Congress approves $600M for Israel’s missile defense program

Congress has approved a significant, mutually beneficial boost to Israel’s defense development. 

Both houses of Congress on Thursday passed a defense authorization bill that includes over $600 million in funding for Israel’s missile defense development, carried out in close collaboration with the US.

The defense legislation passed the Senate by a vast majority of 92-7, after the House of Representatives approved it by a 375-34 vote. It now awaits President Barack Obama’s signature, which he is expected to add to the bill.

The legislation includes authorization to spend $600.7 million on joint US-Israel development of missile defense during the 2017 fiscal year.

Of that total, $268.7 million will be designated for joint research and development, $62 million for the Iron Dome anti-rocket system, $150 million for the David’s Sling medium-range missile defense system, and $120 million for the Arrow-2 long-range missile defense system.

Congress has approved similar funding for Israel’s defense in the past.

An additional $10 million was earmarked for the development of anti-tunnel technology, chiefly to be deployed on Israel border with Gaza.

The missile defense funding is not part of the recently signed historic 10-year, $38 billion Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on American defense aid to Israel. That memorandum goes into effect starting in 2018.

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Israel is simultaneously working on developing several defense systems, including the highly successful Iron Dome and David’s Sling. The latter is designed to contend with mid-range missiles, working to provide Israel with an almost hermetic defense against a wide array of ballistic projectiles, with its eye on the Iranian ballistic threat and the dangers posed by the Lebanon-based Hezbollah terror organization and Hamas in Gaza.

By: World Israel News Staff

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