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That's how things get done in Congress honestly. If Republicans say, "we promise if you provide border funding, we'll support legislation to provide Israel and Ukraine funding" you have to trust that after you pass the law, they won't back off of their deal.
I'd be curious how other countries handle this situation
In non-first past the post systems you often end up with coalition governments.
The result is that you can screw the other guy over, but you're likely to be in government with them sooner rather than later, at which point they'll screw you right back.
It breeds compromise, even if it happens after spending a full year negotiating before agreeing to enter a coalition government and exactly and to ten decimal places which laws you that government will be enacting during the coming parliament.
Except that this stuff was packaged together, so they couldn't pick one and refuse the other. So they refused the whole package.
So? If they weren't both packaged together they were both going to be voted down. Republicans don't want the Ukraine funding and Republicans have decided for now that it's better politically to have a mess at the border to blame on Biden. They don't want either proposal to pass so splitting them does nothing.