The Trump administration has completed approval for nearly $16 billion in military sales to Israel and Saudi Arabia, with the State Department confirming Friday that Israel will receive $6.67 billion in varied equipment while Saudi Arabia obtains $9 billion in defensive systems. These authorizations demonstrate continued American commitment to allied military capabilities amid a volatile regional landscape and ongoing geopolitical challenges.
Israel’s multi-dimensional package addresses both aerial and ground capabilities through four strategic acquisitions designed to enhance operational effectiveness. The Apache helicopter procurement constitutes the largest investment at $3.8 billion, providing 30 advanced aircraft equipped with rocket launchers and cutting-edge targeting systems. The State Department emphasized that none of the new sales would affect the military balance in the region, while all would enhance Israel’s capability to meet current and future threats.
These advanced helicopters will provide Israeli forces with superior operational capacity for missions spanning border defense, infrastructure protection, and counterterrorism operations across diverse environments. The procurement includes 3,250 light tactical vehicles valued at $1.98 billion to transform ground force deployment and logistical efficiency, enabling Israeli Defense Forces to move personnel and logistics while extending lines of communication. Additional allocations support armored vehicle modernization at $740 million and utility helicopter expansion at $150 million.
The Saudi Arabian transaction focuses entirely on air defense through acquisition of 730 Patriot missiles and supporting infrastructure worth $9 billion. State Department officials emphasized that the enhanced capability serves broader American national security objectives by strengthening a stable regional partner, protecting land forces of Saudi Arabia, the United States, and local allies, while significantly improving the integrated missile defense architecture safeguarding the Gulf Region.
Legislative concerns have emerged from Democratic congressional leadership challenging the approval timeline and consultation procedures. The House Foreign Affairs Committee’s ranking member accused the administration of circumventing established oversight protocols, characterizing the process as disregarding congressional prerogatives and rushing announcements without adequate engagement on critical policy questions regarding Gaza reconstruction and the broader framework of American-Israeli relations.