| Biden advisor ridiculed for saying he supports withholding arms to Israel 
 
 Former national security advisor Jake Sullivan linked any embargo to a ceasefire and not Gaza's famine or death toll
 
   US national  security advisor Jake Sullivan speaks during the daily press briefing in  the Brady press briefing room of the White House in Washington, DC, on  13 January 2025 (Roberto Schmidt/AFP)
 By  MEE staff
 Published date: 28 August 2025 20:47 BST             |              Last update: 9 hours 52 mins  ago
 
 Former  US national  security advisor Jake Sullivan was skewered as a hypocrite on Thursday  after an interview aired of him saying he would support Congress voting  to withhold military aid to  Israel over its decision to abandon a  Gaza ceasefire with Hamas in March.
 
 “The situation as it stands today, following the breakdown of the  ceasefire in March, means that a vote to withhold weapons from Israel is  a totally credible position. That is a position I would support,”  Sullivan told a podcast hosted by The Bulwark media.
 
 Sullivan was lambasted on social media for his statement.
 
 “This has almost been too obvious to say, but Jake Sullivan is one of  the original architects and cheerleaders for Israel's genocide and  personally intervened to make sure the US is sending more bombs,” one  commentator on X  wrote.
 
 Sullivan was Biden’s National Security Council advisor and deeply  involved in efforts to arm Israel after it assaulted Gaza following the  Hamas-led 7 October 2023 attacks on southern Israel.
 
 
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 During his  time at the White House, Sullivan lobbied Democratic members of Congress  against voting to block arms transfers throughout the war. Human rights  experts and high-profile academics have labelled Israel’s war a  genocide against Palestinians. Sullivan did not link a blockade of arms  transfers to Israeli atrocities in Gaza.
 
 “Jake Sullivan does not deserve an ounce of credit for saying this  after he spent his time in power arming, enabling and defending the  genocide in Gaza,” another commentator  said on X.
 
 “The continuing slaughter today was made possible by Jake and his  boss, Biden. Is he hoping Americans don’t have object permanence?”
 
 Sullivan’s record on calling shots in the Middle East has not aged well since he left office.
 
 For months, he insisted that the former Hamas leader in Gaza, Yahya  Sinwar, was the “massive obstacle” to a ceasefire. But Sinwar was killed  in Gaza in October 2024, and the war has continued to rage without him.
 
 Almost a year after his death, Israel is preparing to assault Gaza City.
 
 Sullivan is already remembered for his now infamous speech at the  Atlantic Festival on 29 September 2023, when he boasted that under the  Biden administration, the Middle East “is quieter today than it has been  in two decades”.
 
 
 
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 A week later, the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel sparked a region-wide conflict that included fighting in  Syria,  Yemen, and  Lebanon. Israel and  Iran engaged in unprecedented direct fighting, and the US, under the Trump administration, bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities.
 
 Meanwhile, Israel’s genocide in Gaza has raged on with nearly  unconditional US backing, first by the Biden administration and then the  Trump administration. At least 62,966 Palestinians, mainly women and  children, have been killed by Israel, according to Palestinian health  officials.
 
 Although Sullivan is no longer in public office, several commentators  noted the irony of his calling for lawmakers to back an arms embargo on  Israel while his wife, Maggie Goodlander, has remained relatively quiet  on the topic. She is a Democratic congresswoman for the state of New  Hampshire.
 
 In a statement posted on her  website  on 22 August, Goodlander called for humanitarian aid to surge into  Gaza, but she did not call for an arms embargo against Israel or offer  any new legislation on the matter.
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