Media Search:



Clarius Introduces First Ultrasound System That Uses AI and Machine Learning to Recognize Anatomy for an Instant Window into the Body – PRNewswire

VANCOUVER, BC, May 19, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --In its biggest Clarius Ultrasound App update to date, Clarius Mobile Health is introducing the ability for its wireless ultrasound systems to automatically detect body anatomy being scanned by clinicians. This new feature is now available with the Clarius C3 HD multipurpose and the Clarius PA HD phased array ultrasound systems.

Ideally suited for emergency medicine, EMS, critical care and primary care, these high-definition scanners enable clinicians to quickly examine the abdomen, heart, lungs, bladder, and other superficial structures without additional interaction through the App. Users simply select Auto Preset AI and the Clarius App will automatically adjust settings to optimize imaging for the area being examined.

"Although machine learning and artificial intelligence have been applied to medical imaging over the past several years, this is the first commercially available application that enables an ultrasound system to recognize anatomy on a macro level, allowing the AI to recognize different structures in the human torso," says Kris Dickie, Vice President of Research and Development at Clarius. "We've labelled tens of thousands of ultrasound images within our vast database to achieve this exciting breakthrough, which will help clinicians to get the answers they need more rapidly."

In addition to Auto Preset AI, Version 8.0 of the Clarius Ultrasound App includes dozens of new features and enhancements, most of which are available across the entire Clarius product line. Clinicians across the medical spectrum can choose from ten wireless ultrasound scanners that are operated by the Clarius Ultrasound App, which can be downloaded from the App Store or Google Play store. The App is compatible with most iOS and Android smart devices for high-definition imaging. Always free, the Clarius Ultrasound App 8.0 offers many different capabilities for novice and expert users.

Enabling Ultrasound Mastery

Dr. Oron Frenkel, an emergency physician and Chairman of the Clarius Medical Advisory Board, is dedicated to expanding the use of point-of-care (POCUS) ultrasound. He works closely with Clarius on ultrasound education and developing features that help clinicians master ultrasound imaging.

"Ultrasound is an amazing tool that gives those of us who know how to use it an instant window into the patient's body," says Dr. Frenkel. "I'm excited about the many features in this Clarius Ultrasound App update that will help enhance ultrasound proficiency. Besides the Auto Preset AI, which will set up novice users for success from day one, we now have nearly 100 ultrasound tutorials that can be viewed in-app. Through this integration, users can easily toggle between watching the video and scanning their patient. Clarius Classroom provides an excellent way to learn."

Anatomical Photographs and New Ways to Share

Also new in the latest Clarius Ultrasound App is the ability for clinicians to capture and document photographs, taken with the mobile device camera, alongside the ultrasound images. This is an excellent way to provide context for education, reporting and patient information. Users can also share interesting cases more easily to their social networks for commentary all images and clips remain anonymous to protect patient identity. The new sharing functionality allows users to take advantage of native mobile device integrations such as Apple's AirDrop.

Enhanced Workflows and Imaging

Since 2016, Clarius ultrasound scanners have gained a reputation for delivering high-resolution imaging comparable to high performance laptop systems, at a fraction of the cost. Among other enhancements, the new Clarius Ultrasound App offers advanced workflow features that include a TI-RADS reporting module, Lower Extremities Doppler packages, as well as a Labour and Delivery workflow that includes Biophysical Profile reporting. Additional advanced imaging features now include a Dynamic Range control, High Frame Rate Carotid Doppler imaging, and High-Definition Zoom capabilities.

Accurate, easy-to-use and affordable ultrasound imaging is here. Unlike alternatives, Clarius offers advanced innovation in-app, Clarius Cloud storage/management, Clarius Live telemedicine and Clarius Classroom at no additional cost, with zero subscription fees. Clinicians are invited to book a demo with a Clarius sonographer to see the difference high-definition imaging can make in delivering the best patient care.

About Clarius Mobile Health

Clarius is on a mission to make accurate, easy-to-use and affordable ultrasound tools available to all medical professionals in every specialty. With decades of experience in medical imaging, the team knows that great ultrasound imaging improves confidence and patient care. Today, Clarius handheld wireless ultrasound scanners connect to iOS and Android devices, delivering high-resolution ultrasound images traditionally only available with bulkier, high-end systems at a fraction of the cost.

More than one million high-definition scans have been performed using Clarius wireless handheld scanners. Clarius scanners are available in over 90 countries worldwide.

Learn more at http://www.clarius.com.

Media Contact:Gense CastonguayMarketing Vice PresidentPhone: +1 (866) 657-9243 ext. 221 | Direct: +1 (604) 260-7077[emailprotected]

SOURCE Clarius Mobile Health

Home

The rest is here:
Clarius Introduces First Ultrasound System That Uses AI and Machine Learning to Recognize Anatomy for an Instant Window into the Body - PRNewswire

UK’s machine learning startup Causaly raises 12M to boosts its drug discovery AI – UKTN (UK Technology News

Biomedical information including, scientific literature, regulatory documents, clinical trials, and proprietary research is growing exponentially, and humans are struggling to keep up.

And heres where Causaly helps overcome this informational bottleneck through its sophisticated algorithms that mimic human reading and extract the meanings encoded in language.

Based out of London, Causaly accelerates how humans acquire knowledge and develop insights in Biomedicine. Recently, the company has raised $17 million (approx 12 million) funding in Series A round led by Index Ventures, joined by Marathon, Pentech, and EBRD.

As a part of the funding round, Carlos Gonzalez-Cadenas, partner at Index, joins the board.

With the new funding, Causaly plans to expand its technology team, grow its sales team to allow it to expand into the US, and increase its capacity to work with clients to generate insights from private, proprietary data.

Founded by Artur Saudabayev and Yiannis Kiachopoulos in 2018, Causaly uses machine learning to run deep searches and find answers to complex research questions that would have previously taken weeks months to find with traditional keyword search.

Finding a new drug can take over a decade in research, development, and clinical trials, and requires thousands of experts working together with complex evidence, says Kiachopoulos. Causaly is the first platform to map correlations and relationships within scientific data, allowing researchers and scientists to innovate rather than having to laboriously find the relationships themselves. This means better decisions about which research areas to prioritise and faster learning cycles. Switching from a standard database of documents to Causaly is like going from using a Rolodex of phone numbers to having a smartphone. Its intuitive, interactive, and shows you where you want to go.

Its worth mentioning that Causalys AI reads the entire volume of biomedical literature ever published in seconds.

The companys technology is the fastest way for world-leading researchers to find evidence, explore hidden connections between complex physiological mechanisms, and make new predictions in biomedical science.

At present, the company is working with nine large pharmaceutical companies, including Gilead and Novartis, as well as institutions such as the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

Causalys technology has a wide range of potential applications, including healthcare, cosmetics, consumer goods, and any industry that touches human health.

Causalys platform transforms the biomedical workflow from one of search, read, and synthesise to ask questions and analyse, says Carlos Gonzalez-Cadenas, partner at Index Ventures. Causaly allows researchers to ask extremely complex questions easily, and get results that would have been nearly impossible otherwise. In an era when Covid has reminded us of the significance of biomedical innovation, Causaly is poised to help unleash the potential of new research for the benefit of humanity.

One significant use-case for Causaly is the process of screening for biomarkers that are associated with particular diseases or their relationship to treatment response. This typically takes weeks to months of work and is prone to missing important discoveries due to a large amount of literature to trawl through.

Causalys Clients have shaved off 80% of the time for biomarker screenings and the technology has proposed innovative solutions when identifying possible applications for cancer treatments.

Causaly is the latest example of humans using technology to improve our relationship to knowledge, Kiachopoulos says. After Gutenberg invented the printing press, libraries became a way to categorise all the new information and make it manageable. Then with the digital revolution, libraries moved online, turning into documents and databases. Now we need to move a step beyond static repositories of documents towards much richer, multidimensional and interactive modes of knowledge discovery.

Originally posted here:
UK's machine learning startup Causaly raises 12M to boosts its drug discovery AI - UKTN (UK Technology News

How Progressives Are Changing the Conversation on Israel-Palestine – Progressive.org

Rashida Tlaib is going viral at least once a day.

Whether its a photograph of the the Michigan Representative confronting President Joe Biden on an airport tarmac moments after he arrived in Detroit, or a video snippet of her choking up on the House floor as she asks her colleagues to recognize Palestinian humanity, Tlaib is the face of an emerging faction of progressive Congressmembers willing to challenge Washingtons decades-long status quo of unconditional support for Israel.

Palestinians in the United States generally have been among the first to stand with Indigenous activists at pipelines and to stand up against police violence in Ferguson and Minneapolis.

Tlaib, the daughter of Palestinian immigrants, frequently speaks of her sitty, her maternal grandmother who lives in the Occupied West Bank, weaving personal anecdotes together with damning statistics that illustrate the devastating reality of life under Israeli occupation.

When #SaveSheikhJarrah began trending across social media earlier this month, Tlaib created a petition, which urges U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to uphold international law by demanding an end to Israels evictions of Palestinians in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah and elsewhere. The petition, which has garnered nearly 70,000 signatures, also calls on the U.S. to pressure Israel to halt demolitions of Palestinian homes and the theft of Palestinian land in the Occupied West Bank.

Tlaib and the five other members of The Squad, as well as a handful of other Democrats in both the House and the Senate, have harshly criticized Israels use of force in Gaza and urged the Biden Administration to pressure Israel to end its ongoing operation, which has so far killed 230 Palestinians.

On May 12, twenty-five U.S. Representatives signed a letter to Blinken, demanding that diplomatic pressure be exerted to keep Israel from evicting the families in Sheikh Jarrah. Additionally, legislation introduced by Minnesota Representative Betty McCollum in June would prohibit Israel from using U.S. taxpayer dollars to carry out several specific human rights violations in the Occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. These issues have achieved newfound traction in the national discourse occurring around the Israeli occupation.

While the shift in popular opinion on Israel may seem sudden, this movement has been gaining momentum for years, according to Sandra Tamari, the executive director of the Washington-based Adalah Justice Project.

We cant just sit here and talk about ceasefires. We need to deal with the real problem and not just the symptoms. We need to talk about the occupation.

What we are seeing is the result of years and years of grassroots advocacy and a growing Palestine movement that has developed relationshipsnot only with staffers and members of Congress, but by building wide support across communities in the United States, Tamari tells The Progressive. Theres no progressive or leftist coalition organizing in any city that doesnt include Palestinian liberation on its agenda.

Tamari describes Adalah as a Palestinian-led organization that is working to change the conversation and place Palestine on the progressive agenda using a collective liberation framework, both at the local and national levels.

Palestinians in the United States generally have been among the first to stand with Indigenous activists at pipelines and to stand up against police violence in Ferguson and Minneapolis, Tamari says. These arent just photo-ops. Its a deep feeling of our liberation being connected. We fight for all of us.

This inter-movement solidarity has manifested as more members of Congress publicly advocate for Palestinian human rights. In the same House floor session at which Tlaib spoke, Missouri Representative Cori Bush recalled that when she organized against police brutality in Ferguson, Missouri, a Palestinian immigrant was one of the most committed activists with whom she had worked. She noted that the activist, Bassem, often drew from his own childhood experiences in East Jerusalem to advise others on how to deal with tear gas and rubber bullets.

What the conversation about police violence has taught us is that you cant reform a system of violence; you cant dialogue away a system of violence, Tamari says. People are understanding more and more that theres an asymmetry between Palestinians and Israelis. There is a system of violence that is structural and is the root cause of what is happening. Its many things that have come together to help give people a deeper understanding.

Mairav Zonszein, a senior analyst on Israel/Palestine with the International Crisis Group, credits the shift among some in Washington, D.C., to the success of advocacy organizations and progressive politicians in reframing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a human rights issue above all else.

The go-to talking point in Washington has always been, Oh, if Israel is doing something harmful against Palestinians, it hurts its ability to be Jewish and democratic. It prevents the two-state solution, Zonszein says. The Trump years exposed how U.S. foreign policy has been complicit in a lot of destructive Israeli policies. Now, this specific spike in violence and Israeli air strikes on Gaza are an opportunity for Congress members who had already been working on this issue to come out full throttle.

The U.S.-based American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) is one of the advocacy organizations that can be credited with pushing the discourse surrounding Israel and Palestine further to the left. In addition to organizing Americans to lobby their representatives on Capitol Hill and at local levels, AMP organizes national campaigns and supports educational initiatives across the United States.

Taher Herzallah, AMPs Director of Outreach and Grassroots Organizing, says that when he first moved to Washington, D.C., at the end of Barack Obamas second term, the stances that some members of Congress are taking now wouldve been unthinkable.

The dynamics and discourse have changed dramatically over the last five years, Herzallah says. The Biden Administration and any administration after his will need to realize that the voter base and the donor base has shifted on this issue, and they will need to catch up to it.

For U.S. policy regarding Israel to change, Herzallah says the discourse still needs to be pushed forward.

Now is the time to take advantage of the momentum that we have to build better alliances, to organize our community and to force policy change, Herzallah says. We cant just sit here and talk about ceasefires. We need to deal with the real problem and not just the symptoms. We need to talk about the occupation. We need to talk about the siege on Gaza. We need to talk about Israels violation of Muslim sacred spaces and its erasure of Palestinian identity and heritage. These are things that need to be addressed if we are going to provide justice for people in the region.

As Palestinian rights becomes a more normalized part of leftwing priorities, Tamari encourages citizens to remind their Representatives and Senators that the funds earmarked for aid to Israel can be redirected to fund progressive domestic initiatives, such as Medicare for All or student loan forgiveness.

We have everything we need, and we have learned from Bidens bold moves in his first few months that its possible to redirect funds, Tamari says. We need to start by backing up our values with our budget priorities and go from there. What we see is that if you give a values statement to a member of Congress and insist that they be consistent with their values, not only on domestic issues but across borders, then we can make headway.

Excerpt from:
How Progressives Are Changing the Conversation on Israel-Palestine - Progressive.org

7 Best Resources To Learn MLOps In 2021 – Analytics India Magazine

MLOps, also known as DevOps for machine learning, is facing a talent crunch. GitLabs latest survey also shows that developers roles are shifting toward the operations side. Most developers are taking on test and ops tasks, especially around cloud infrastructure and security.

Further, the report found close to 38% of developers now define or create the infrastructure their app runs on, about 13% monitor and respond to that infrastructure, and 26% of developers instrument the code theyve written for production monitoring (up by 18% from last year).

Nearly 43% of the survey respondents have been doing DevOps for three to five years. Thats a sweet spot where they have known success and are well-seasoned, highlighted the report.

MLOps engineering is poised to take off in a big way. We have curated a list of top MLOps learning resources to help you get a handle on the subject.

DeepLearning.AI recently introduced a new specialised source called Machine Learning Engineering for Production (MLOps) Specialisation. The course is currently available on Coursera. Curated by tech evangelists Andrew Ng, Robert Crowe, Laurence Moroney and Cristian Bartolom Armburu, the course will help individuals become machine learning experts and enhance production engineering capabilities.

Heres an overall highlight of the course:

Click here to know more about the course.

Coauthored by Mark Treveil and the team Dataiku, this book covers the following aspects:

The platform offers a one-stop solution to discover, learn and build all things machine learning. It provides a series of lessons around machine learning and MLOps, which includes the basics of applying machine learning to building production-grade applications and products. Goku Mohandas curated the course.

The course covers various aspects of the machine learning pipeline, including data, cost, utility and trust. The courses have been created to educate the community on developing, deploying, and maintaining applications built using ML.

Computer scientist Chip Huyens blog post has summarised all the latest technologies/tools used in MLOps. The complete list is available here.

In this list, there are about 285 MLOps tools. Interestingly, out of 180 startups present in the list, 65 startups had raised funds in 2020, and a large majority of them are still in the data pipeline category. Some of the Indian MLOPs startups mentioned in the list include Playment, Dataturks, Scribble Data and Dockship.

The website offers collective resources for facilitating machine learning operations with GitHub. It gives access to use GitHub for automation, collaboration and reproducibility in machine learning workflows.

The site has blog posts explaining how to GitHub for data science and MLOps; open-source GitHub Actions tool that facilitates MLOps; documents and resources for getting started with MLOps; repository templates, examples and related projects that demonstrate various GitHub features for data science and MLOps; recorded talks, demos and tutorials and more.

The website is a collection of resources to understand MLops, starting from books, newsletters, workflow management, data engineering in MLOps (DataOps), communities, articles, feature stores, model deployment and serving, infrastructure, economics and more.

A complete list of links and resources for MLOps is available on GitHub.

Modelled on a Kubernetes SIG, the MLOps community is an open platform where machine learning enthusiasts, developers and industry professionals collaborate and discuss the best practices around machine learning operations (MLOps or DevOps for ML).

The meeting happens every Wednesday at 5 pm UK time on Zoom. The sessions are recorded and published on the website and Youtube channel.

Amit Raja Naik is a senior writer at Analytics India Magazine, where he dives deep into the latest technology innovations. He is also a professional bass player.

Original post:
7 Best Resources To Learn MLOps In 2021 - Analytics India Magazine

Fight Between Progressives and Biden on Israel Just Starting – Yahoo News

Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty

Israel has finally agreed to a cease-fire, but this months violence has sparked a standoff between congressional liberals and President Joe Biden that is just getting started.

On Thursday, after an 11-day military campaign, the Israeli Security Cabinet approved a cease-fire after increasing pressure from the international community and, eventually, Biden.

But Biden didnt start out there. At the beginning of the week, the president made it clear he wasnt calling for a cease-fire so much as saying hed support one, if Israel reached that decision. Biden blocked a United Nations Security Council resolution three times calling for a cease-fire, and he repeatedly said he supports Israels right to defend itself.

When White House press secretary Jen Psaki was asked about some of the criticism the administration has fielded from lawmakers like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Psaki was emphatic that political pressure from progressives wouldnt affect Bidens decision-making.

The president doesn't see this through the prism of domestic politics, Psaki said.

Perhaps not. But Bidens support for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus government has put a number of Bidens Democratic allies in an awkward position. They want to support the president. But many progressives are increasingly uncomfortable with the new administrations accommodation of Israels more bellicose tendenciesand the latest burst of conflict, these lawmakers say, has opened up space for them to reexamine all the ways in which Congress has backed Israel.

There is more and more interest in conditioning aid to Israel, given what's been happening, Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told The Daily Beast on Wednesday. Whether or not that happens this year, that would be a tectonic shift right now.

This is a serious crisis, and I think the President had an opportunity to reset the dial from the last administration's relationship with Israel, Jayapal continued, labeling Bidens decision to block United Nations Security Council calls for a cease-fire unacceptable.

Story continues

Over the course of the week, Biden did get sterner with Israel, as the country continued its bombing campaign of Palestinian territories. By Wednesday, Biden finally did call for a cease-fire. But by the time Israel finally announced an end to its missile strikes, more than 200 Palestinians were dead, including 63 children, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, and 58,000 Palestinians had been displaced. Meanwhile, 12 Israelis have died from Hamas missile attacks and civil unrest.

Jayapal, for one, was unimpressed with Bidens changing tone, telling The Daily Beast that Bidens eventual decision to call for a cease-fire was too little, too late.

That kind of talk has been rare in recent decades, when a consensus of automatic support for Israel dominated the Democratic Party. The fact that this dialogue is happening now reflects a leftward shift within the party on Israeland a rightward shift within Israel that has alienated many Democrats. Netanyahu, for his part, has all but buried the idea of a two-state solution in the Middle East, and done all he could to elect Republican candidates in America. Meanwhile, movements like Black Lives Matter and leftwing stars like Bernie Sanders have helped push progressive sympathies toward the Palestinian side.

In the eyes of many on Capitol Hill, however, Biden has remained as loyal as ever to Israel. During his 36 years in the U.S. Senate, he forged close ties with Israeli leaders as the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee. Hes called Netanyahu his friend for more than 30 years.

The president, one progressive aide told The Daily Beast, is seen as to the right of even the Senates two most pro-Israel DemocratsMajority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), the current chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

But thanks to the outrage over Israels actionscivilian casualties, leveled refugee camps, destroyed medical facilitiesas well as the sense that Biden wont act the way progressive lawmakers want without significant pressure, congressional Democrats are taking inventory of all the different ways they might use their power to shift U.S. policy.

One is fundingthe key power that Congress retains. Traditionally, both parties have supported generous aid packages to Israel, and the notion of putting conditions on that aid has been a red line for most lawmakers. Even progressives havent dared cross that threshold.

But on Wednesday, before the cease-fire was announced, Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI) said the old way of handling Israel wasnt acceptable.

Weve got to start figuring out ways to put some pressure points, said Pocan, a former chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. And one of those is deciding whether or not the assistance that we giveif it continues to go there with no strings attached.

The current chair of the CPC, Jayapal, was just as emphatic.

Our main leverage is around the aid that we give, and our diplomatic relations, Jayapal said. She added that greater support for conditioning U.S. aid to Israel would represent a massive shift in the party. And though she doesnt yet see widespread movement to that policy, she does see some.

Jayapal was one of eight Democrats on Thursday who signed a letter to Biden calling for an indefinite hold on a $735 million arms sale to Israel.

We have a special obligation to scrutinize the actions of our close ally Israel, given our provision of weaponry and other military and diplomatic support to the Israeli government, these Democrats wrote in their letter to Biden, calling the sale antithetical to any efforts to try and de-escalate violence.

The arms sale became a flashpoint this week when news broke that the U.S. had approved the exchange to Israel and planned to move ahead with it despite the continued bombings. While lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which has jurisdiction over arms sales, do not have to be notified about these sorts of transactions, the chairman and ranking member of the committee do.

In this case, Foreign Affairs chairman Gregory Meeks (D-NY) wasnt notified of the sale until it came out in the media. The deal was approved months ago, but became public during the tensest point of U.S.-Israel ties in recent years.

Liberal Democrats were outraged. Committee Democrats called an emergency meeting. And Meeks and Democrats on the panel decided to request that Biden delay the sale, according to Politico. Ultimately, Meeks backed down, saying hed secured a classified briefing for members on the arms sale.

But in the wake of that dust-up, leaders have confirmed to rank-and-file members on the Foreign Affairs Committee that they, too, will be notified of U.S. arms sales, according to one aide, who described it as a small, but welcome, change.

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), a leading progressive on the House Armed Services Committee, said that a goal of lawmakers should be expanded enforcement of arms control laws that require the U.S. to sell weapons only if used for legitimate self-defense.

What I'm going to be pushing for, and I think others as well, is a broader enforcement of the Arms Export Control Act in all situations around the world where our aid is available, to make sure that none of it, to any country is being used knowingly to violate human rights, Khanna said.

On Thursday, Sanders said he would introduce a resolution to block the U.S. arms sale to Israel, and a House companion was introduced on Wednesday by Pocan, Ocasio-Cortez, and Ilhan Omar (D-MN). The odds of success on that legislation, however, are long. Both chambers would need to vote to approve it, and then also override a likely veto from Bidenall in the brief timeframe that is required when it comes to disapproval of weapons deals. But the resolutions ensure that the arms sale will remain front-and-center in the dialogue, even after the cease-fire.

Biden Tells Bibi U.S. Expects Significant De-escalation Today

The public relations campaign illustrates the biggest power progressive lawmakers may have in this debatethe bully pulpit.

This week, many liberal lawmakers became convinced that their rafts of letters and comments, both public and private, had pushed Biden toward a tougher line on Israel, even if it was still far from what they wanted.

He's listening, Khanna said of Biden.

Khanna brought up Bidens impromptu and emotional exchange this week in Michigan with Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), a member of Congress of Palestinian descent. Who knows what makes someone decide something, Khanna said, but I think it's having an impact.

And liberals are convinced that the changing politics of Israel within their party, combined with their advocacy, will have a measurable impact on Biden.

It is very clear that the political environment and debate about the Middle East here in the United States has shifted since Joe Biden was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1972, Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA), a senior member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, told The Daily Beast. Those shifting dynamics are going to continue to be felt in the ensuing months and years.

There are, of course, still a number of influential pro-Israel Democrats in the traditional mold. And they hold sway, even if progressives have defined the debate and key leaders have had to change their rhetoric.

One of those Democrats, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), told Jewish Insider that its a small group of loud voices who were pressuring Biden, and that the overwhelming majority of Democrats in the nation, and Democrats in Congress, are strongly supportive of Israel, of the U.S.-Israel relationship, of Israel remaining a Jewish and Democratic state.

This supposed silent majority may exist within the Democratic caucus, but even if its less robust than Wasserman Schultz asserts, the inertia of U.S. policy toward Israel may still mean that nothing changes.

Take the issue of Iron Domethe U.S-funded missile defense system that intercepted so many of the rockets fired into Israel over the past two weeks. Even Pocan said he has always supported the Iron Dome because the idea is when a missile comes in, if you take it out, no ones been killed on either side and there's de-escalation. If you use it for that purpose, and then you still send 20 times the number of missiles back, thats not the intention.

House Armed Services Chairman Adam Smith (D-WA) acknowledged to The Daily Beast that there wasnt a whole lot members of Congress could do to move Israel policyat least not immediately.

Smith oversees the sprawling defense authorization bill which sets Pentagon policies for the year. Iron Dome is always a hot-button issue. And judging by a procedural vote Republicans forced on Thursday, the political ramifications are only going to get more heated.

As the House voted on an emergency supplemental for increased security after Jan. 6, Republicans introduced an amendment that would have made an additional $500 million available to Israel for the Iron Dome and various ballistic missile programs.

A senior GOP aide predicted to The Daily Beast on Thursday that the House may soon vote on similar legislation, potentially even during the upcoming three-week recess, as a concession to Israel agreeing to a cease-fire.

As this aide said, cease-fires arent cheap.

Read more at The Daily Beast.

Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!

Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.

More here:
Fight Between Progressives and Biden on Israel Just Starting - Yahoo News