Netanyahu Backs Bill To End US Military Aid, Shift To Partnership

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is backing a new congressional resolution that calls for phasing out U.S. military aid to Israel and replacing it with a joint strategic partnership between the longtime allies.

The resolution, introduced Wednesday by Rep. Marlin Stutzman (R-IN) after a meeting with Netanyahu in Jerusalem last week, calls for ending the current military aid framework and replacing it with expanded cooperation on defense technology, intelligence sharing, weapons development, and strategic planning.

“The time has now arrived for us to move from aid recipient to partner.”

Israel receives roughly $3.8 billion annually in U.S. military aid under a long-standing memorandum of understanding between the two countries. Most of that funding must be spent on American-made military equipment and defense systems.

Stutzman said the resolution would mark “a new era” in the U.S.-Israel alliance.

“This resolution affirms that the United States stands with Israel not out of obligation, but out of shared strength and shared strategic interest,” Stutzman said. “Israel has come of age where our nations should contribute equally and share results equally.”

Supporters of the move argue the current aid structure no longer reflects Israel’s military and economic strength, noting that Israel is now one of the world’s top arms exporters and spends a larger share of its GDP on defense than nearly every NATO ally.

Even U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, a decades-long supporter of Israel, suggested this week that the future of the relationship lies beyond traditional aid.

“Israel receives $3.8 billion but spends far more than that buying U.S. military goods,” Huckabee wrote on X. “U.S. also receives intel, tech innovations so that ROI is many times more.”

Israeli leaders have increasingly argued that dependence on foreign weapons shipments creates vulnerabilities during wartime. Those concerns intensified after the Biden administration temporarily halted a shipment of heavy bombs and threatened to withhold offensive weapons if Israel launched an assault on Rafah.

“At a certain stage, we simply didn’t have enough ammunition and people fell, heroes fell. Part of that shortage of ammunition was the result of an embargo.”

Netanyahu recently blamed the embargo for the death of soldiers because of the lack of ammunition. It wasn’t until Trump took office that all of the weapons were shipped.

During Operation Protective Edge in 2014, the Obama administration suspended a shipment of Hellfire missiles and increased oversight of weapons transfers.

Retired Israeli Brigadier General Amir Avivi told The Daily Wire that episodes like those convinced many Israeli defense officials that the country needed greater manufacturing independence.

“This really shook the Israeli defense establishment and an understanding that you cannot really rely, during a moment of truth, on getting what we need,” Avivi said.

Under the military aid agreement negotiated during the Obama administration, the percentage of U.S. aid that Israel can spend on its own defense industry has steadily declined — from 25% to just 11% this year — and is scheduled to reach zero by 2028.

When unveiling his $108 billion, decade-long plan to build an independent Israeli munitions industry, Netanyahu emphasized the goal to “reduce our dependence on all players, including friends.”

Israel is already one of the world’s leading arms exporters, generating roughly $19 billion in weapons sales in 2025, but it remains dependent on foreign suppliers for key munitions and military equipment.

Advocates of the transition also contend that ending aid would strengthen political support for the alliance in the United States.

“In the United States, some — such as Tucker Carlson — use the aid to attack Israel,” Avivi said. “They ask why American taxpayers are funding Israel and its wars. Israel wants to remove this argument entirely and say: ‘We don’t want aid.'”

Lawyer and Israeli activist Ran Bar-Yoshafat, a reservist combat special forces officer, told The Daily Wire that ending aid would reduce both political friction and foreign leverage over Israeli military operations.

“The use of force is constrained according to American preferences,” Bar-Yoshafat said. “The Americans, depending on the administration and military establishment, routinely dictate what weapons we can use and where in the field.”

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