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GOP Lawmakers To Investigate If Hamas Obtained US Weaponry  

Holland McKinnie
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As unsettling revelations encircle the Biden administration, lawmakers now plan to probe the disturbing prospect that U.S. weapons, once stationed in Afghanistan and presently being supplied to Ukraine, have been used by the notorious Palestinian terrorist group Hamas

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) spoke to the urgency of this inquiry following intelligence briefings related to the recent terrorist attacks on Israel, asserting, “If we are finding out information that U.S. weapons have fallen into the hands of terrorists, it’s our duty to investigate and find out if that’s happened or not.” But it’s not just about the weapons; it’s about a perception of administrative lapses, policy blunders and a lenient stance on accountability.

The alarming narrative knits itself into a broader tapestry of Biden’s foreign policy, notably his withdrawal from Afghanistan, which critics argue lacked tactical coherence and left behind a massive trove of U.S. military equipment. The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) flagged that U.S. small arms weapons, remnants of the Afghanistan exit, have indeed been recovered inside Gaza and in the possession of Hamas.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s humanitarian and geopolitical situation looms in our global consciousness. Ukrainian intelligence has accused Russia of intentionally placing U.S. and EU weapons garnered from Ukrainian battlefields into the clutches of Hamas to detract international support for Kyiv. Russia counters with its own media attacks, as President Vladimir Putin claimed, “I have no doubt certain weapons leaked from Ukraine to the Middle East.”

Ukraine’s swift rebuttal highlighted a nuanced strategy by Russia to tarnish Ukraine’s reputation and strengthen Hamas’ hand. The Ukrainian military intelligence highlighted, “The aggressor state, Russia, is using the attack by Hamas terrorists on the state of Israel for a large-scale provocation against Ukraine.” But beneath the volley of accusations, a problematic situation remains — the tangible threat of U.S. weaponry being exploited by terrorist entities is undeniably present.

For many conservatives and proponents of a stringent national security framework, the focus lands squarely on policy missteps and a perceived lack of foresight by the Biden administration. This, when coupled with the $6 billion recently handed to Iran, ostensibly in exchange for five prisoners, ignites further questions regarding the actual end use of these funds and the intrinsic financial strengthening of terrorist groups in the volatile Middle East.

Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-WY) critically underscored the interconnectedness of these geopolitical blunders, stating, “Not just because Joe Biden’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan demonstrated a level of weakness and hubris. But now the weapons have found their way into the hands of other terrorists around the world.”

The underlying peril intertwines national security, alliance protection, and a stark reminder of the butterfly effect within international relations and military decisions. An Israeli commander vocalized fears that echo widely in defense circles, acknowledging that the weapons situation is “very dangerous” for Israel, with potential future implications for the broader global community.

The Congressional probe will hopefully get to the truth of where Hamas obtained its weapons. The prospect that the Biden administration’s mismanagement of U.S. weaponry, policy missteps and a seeming underestimation of geopolitical chess by adversarial nations casts a sobering shadow over the state of American foreign policy.