Netanyahu announces $108 billion investment in domestic arms industry

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has approved a $108 billion plan over the next decade to develop an independent munitions industry. The announcement, made amid international arms restrictions, aims to reduce Israel's reliance on foreign suppliers. It precedes Netanyahu's upcoming meeting with US President Donald Trump to discuss Gaza governance.

On Wednesday, at an Israeli Air Force pilot graduation ceremony, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed a major initiative to bolster Israel's self-sufficiency in defense production. "I approved, along with the defense minister and finance minister, a sum of NIS 350 billion [$108 billion] over the next decade to build an independent Israeli munitions industry," he stated, as reported by the Times of Israel.

Netanyahu emphasized the need to "reduce our dependence on all players, including friends," citing restrictions imposed by various countries on weapons sales to Israel. These include Belgium, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Slovenia, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States during former President Joe Biden's administration. Such measures have been particularly challenging since the war against Hamas began on October 7, 2023.

The timing aligns with Netanyahu's fifth meeting with President Trump since January, scheduled for Monday at Mar-a-Lago. Discussions will cover a proposed new governing entity for Gaza, backed by a Trump-led Board of Peace featuring former UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov on the ground. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are coordinating with Arab partners and Turkey on the ceasefire's second phase, which involves disarming Hamas and demilitarizing the Gaza Strip.

Israel ranks as the world's eighth-largest arms exporter, with $15 billion in sales in 2024, yet it has depended on imports for munitions. Netanyahu has previously pushed for less reliance on foreign equipment, once describing Israel's defense sector as aiming to become a "super-Sparta"—a comment he later clarified applied only to military industry.

Advancements like the Iron Beam laser system, developed with Rafael Defense Industries and Lockheed Martin, underscore this shift. Set for delivery by month's end, it intercepts threats for about $2 each, far cheaper than Iron Dome missiles costing $100,000 to $1 million. The technology is being shared with the US Army's directed energy program.

US aid totals $3.3 billion annually for purchasing American equipment, plus $500 million for joint missile defense. Proponents argue it deters threats from Iran and Hezbollah while benefiting US jobs and technology through real-world testing. However, bipartisan US lawmakers like Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Summer Lee, and Al Green have pushed to reduce funding, including a failed July amendment to cut $500 million from Iron Dome. Within Israel, some oppose the aid, viewing it as a constraint on military autonomy and a source of political pressure.

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Benjamin Netanyahu announcing Israel's plan for military self-sufficiency, phasing out U.S. aid in 10 years, with economic and defense symbols.
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Netanyahu says Israel wants to phase out U.S. military aid within a decade

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel should aim to end its reliance on U.S. military assistance over the next 10 years, arguing that Israel’s economy and defense industry are strong enough to move toward greater self-sufficiency while keeping the U.S.-Israel alliance close.

Israel’s Defense Ministry and industry partners say they are preparing to deliver an initial operational version of the Iron Beam laser air-defense system to the Israel Defense Forces, a milestone that could lower the cost of intercepting short-range rockets, mortars and drones when conditions allow.

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One week into the war that erupted on February 28, 2026, with US-Israeli strikes dismantling Iran's missile capabilities, Israel has announced a 'new phase' targeting the regime's foundations. This follows airstrikes by 90 Israeli aircraft on over 40 strategic sites in Tehran, amid reports of significant advances and Iranian vows of a prolonged conflict with new weapons.

Amid the ongoing 2026 US-Israel-Iran conflict—sparked by the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei—Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched missiles carrying cluster munitions at Israel on the 17th day, damaging eight central sites and hospitalizing 142 people. Israeli media reported fragments in greater Tel Aviv.

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South Korea's Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) will advance the deployment of a homegrown Low-Altitude Missile Defense (LAMD) system, akin to Israel's Iron Dome, by two years to 2029 to counter North Korean long-range artillery threats. The government plans to invest 842 billion won (US$558 million) by 2030. The decision was approved at a pan-government committee on defense projects.

Reuters reported on Friday that a US$14 billion arms package to Taiwan, possibly the largest ever, is ready for US President Donald Trump's approval and could be announced after his visit to Beijing. Despite the delay in the Trump-Xi summit, Taiwan's Defence Minister Wellington Koo Li-hsiung reassured on Tuesday that Taipei had received no indication of any sales delay. Broader concerns loom as the US depletes ammunition stockpiles in the war on Iran.

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With Japan's defense budget on the rise, manufacturers specializing in defense materials like radar and missiles are expanding workforces and increasing capital expenditures. This is driven by the government's five-year plan starting in fiscal 2023 for substantial budget increases and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's proactive defense stance. Companies anticipate further order growth, turning defense-related business into a burgeoning sector.

 

 

 

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