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United States Foreign Military Financing
US federal government program
US federal government program

The United States Foreign Military Financing (FMF) program provides grants and loans to friendly foreign governments to fund the purchase of American weapons, defense equipment, services and training. FMF constitutes a major component of U.S. security assistance, shaping defense partnerships worldwide and reflecting broader foreign policy priorities. The authority for Foreign Military Financing derives from the Arms Export Control Act, as incorporated in the Foreign Assistance Act, and is enacted annually through the Foreign Operations Appropriations Act. The program is overseen by the Office of Security Assistance within the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (previously the Office of Policy Plans and Analysis) of the United States Department of State and executed by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) of the United States Department of Defense. According to U.S. government sources, the Foreign Military Financing program aims to support U.S. national security interests by equipping and training partner governments to pursue shared security objectives, contribute to regional and global stability, and address transnational threats, including narcotics and weapons trafficking.
FMF provides funding that eligible governments use to acquire U.S. defense articles, services, and training. Most commonly this occurs through the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) mechanism, and in selected cases via Direct Commercial Contracts (DCC). FMF does not typically involve direct cash grants to recipient governments; it generally pays for sales of specific goods or services through FMS or DCS.
According to DSCA data, in fiscal year 2020 the Foreign Military Sales program reported approximately $50.8 billion in cases administered, and the Direct Commercial Contracts program accounted for roughly $124.3 billion in contracts. These figures reflect the broader U.S. arms transfer environment in which FMF serves as one funding mechanism.
Allocation of Foreign Military Financing
Middle East and North Africa
Israel is the largest recipient of Title 22 security assistance under the FMF program. In 2016, the governments of United States and Israel signed their third ten-year MoU, covering 2019 to 2028, for the United States government to annually provide $3.3 billion in FMF. Since 2009, Israel has been provided with $3.4 billion for missile defense, including $1.3 billion for Iron Dome since 2011 and access to purchase other U.S. military equipment, including 50 Lockheed Martin F-35. Annual FMF grants represent approximately 16% of the 2021 Israeli defense budget. In 2021, the Security Cabinet of Israel allocated $9 billion in future FMF funds to finance the purchase of 12 Sikorsky CH-53K helicopters (with an option to procure six more) and additional F-35 aircraft. In August 2022, Boeing Defense, Space & Security and the Israeli government signed a contract for four Boeing KC-46A multirole tanker aircraft and "associated maintenance, logistics, and training" for $927 million. Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz thanked the Department of Defense for approving the deal, which included an "expedited implementation of U.S. FMF."
Other countries in the Middle East and North Africa were among the other major recipients of FMF funds, including Jordan, Egypt, and Pakistan. The United States has provided aid to Jordan since the late 1960s. In 2022, the United States provided Jordan with $425 million in State Department Foreign Military Financing funds as part of its bilateral aid program. Egypt receives $1.3 billion in annual FMF, accounting for 80 percent of its military procurement budget. Since the 1979 Egypt–Israel peace treaty, over $40 billion in FMF funds have been used to acquire more than 1,100 M1A1 Abrams tanks, 224 F-16 fighter aircraft, 10 Boeing AH-64 Apache helicopters, thousands of Humvees, FIM-92 Stinger MANPADS, and AGM-114 Hellfire and Harpoon missiles. Pakistan has been one of the largest recipients of US aid in the past, with the US providing the country more than $30 billion in direct aid since 1948. In 2018, the Trump administration indefinitely froze all security aid to Pakistan due to its terror record.
East Asia and Asia Pacific
In September 2023, the Biden administration notified Congress that it was withholding $85 million designated for U.S. security assistance from Egypt due to its detention of political prisoners and human rights abuses and transferring $55 million to Taiwan and $30 million to Lebanon in FMF. In 2022, Congress authorized but did not appropriate $2 billion in annual FMF to Taiwan. The 2023 NDAA instead required that security assistance to Taiwan be provided through loans payable in 12-years.
In October 2022, the Philippines was granted $100 million in FMF that according to U.S. ambassador to the Philippines MaryKay Carlson "could be used to 'offset' its decision to scrap a $227 million deal with Russia" and buy Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopters from the United States instead of Mil Mi-17.
Ukraine and Europe
Since the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the U.S. government has provided $2.6 billion in FMF to European allies and partners. The U.S. Congress has appropriated $4.65 billion across two aid packages for Ukraine and "countries impacted by the situation in Ukraine." FMF funds were used to refit and transfer four former United States Coast Guard Island-class patrol boats since 2018. In September 2022, Congress approved $288.6 million in FMF for Poland to "build the capacity to deter and defend against the increased threat from Russia."
In May 2024, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced a $2 billion aid package for Ukraine to establish a Ukraine Defense Enterprise Program. The package is intended to help Ukraine grow its indigenous defense industrial base and move away from Soviet-era weaponry.
South America
In April 2024, the U.S. embassy in Argentina announced that Argentina would receive $40 million in FMF to fund the purchase of 24 F-16 aircraft from the Royal Danish Air Force.
References
References
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- Lewis, Jessica. (5 December 2023). "The Future of Security Assistance in an Era of Strategic Competition - Remarks by Jessica Lewis, Assistant Secretary of Political-Military Affairs".
- Welt, Cory. (15 February 2024). "U.S. Security Assistance to Ukraine". Congressional Research Service.
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- Poland, U. S. Mission. (2022-09-29). "United States Invests $288.6 Million in New Foreign Military Financing for Poland".
- Harris, Bryant. (2024-05-16). "US announces $2 billion to help Ukraine make its own weapons".
- (2 May 2025). "Special Inspector General for OAR Report to the Congress, Q2FY2025".
- (2024-04-18). "United States Announces $40 Million in Foreign Military Financing for Argentina".
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