šŗšøš„š®š± Congress Just Voted to Fuse the U.S. Military With Israelās ā and Buried It on Page 847 So You Wouldnāt Notice ā ļø
Section 224 of the $1.15 Trillion NDAA Doesnāt Fund Israel. It Makes Israel Part of the Pentagon. Forever. No Exit. No Debate. No Vote. š
šÆ Deep Dive: The Quiet Coup Inside the NDAA
The Responsible Statecraft piece has put its finger on something genuinely significant ā and the fact that this is happening inside a must-pass $1.15 trillion defense bill, buried at Section 224, tells you everything about how the permanent national security apparatus operates when it wants to avoid a public fight.
šļø What Section 224 Actually Does
This isnāt a tweak. Section 224 ā titled the āUnited States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiativeā ā is a structural rewiring of the U.S.-Israel military relationship.
The provision authorizes $150 million annually from FY2027 through FY2029, but the money is almost beside the point. What matters is the architecture it builds:
- Bilateral R&D across AI, quantum computing, autonomous systems, directed energy, cyber, biotech, counter-drone systems, and missile defense
- Co-production and joint ventures with Israeli defense firms on U.S. soil
- Licensing agreements that embed Israeli-origin intellectual property into Pentagon programs of record
- āNetwork integrationā and ādata fusionā ā which means U.S. military data flowing into Israeli systems and vice versa
- Pathways from R&D straight into procurement, bypassing the normal foreign aid oversight channels
The key phrase in the legislative text: technologies are to be identified for āintegration into United States systems and programs of record.ā Thatās not foreign aid. Thatās making Israeli defense tech a backbone of the U.S. military.
š The Strategic Shift: From Aid to Embedded Infrastructure
The Quincy Instituteās Steven Simon has been tracking this for months. His brief, The Disappearing Aid Check, lays out exactly whatās happening ā and itās more sophisticated than most people realize.
The current model: Israel receives Foreign Military Financing (FMF) through the State Department, voted on annually by Congress. It's visible. It's politically accountable. People can argue about it.
The new model: Phase out FMF grants and replace them with Pentagon procurement accounts, industrial partnerships, and sustainment pipelines. Same money, different door ā one with vastly less transparency.
The logic, as Simon documents, is being sold under an āAmerica Firstā framing: this isnāt a handout to Israel, itās an investment in American military readiness, industrial capacity, and jobs. Israeli co-production facilities in Mississippi and Arkansas become political leverage ā members of Congress protect the jobs in their districts, and the relationship becomes structurally impossible to unwind.
This is the same playbook the military-industrial complex always uses: distribute the subcontracts across as many congressional districts as possible so no one dares vote against the program. Now theyāre doing it with a foreign countryās defense sector.
š³ļø The Transparency Problem
The shift from State Department-administered FMF to Pentagon procurement is the move that should alarm anyone who cares about accountability.
Under the FMF model:
- Congress votes on the aid package publicly
- The State Department provides human rights certifications
- Thereās diplomatic oversight and policy conditionality
- Public debate is possible
Under the Pentagon procurement model:
- Funding moves through budget justification documents and program element descriptions
- Oversight is limited to ācost, readiness, and capabilityā ā bureaucratic criteria
- The relationship gets evaluated like any other weapons program, not as a strategic political commitment
- No diplomatic strings attached
As the Responsible Statecraft piece notes, this would give Israel āa higher level of military-industrial integration than the U.S. has with any other country in the worldā ā including NATO allies. Not even the Five Eyes partners have this kind of embedded access to U.S. defense procurement.
𧬠The Legislative Genealogy
This didnāt come out of nowhere. H.R. 7540 (Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-TX) and S. 3855 (Sen. Ted Budd, R-NC) were introduced as standalone bills in February 2026 with nearly identical language. When a standalone passage looked difficult, the provisions got folded into the NDAA ā the classic maneuver for legislation that canāt survive public scrutiny on its own.
The JINSA (Jewish Institute for National Security of America) influence is unmistakable. Their āPartners in Productionā report explicitly recommended deeper industrial integration and the addition of Israel to the U.S. National Technology and Industrial Base (NTIB). The FY2026 NDAA had already directed DoD to establish a working group to assess exactly that. Section 224 is the next logical step ā and JINSAās fingerprints are all over it.
ā ļø Why This Matters More Than the Dollar Figure
$150 million a year is a rounding error in a $1.15 trillion defense bill. But the institutional architecture this creates is permanent.
Once Israeli firms are embedded in U.S. supply chains, once Israeli-origin IP is inside Pentagon programs of record, once U.S. and Israeli military data networks are fused ā disentanglement becomes economically and institutionally impossible. You canāt just stop the aid check. Youād have to rip apart procurement programs, break contracts, and rebuild supply chains.
Thatās the point. This is designed to make the relationship irreversible ā at precisely the moment when a growing number of Americans are questioning unconditional support for Israelās actions in the region.
The traditional Israel lobby works through campaign contributions and media influence. This is more sophisticated: it works through the defense procurement bureaucracy itself, creating material interests that guarantee political support regardless of public opinion.
š³ļø What Happens Next
The House Armed Services Committee markup is scheduled for June 4, 2026. After that, the bill moves to the full House, then reconciliation with the Senate version.
Section 224 is currently in the base text ā meaning it was put there by committee leadership before amendments or broader debate. Thatās how the most consequential provisions get through: bury them in the chairmanās mark, count on the must-pass nature of the NDAA, and dare anyone to hold up the entire defense budget over one section.
Members who want to stop this have a narrow window: force a floor amendment to strike Section 224, or demand recorded votes that put colleagues on the record supporting the fusion of U.S. and Israeli militaries. The question is whether anyone has the stomach for that fight when the pro-Israel apparatus in both parties remains largely unchallenged.
The Responsible Statecraft piece is right to flag this. The quiet ones are always the ones that matter most.