Israelis don't pay for the weapons we 'sell' to them — US taxpayers do
Most arms 'sales' are financed through Foreign
Military Financing, which is basically an American subsidized gift card
Apr 06, 2026
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-arms-sales-to-israel/
The Trump administration expects U.S. taxpayers to fund not only its own
military adventurism but Israel’s as well.
Ending American subsidies for Israel’s wars is one
reason why Senators Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jeff
Merkley (D-Ore.), and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) recently filed Joint Resolutions of
Disapproval opposing $659 million in President Donald Trump-approved bomb sales
to Israel, with many of the bombs coming directly from U.S. stocks.
“Given the horrific destruction that Israel’s
extremist government has wrought on Gaza, Iran and Lebanon, the last thing in the world that
American taxpayers need to do right now is to provide 22,000 new bombs to the
[Benjamin] Netanyahu government,” Sanders said in a statement.
Van Hollen added that “Congress must use all the tools at our
disposal to end Trump’s war, including stopping the transfer…of taxpayer-funded
bombs to the Netanyahu government.”
The senators are right to highlight U.S. taxpayers’
role in these arms deals. That they’re reported as sales belies
who’s actually paying for them. Americans, not Israelis, pay for the vast
majority of U.S. arms sales to Israel.
Who really pays for U.S. arms sales to Israel
U.S. arms sales to Israel aren’t really sales, at
least not in the typical sense. Israel’s position as purchaser in these weapons
deals isn’t synonymous with funder. This is made clear in the arms sales
notifications themselves.
Consider the four most recent notified arms sales to
Israel published in the Federal Register: $740 million
for armored personnel carriers, $1.98 billion
for tactical vehicles and accessories, $3.8 billion
for attack helicopters and related weaponry, and $150 million
for utility helicopters and parts. After “Prospective Purchaser,” all these
notifications list Government of Israel. After “Funding Source,”
all list Foreign Military Financing — or FMF, the U.S. military aid program through which Israel receives at least
$3.3 billion a year.
Even that analogy is generous. The relationship
between military spending and jobs is not self-evident. In 1985, the U.S.
military budget was $295 billion — $746 billion in today’s dollars — and there
were 3 million workers in the U.S. arms industry. By 2021, the U.S. military
budget had increased by $132 billion in real terms — to $879 billion — while
the number of arms industry workers had dropped to 1.1 million. Despite military spending
increasing 18% above inflation, there was a 63% drop in arms industry
employment.
Under Biden, U.S. taxpayers funded $18 billion in arms
“sales” to Israel
American arms sales are either U.S.
government-brokered (“Foreign Military Sales”) or commercial (“Direct
Commercial Sales”). I collected data on both via the Defense Security
Cooperation Agency’s (DSCA) Historical Sales Books and the Directorate of Defense
Trade Controls’ (DDTC) Section 655 Reports, respectively. Both yearly
publications tally the value of authorized arms sales.
The Biden administration authorized $22 billion in
arms sales to Israel, including more than $13.2 billion in U.S.
government-brokered sales and over $8.7 billion in commercial sales. According
to the DSCA report, 90% of the government-brokered deals were funded with U.S.
military aid. The DDTC report doesn’t specify the funding source, but 68% is a
reasonable estimate based on the average annual share of FMF funding that Israel reportedly spends on
commercial sales.1
All told, U.S. taxpayers funded $17.8 billion in arms
sales to Israel under Biden — $11.9 billion government-brokered and $5.9
billion commercial — 81% of the $22 billion in sales from 2021–2024. That’s
nearly $18 billion in subsidies disguised as sales.
U.S. taxpayers deserve a refund, not more of the same
from Trump.
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