that doesn't address motivation for the vote.
From the CNN transcript linked to in the OP:
The State Department says the United States is looking into allegations that Israel used American-made cluster bombs against targets in civilian areas of southern Lebanon, a possible violation of a secret agreement with the United States on the use of such munitions. Israel insists its use of the weapons was legal.
Let's turn to our senior Pentagon correspondent, Jamie McIntyre. He's looking into this story -- Jamie.
JAMIE MCINTYRE, CNN SR. PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT: Well, Wolf, you know cluster bombs are controversial, but add cluster bombs and U.S. weapons sales to Israel and possible targeting of civilians, and you've got a controversy that has the State Department looking for answers.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
MCINTYRE (voice-over): In southern Lebanon, bomb disposal units are finding and disarming thousands of unexploded cluster munitions that litter the landscape after the recent 34-day Israeli offensive.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: From what we're seeing on the ground, there is tens of thousands of cluster bombs everywhere, scattered everywhere.
MCINTYRE: U.N. workers and human rights groups report many of the unexploded bomblets come from American-made cluster bombs provided to Israel which could violate the conditions under which they were sold.
BONNIE DOCHERTY, HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH: Well, the United States had a special agreement with Israel in the '70s that said that Israel was not allowed to use these weapons in populated areas. It violated those rules in its earlier invasion of Lebanon, and that moratorium was extended.
MCINTYRE: In the '80s, the U.S. banned sales of cluster bombs to Israel because of how they were used in the 1982 invasion of Lebanon. But the State Department won't discuss the strings attached to the recent sales.
A State Department spokesman told CNN simply, "What we are looking to see is if they were used... how they were used, who were the targets..."
Because cluster bombs have a five to 10 percent failure rate, dug (ph) bomblets can kill and maim long after the fighting stops.
MAJ. GEN. DON SHEPPERD (RET.), CNN MILITARY ANALYST: One of the problems that the human rights people have is that kids come out after the war, after the attack, and they find these things and try to pick them up, and they go off unfortunately at that time, producing injuries of civilian casualties that you're not looking for.
MCINTYRE: A U.N. report cited Lebanese army figures that 12 people had been killed and 51 injured from unexploded ordnance, including cluster bombs, since hostilities ended. U.N. workers have located 288 sites across Lebanon where cluster bombs were used, mostly, they say, in the three days before the cease-fire.
A statement from the Israeli Defense Forces says, "All the weapons and munitions used by the IDF are legal under international law, and their use conforms with international standards."
(END VIDEOTAPE)
MCINTYRE: An office in the State Department that oversees foreign military sales will conduct a review. Meanwhile, a spokesman at the Israeli embassy told CNN today that so far there has been no formal inquiry from the U.S. government -- Wolf.
BLITZER: When I was in Israel in recent weeks this issue of cluster bombs came up and what the Israelis said, Israeli military and political leaders, was that when they use cluster bombs, they use it just as the U.S. military would use cluster bomb munitions, whether in Iraq, or Afghanistan, or earlier in the Balkans.
Israel, and Iraq, came up in the discussions. So why did Hillary vote against the bill?