Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

State Department approves $510m weapons sale to Israel

The sale includes the provision of 500-pound and 2,000-pound bombs that had been frozen or paused during the Biden administration.

Mark 82 500-Pound Bomb
A Mark 82 500-pound general-purpose bomb hangs from a pylon beneath the wing of a Strike Fighter Squadron 87 Hornet aircraft aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier “USS Theodore Roosevelt” during “Operation Desert Storm,” Feb. 13, 1991. Credit: Lt. Parsons/U.S. Defense Industry via Wikimedia Commons.

The Trump administration approved a $510 million weapons sale to Israel on Monday.

The sale includes munitions at the center of a Biden administration controversy about freezes, pauses and the slow rolling of the provision of arms to Israel.

Washington will sell Israel more than 7,000 bombs—both 500-pound and 2,000-pound varieties—and their affiliated guidance kits, per an announcement from the Defense Security Cooperation Agency.

“The proposed sale will enhance Israel’s capability to meet current and future threats by improving its ability to defend Israel’s borders, vital infrastructure and population centers,” the agency stated.

“This proposed sale will increase the interoperability with U.S. forces and conveys U.S. commitment to Israel’s security and armed forces modernization,” it said. “Israel will have no difficulty absorbing this equipment into its armed forces.”

Critics of Israel’s use of American-made bombs allege that they have caused excessive civilian casualties in urban areas in Gaza and elsewhere.

The Israeli military has said it needs the heavy bombs to penetrate Hamas and Hezbollah tunnels and other hardened, underground structures.

Upon coming into office in January, U.S. President Donald Trump said that he would undo former President Joe Biden’s formal freeze on the sale of 2,000-pound bombs, as well as end any informal efforts to bureaucratically slow the provision of arms to Israel.

Biden had also paused the sale of 500-pound bombs for two months in 2024, though resumed sales in July of that year.

Monday’s authorization follows a much larger Israeli restock in February when it purchased more than 35,000 new bombs for more than $2 billion.

AIPAC thanked Trump for the new sale. “The Jewish state is buying American-made products to help protect its families and confront its enemies,” it stated. “A strong Israel makes America more secure.”

See more from JNS Staff
“The forest, the fields, the tractor, the threshing floor and the local swimming pool were all part of childhood,” said Efrat Sinai, director of archives at KKL-JNF. “These weren’t staged vacation moments; they were everyday life.”
Fire damaged more than 30 structures, destroyed 15 homes and 10 businesses, and forced the evacuation of some 100 families.
Jerusalem began cracking down on the Health Work Committees group following its involvement in the murder of 17-year-old Israeli teenager Rina Shnerb in 2019.
“I think we need to invest in Israel’s Arab society—in education, employment and infrastructure. If we don’t, we’ll be the ones who suffer,” the lawmaker told JNS.
Bar-Ilan University researchers reported that pregnant women living near more vegetation had lower levels of long-term stress hormones.