Democratic senator hits admin for Israel messaging, says he's 'not clear' on WH position

Sen. Chris Van Hollen said Sunday that it was still unclear where the White House stood with regard to continuing aid to Israel during CBS' "Face the Nation."

Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., revealed on Sunday that he still isn't fully clear on the White House's position concerning aid and Israeli accountability amid the humanitarian situation in Gaza. 

CBS' Margaret Brennan asked Van Hollen if he was clear on Biden's position of conditioning aid to Israel, and noted the Democratic senator has been calling on the White House to "act on the president's own standards" regarding national security.

"I'm not clear," he responded. 

"I was glad to see the president, at least as was reported out, finally say to President Netanyahu that if you don’t follow these — my requests — that there will be consequences, but the president and the White House have yet to lay out what consequences they have and what they want to impose. And we have had a situation where for months, the president has made requests to the Netanyahu government, they have ignored those requests, and we have sent more 2,000-pound bombs. We cannot revert back to that. We have to make sure that when the president requests something, that we have a means to enforce it," Van Hollen said. 

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Brennan asked Van Hollen about the $14 billion aid package for Israel held up in the House of Representatives, and questioned whether it was being reconsidered. 

Van Hollen explained that the president's national security memorandum No. 20 stated specifically that "if a recipient of U.S. military assistance, including the Netanyahu government, is restricting the delivery of humanitarian aid, that we should not be sending more weapons."

"So it’s very important that the Biden administration enforce its own policy," he continued. "That was signed by the president of the United States as a directive to the government. It needs to be enforced."

Brennan also interviewed White House national security communications adviser John Kirby, who was pressed on why the president hasn't spoken out about potential conditions on aid to Israel.

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"I'm not going to get ahead of the president or decisions he might or might not make going forward," Kirby told CBS. "He was very clear in his call with the prime minister that if we don't see some changes in their policies in Gaza and the way they're prosecuting operations, we're going to have to make some changes of our own."

Biden warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday that U.S. policy in Gaza could change if the Israeli military doesn’t do more to improve the humanitarian situation.

During a phone call with his Israeli counterpart, Biden stressed that Israel’s strikes on "humanitarian workers and the overall humanitarian situation are unacceptable," according to a White House readout of the call, Fox News Digital previously reported.

The same sentiment was echoed later Thursday by Kirby and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, with Blinken telling reporters that the United States would shift gears "if we don't see the changes that we need to see," according to the Jerusalem Post.

The 30-minute call came after seven aid workers with the World Central Kitchen were killed by Israeli airstrikes this week, adding to concerns about the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Fox News Digital's Michael Lee contributed to this report. 

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