already been let go. Illston's order directs numerous federal agencies to halt acting on the president's workforce executive order signed in February and a subsequent memo issued by DOGE and the Office of Personnel Management. Illston, who was nominated to the bench by former President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, wrote in her ruling that presidents can make large-scale overhauls of federal agencies, but only with the cooperation of Congress. Lawyers for the government say that the executive order and memo calling for large-scale personnel reductions and reorganization plans provided only general principles that agencies should follow in exercising their own decision-making process.