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US approves $2.2 billion sale of battle tanks to Bahrain

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The United States approves a $2.2 billion sale of advanced battle tanks to Bahrain, a Gulf Arab ally once under an arms embargo over a crackdown on Shiite dissent.

Congress can still block the sale, although most military deals go through © Mena Today 

The United States approves a $2.2 billion sale of advanced battle tanks to Bahrain, a Gulf Arab ally once under an arms embargo over a crackdown on Shiite dissent.

The State Department says it had notified Congress it is ready to sell 50 M1A2 Abrams tanks, generally used for ground warfare, to the small island nation which has tense relations with nearby Iran.

“The proposed sale will improve Bahrain’s capability to meet current and future threats by providing a credible force that can deter adversaries and provide the capability to participate in regional operations with the United States and other US partner nations,” a State Department statement says.

The United States approves a $2.2 billion sale of advanced battle tanks to Bahrain, a Gulf Arab ally once under an arms embargo over a crackdown on Shiite dissent.

The State Department says it had notified Congress it is ready to sell 50 M1A2 Abrams tanks, generally used for ground warfare, to the small island nation which has tense relations with nearby Iran.

“The proposed sale will improve Bahrain’s capability to meet current and future threats by providing a credible force that can deter adversaries and provide the capability to participate in regional operations with the United States and other US partner nations,” a State Department statement says.

Congress can still block the sale, although most military deals go through.

Bahrain is home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet and is classified as a major non-NATO ally, giving it privileged defense cooperation with the United States.

Unique among Arab nations, Bahrain has signed on as a member of the coalition led by the US and Britain that has struck Yemen’s Iran-allied Houthi rebels over attacks on shipping carried out in professed solidarity with the Palestinians in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

Bahrain came under criticism in 2011, when, backed by fellow Sunni kingdom Saudi Arabia, it crushed an uprising led by the Shiite community that demanded a constitutional monarchy and an elected prime minister.

Then US president Barack Obama imposed an arms embargo for four years. Bahrain returned to the US’s good graces under former US president Donald Trump, who hailed Bahrain’s recognition of Israel.

Last year, Biden’s administration signed a new agreement with Bahrain to enhance defense and economic ties, including through greater intelligence-sharing.

© TOI

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