The Good News: 5-31-2026

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Israel has a bill in US congress to use American infrastructure to build Israeli weapons

Netanyahu has publicly outlined an ambitious plan to transform Israel into a major independent defense and technology powerhouse. In late 2025, he announced a $110 billion (350 billion shekels) investment over the next decade to build a robust domestic arms industry, aiming to reduce reliance on foreign suppliers—including the United States—and produce more weapons, munitions, and advanced systems “as much as possible in Israel.”

This vision extends to positioning Israel as a leader in AI, cyber, and next-generation defense technologies, leveraging its strengths in innovation and combat-tested systems. Israel is already the world’s 7th-largest arms exporter, with record defense sales driven by demand for systems like air defense and drones.

Israel’s Scale Limitations

However, as a small country (population ~9-10 million) with constrained geography, manpower, and industrial base, Israel faces real limits in scaling large-volume manufacturing, supply chains, and production infrastructure for major weapons platforms and emerging tech. Historical analyses and current reports note these bottlenecks: dependence on global components, skilled labor shortages, and challenges in moving beyond niche innovation to mass output.

The NDAA Provision’s Role

Section 224 of the FY2027 NDAA (“United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative”) directly supports scaling Israeli-originated technologies by promoting U.S.-based co-production, joint ventures, licensing, manufacturing partnerships, and industrial cooperation on American soil. It establishes a senior executive agent to coordinate expanded efforts in AI, quantum, directed energy, counter-drones, data fusion, biotech, cyber, and defense manufacturing—explicitly facilitating the integration of Israeli tech into U.S. systems and creating facilities that tap into American infrastructure, labor, and procurement budgets.

Critics argue this effectively allows Israel to expand its defense-industrial footprint by embedding in the much larger U.S. ecosystem, potentially giving Israeli firms greater access to American resources while increasing long-term political and economic leverage. Supporters frame it as mutually beneficial collaboration that strengthens both nations against shared threats and creates U.S. jobs. The provision does not involve operational military command but focuses on technological and industrial integration.

This aligns with Netanyahu’s self-reliance goals while addressing Israel’s infrastructure constraints through deeper U.S. partnerships.

The draft faces pushback, including amendments from Rep. Thomas Massie.

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