WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A plan to sell Saudi Arabia highly accurate Boeing Co bomb-guidance kits is roiling Israel's backers in the Congress, setting up a potential clash with President George W. Bush.
The administration could formally notify lawmakers as soon as January 15 of the possible sale to Riyadh of Joint Direct Attack Munitions, or JDAM, technology.
As many as 253 members of the 435-seat House of Representatives have signed bipartisan warnings to Bush about such a sale to Saudi Arabia, still in a formal state of war with Israel.
The projected deal involves tail kits that turn unguided bombs into precision munitions with built-in satellite and motion-sensor navigation systems.
"You have the makings of a resolution of disapproval," said Rep. Mark Kirk, an Illinois Republican pushing for measures to curb what he considers the JDAM's risk to Israel and U.S. forces in the region.
Kirk is a naval reservist who serves a weekend a month as deputy director of intelligence in the National Military Command Center at the Pentagon. In a telephone interview on Wednesday, he said he was waiting for the administration to propose measures "to prevent these systems from ever being a threat to Americans or Israel."
Kirk cited possible political assurances, special arrangements with the Saudi government or "anything else they can think of."
The State Department originally planned to notify Congress of a possible JDAM sale early in December, but delayed that to January 15 at the request of senior House members who wanted to scrutinize it after their winter break.
Under U.S. law, Congress has 30 days to block an arms sale after receiving formal notice. In 1986, then-President Ronald Reagan dropped plans to sell shoulder-launched "Stinger" missiles to Riyadh after the House and Senate objected.