Israel says US approves 'landmark' missile defense sale to Germany
An "Arrow 3" ballistic missile interceptor during its test launch near Ashdod, Israel, Dec. 10, 2015. (Reuters Photo)


Israel said the United States on Thursday agreed to the "historic" sale of the Arrow 3 hypersonic missile defense system to Germany, in the country's biggest military deal worth $3.5 billion.

The Arrow 3 system – designed to shoot down ballistic missiles above the Earth's atmosphere – is jointly developed and produced by Israel and the United States.

Israel's defense ministry said in a statement the U.S. State Department had notified it of the U.S. government's approval for Germany to procure the Arrow 3 system.

"The Israeli Ministry of Defense, German Federal Ministry of Defense, and Israel Aerospace Industries will sign the landmark $3.5 billion defense agreement," it said.

The ministry said senior officials from the Israeli and German defense ministries would sign a letter of commitment to the deal with a preliminary payment of $600 million.

"With its exceptional long-range interception capabilities, operating at high altitudes above the atmosphere, (the Arrow 3) stands as the top interceptor of its kind," it said.

"The system employs a hit-to-kill approach for intercepting incoming threats."

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, quoted in the statement, called the agreement "the largest in Israel's history."

"This is a significant decision, which will contribute to Israel's force buildup and economy," he said.

Israel Missile Defense Organization director Moshe Patel said, "We are talking about a defense agreement with Germany 78 years after the Holocaust where Israel is selling a system that is going to protect German citizens."

European interest

Partly financed by the United States, the Arrow system was developed and produced by Israeli Aerospace Industries in partnership with Boeing.

The Arrow 3 can intercept ballistic missiles fired from a distance of up to 2,400 kilometers (1,490 miles), according to IAI.

IAI would set up new infrastructure for the German program and hire new engineers and production employees in Israel and in the United States, Patel said.

"The German government wants it to be exactly as the system that we use," he told journalists in an online briefing, adding half of the components would be produced in the United States by an American subsidiary of IAI.

Germany is buying the "full architecture" of the system that can protect its citizens across the country, Patel said.

"I can't elaborate more than this, but there is a lot of attention from other nations, specifically in Europe to have the Arrow 3 weapons system," he said.

IAI president Boaz Levy said Arrow 3 was a "mobile system."

"You can shift it according to your threats, and that's why Germany is buying the system that can be utilized according to its own requirements," Levy said, quoted in the statement.

The system was first deployed at an Israeli air force base in 2017 and has been used to protect Israel against attacks from Iran and Syria.

The final contract for the deal is expected to be signed by the end of 2023 after it is approved by the parliaments of both Germany and Israel, the Israeli defense ministry said.

Berlin expects the Arrow 3 system to be delivered in the final quarter of 2025.

The German government has led a push to bolster NATO's air defenses in Europe after seeing Russia's relentless missile strikes on Ukraine, urging allies to buy deterrence systems together.

More than a dozen European countries have so far signed up to the so-called European Sky Shield initiative.