A hidden provision buried in America’s annual defense bill would permanently link the U.S. military to Israel’s in ways that no other country on Earth enjoys — and Congress blocked a vote to even debate removing it.
Story Snapshot
- Section 224 of the FY2027 National Defense Authorization Act creates a Pentagon official whose sole job is to merge U.S. and Israeli defense technology, weapons production, and military data systems.
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called this arrangement “my plan,” and Rep. Ro Khanna says Netanyahu personally wrote to a U.S. congressman to get the provision added to the bill.
- The House Rules Committee blocked a bipartisan amendment from Reps. Thomas Massie and Khanna that would have removed the provision — preventing a public vote or debate.
- Supporters say the measure adds transparency and efficiency; critics warn the deep technology integration would be nearly impossible to undo once in place.
What Section 224 Actually Does
Section 224 of the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) creates a new U.S.-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative. The bill directs the Secretary of Defense to appoint an “executive agent” — a single Pentagon official — to oversee and speed up joint research, weapons co-production, technology sharing, and what the bill calls “data fusion” between U.S. and Israeli military systems. No other country has this kind of dedicated arrangement with the U.S. military.
The provision covers a wide range of sensitive technology areas, including artificial intelligence, quantum computing, autonomous weapons systems, directed energy, cyber warfare, biotechnology, and electronic warfare. It also directs the Pentagon to identify Israeli-made technologies and move them into formal U.S. military programs — pushing them from research all the way through to full procurement and battlefield use. That is a significant step beyond simply sharing information.
Netanyahu Called It “My Plan”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly described this shift in the U.S.-Israel relationship as “my plan.” Rep. Ro Khanna went further, stating that Netanyahu personally wrote to a U.S. congressman urging that the provision be placed in the defense bill. That claim has not been denied by supporters of the legislation. The Arab Center Washington D.C. warned that once contracts are signed and Israeli technology is embedded in U.S. systems, the arrangement would be “very hard to unwind.”
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) — which spent over $100 million in the 2024 elections — published a memo defending the provision. AIPAC says the initiative does not create joint command structures, does not authorize new military aid, and does not allow unrestricted sharing of U.S. military data. Rep. Mike Rogers, a co-sponsor, called claims of a military merger “categorically false,” saying the section “simply adds transparency and improves efficiency.”
Congress Blocked the Public Vote
Reps. Massie and Khanna introduced a bipartisan amendment to strip the provision from the bill. The House Rules Committee blocked it from reaching the full House floor — meaning no recorded vote, no public debate, and no chance for members to go on record. The Armed Services Committee passed the broader NDAA by a vote of 44 to 12, with Section 224 included.
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is the central bank for central banks, founded in 1930 to facilitate cooperation, settlements, and stability among member central banks. It does not manage, fund, or intermediate US bilateral military or economic aid to Israel—that…
— Grok (@grok) July 5, 2026
The Senate is considering a nearly identical provision, labeled Section 1217 in its version of the NDAA. The two versions will be merged in a conference committee, where the public has little visibility. If both chambers keep the language, the executive agent framework becomes law — and the deep integration it enables begins. Critics argue the rushed process and blocked amendment are exactly the kind of government maneuver that bypasses the American people on a major national security decision.
Why Americans Should Pay Attention
Conservatives who value American sovereignty and limited government should look closely at this provision. Shifting defense cooperation from transparent foreign aid — where Congress controls the dollars — into Pentagon procurement contracts makes the arrangement harder to cap, monitor, or end. The Quincy Institute’s Steve Simon warned the measure could “tether the U.S. military to its Israeli counterpart technologically,” making it difficult to reverse if circumstances change.
The core question is not whether the U.S. and Israel should cooperate on defense — they already do. The question is whether Congress should lock in a permanent, deep integration managed by a single unelected Pentagon official, with limited public debate and no easy exit. That is a question every American, regardless of party, deserves the chance to answer through their elected representatives.
Sources:
theamericanconservative.com, resist.bot, aipac.org, imeupolicyproject.org, adc.org, x.com, rules.house.gov, aljazeera.com
