His boast, however, started to unravel when
Maor Elbaz-Starinsky, Israel’s consul general, told the news agency he had not asked for DeSantis’s help, and that the governor’s involvement was limited to smoothing paperwork requirements for a previously arranged shipment of “rifle parts” ordered by his government.
“I am not aware and would find it very, very bizarre to think that somebody is procuring weapons and sending it to
Israel,” he said. “This is not how we work. And certainly not privately funded.”
Elbaz-Starinsky told the Herald that all necessary approvals for the rifle parts requested by Israel had been obtained, but said he was not certain it was DeSantis’s office that helped secure them.
“It was really the first days of the war, everyone was panicked and stressed, everything was urgent,” he told the newspaper.
“I approached a few contacts, including the governor’s office, to get the final approval. It went through all the process. I’m not even sure, at the end of the day, which one untangled this thing and made the shipment be approved.”
DeSantis’s office, meanwhile, has backed away from its initial claim it worked directly with the consul general to “help get weapons and ammunition”.
Jeremy Redfern, the governor’s press secretary, told Reuters DeSantis “was contacted by the consul general’s office for assistance to clear federal bureaucratic hurdles associated with getting those items to Israel”.
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even isrealis don't like him
hahahahhaha