What was approved
On 3 May 2026 Israel’s Ministerial Committee on Procurement (MOCP) cleared the simultaneous purchase of a fourth F-35I Adir squadron from Lockheed Martin and a second F-15IA squadron from Boeing. The Israeli Ministry of Defense confirmed the decision over the weekend, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz framing it as the opening move of the wider “Magen Israel” force buildup — a 350-billion-shekel (US$119bn) decade-long plan first authorised in late 2025. [1] [2]
Reuters and the Israeli MoD value the combined package at at least US$6bn, inclusive of fleet integration, sustainment, spare parts and logistics. [3] The director-general of the Defense Ministry has now instructed the Israeli procurement delegation in Washington to move to signature with the US Government and the prime contractors.
Once delivered the order takes the IAF inventory to a target of ~100 F-35I and 50 F-15IA, anchoring an explicit high-low mix that the Iran conflict (Operation Roaring Lion, the 40-day campaign of summer 2025) is widely held to have validated. The new F-35I squadrons are expected to be based at Nevatim Air Base alongside the existing 116th “Lions of the South” (Arayot HaDarom) and 140th “Golden Eagle” (Nesher HaZahav) squadrons. [4]
The high-low doctrine, restated
Israeli air-power planners describe the two airframes as a complementary pair: the F-35I as the scalpel and the F-15IA as the hammer. The vocabulary is deliberate and the division of labour is operational, not rhetorical.
| Capability | F-35I Adir (5th gen) | F-15IA (advanced 4.5 gen) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary strength | Stealth + sensor fusion | Massive payload + range |
| Stealth | Very low radar cross-section, internal weapons bays | None (large signature) |
| Payload | ~18,000 lb total (limited in stealth configuration) | 29,500 lb (~13,381 kg) across 25 hardpoints |
| Range | ~1,380 mi combat radius (extended via stealth-compatible fuel tanks fielded 2026) | ~2,100 nmi ferry with conformal fuel tanks |
| Top speed | Mach 1.6+ | Mach 2.5 |
| Sensors | AN/APG-81 AESA, AN/AAQ-37 DAS, Israeli EW & C4I overlay | AN/APG-82(V)1 AESA, Israeli EW suite |
| Best for | Day-one penetration, SEAD, ISR node | High-volume strike, air-superiority escort |
The point of the pairing is not that one airframe replaces another; it is that each airframe occupies the role for which it is most efficient. The F-35I goes first into contested airspace, generating a real-time picture and prosecuting the highest-risk targets from inside an integrated air-defence bubble. The F-15IA, surging from outside the threat ring, then arrives with overwhelming ordnance against fixed and emerging targets the F-35I has already characterised. In the Iran war, this is broadly the pattern Western analysts assess Israel ran — and it is the pattern the new squadrons are designed to industrialise.
What actually binds them: the C4ISR fabric
The interesting part of this procurement is not either airframe in isolation. It is the connective tissue.
Israel runs a sovereign command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR) overlay that sits on top of the US baseline and, in places, replaces it. The major elements include:
- Elbit Systems Torch-X — the battle-management backbone, fielded across the IAF and IDF ground forces.
- IAI special-mission aircraft — the Shavit (signals intelligence), Eitam (Conformal Airborne Early Warning & Control on Gulfstream G550) and Oron (multi-mission ISR on G550) platforms generate the wide-area picture that fighters plug into.
- Israeli “app-style” mission overlay on the F-35I — bolt-on Israeli command software that runs alongside the Lockheed Martin baseline, reportedly with the agility of the Joint Strike Fighter Programme’s Block 4 / TR-3 stack.
- AI-assisted targeting — including the Habsora (“Gospel”) target-recommendation system that compresses the find-fix-finish loop.
- Custom Israeli secure datalinks — running in parallel with Link 16 / MADL where required, and deliberately structured so Israel does not depend on the US Joint Programme Office for combat-critical software updates.
In operational terms: the F-35I penetrates and senses; the C4ISR layer fuses and prioritises; the F-15IA delivers the mass. None of this is implied by the airframe specification sheets. All of it is what the Israeli MoD is actually buying when it buys an F-35I or an F-15IA.
What is in the box: 2026 configuration upgrades
Both airframes are being delivered in their most current configuration, with continuing Israeli modifications driven by combat feedback — not as new designs, but as the current evolution of mature products.
| Upgrade | Platform | Status / detail |
|---|---|---|
| Stealth-compatible external fuel tanks | F-35I | Field-deployed 2026, extending combat radius without breaking low-observability |
| TR-3 hardware + Block 4 software | F-35I | Improved sensors, electronic warfare (EW), memory and weapons integration |
| “Productionized Plus” software builds | F-35I | April 2026 US Government contract action, ~$11.4M |
| Israeli EW suite (Elbit) | Both | Replaces or supplements the US baseline EW system |
| IAI C4I overlay + national datalinks | Both | Sovereign mission system layered over the US architecture |
| Israeli weapons integration | Both | Python-5, SPICE family, Delilah, Rampage / Air-LORA-class stand-off effectors |
The combat feedback loop in the other direction matters too. Israeli operational experience in Iran — how the AN/APG-81 actually performed against modern Russian-pattern emitters, where Block 4 software stumbled, what proved fragile in the EW kit — is being fed back to Lockheed Martin and the US Air Force. That information is one of the reasons Washington keeps signing off on Israeli F-35 sales: Israel is the most operationally stressed F-35 customer in the fleet, and it pays for the data with combat sorties no other partner is flying.
F-15IA versus F-15EX: where the deltas are
The F-15IA is best understood as the F-15EX Eagle II airframe with a heavy Israeli overlay. The flight-performance envelope — speed, payload, range, radar — is essentially identical. The deltas are in the systems that decide whether an airframe survives and prosecutes targets in a contested electromagnetic environment.
| Area | F-15EX (US) | F-15IA (Israel) |
|---|---|---|
| Base platform | F-15EX Eagle II | F-15EX + Israeli overlay |
| EW system | AN/ALQ-250 EPAWSS | Elbit Israeli EW suite |
| Mission systems | US standard | Israeli avionics, open architecture |
| Weapons integration | Optimised for US arsenal | Optimised for Israeli arsenal — Python-5, SPICE-family, Delilah |
| Datalinks | Link 16, JREAP, US standards | Custom Israeli national datalinks (in addition) |
| Helmet display | US HMD | Israeli HMD |
| Upgrade flexibility | Standard FMS pipeline | Significantly higher (sovereign software control) |
The procurement consequence is straightforward: Israel is buying as much sovereign control over the upgrade path as the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) framework permits. Where the EPAWSS update cycle is held by the US Air Force, the Elbit suite update cycle is held in Israel. That distinction is doctrinal rather than commercial — it is what allows Israel to retune its EW posture inside an active campaign, on weeks rather than years.
Delivery profile and squadron status
The shape of the delivery curve, on current public information:
| Period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2026–2027 | Final deliveries of the initial ~50 F-35Is (116th & 140th squadrons complete) |
| Late 2027 – 2028 | Third F-35I squadron begins arriving (25 aircraft, ordered 2023) |
| 2028 – mid-2030s | Fourth F-35I squadron and second F-15IA squadron deliveries phased in |
| 2031 | First F-15IA deliveries begin (initial 25 aircraft, ordered 2024) |
| Early to mid-2030s | Full target fleet of ~100 F-35I and 50 F-15IA achieved |
Squadron names and numbers for the new third and fourth F-35I squadrons and the second F-15IA squadron have not been publicly released. The IAF generally announces squadron identity and insignia closer to activation. The two existing F-35I squadrons remain a useful reference for what to expect: the 116th “Lions of the South” and the 140th “Golden Eagle” both ship recognisable insignia — the 140th’s 2016-vintage modernised eagle, in particular, was redesigned to align visually with the F-35I airframe and became a prominent unit identity.
The name Adir itself (אדיר, “Mighty One”) is one of the biblical names of God in Judaism. It is not a casual choice and reflects the political weight Israel attaches to the platform.
Industrial signal
For the US prime contractors, the MOCP approval is a meaningful read on the late-2020s order book. Three points stand out:
- Lockheed Martin picks up a fourth Israeli F-35 squadron at a moment when the US Joint Programme Office is still working through Block 4 / TR-3 software-deployment frictions. The Israeli order is a vote of confidence that those frictions are tractable.
- Boeing doubles the F-15IA backlog at the moment the F-15EX line transitions from Tranche 1 to Tranche 2. A second IAF squadron is the kind of foreign anchor order that helps stabilise the St. Louis assembly cadence into the 2030s.
- The Israeli industrial supply chain — Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Rafael Advanced Defense Systems — benefits twice. First as the integrator of the sovereign overlay on each delivered airframe; second as the Israeli party in offset and co-production arrangements that always accompany an FMS package of this scale.
What is conspicuously not in this announcement is a new weapon. No new air-launched munition has been disclosed alongside the order. That is consistent with the Israeli pattern: Israel is buying more of the airframe and more of the integration depth, then layering existing Python-5 / SPICE / Delilah / Rampage-class effectors against the C4ISR fabric. Industrial implication: expect follow-on Israeli munitions orders — through Rafael in particular — rather than a new line item from a US prime.
Data gaps
Open-source information on the following remains thin and should be treated with caution:
- Final unit cost per airframe, on either order line. The headline US$6bn figure is package-level and includes sustainment.
- Specific Block 4 software thresholds the new airframes will be delivered against. The Pentagon’s Block 4 plan was rebaselined in late 2025; the Israeli order will inherit whatever the US JPO has cleared by the relevant delivery slot.
- Whether the second F-15IA squadron will share a base with the first or stand up as a separate operational unit. Public reporting has not addressed basing.
- Whether the order interlocks with any forthcoming US Foreign Military Financing (FMF) reauthorisation. The headline figures suggest a heavy FMF component but the specific instrument has not been published.
References & Sources
- The Times of Israel, “Israel approves purchase of 2 more squadrons of F-35I and F-15IA fighter jets from US”, 3 May 2026. Link
- Breaking Defense, “Israel buying more F-35s, F-15IAs fighter jets, Netanyahu announces”, 4 May 2026. Link
- U.S. News & World Report / Reuters, “Israel Approves Plan to Buy F-35 and F-15IA Fighter Jets From Lockheed, Boeing”, 3 May 2026. Link
- AeroTime, “Israel orders two more F-35I and F-15IA squadrons from US”, 4 May 2026. Link
- Defense News, “Israel to buy more F-35 and F-15 warplanes”, 4 May 2026. Link
- The War Zone, “Israel To Buy Extra F-15IA And F-35I Squadrons”, 4 May 2026. Link
- GlobalSecurity.org, “IDF to Receive Two New Fighter Squadrons: Ministerial Procurement Committee Approves Acquisition of F-35 and F-15IA Squadrons”, 5 May 2026. Link
Source rating: NATO STANAG 2022 (Reliability A–F · Accuracy 1–6). Disclosure: This briefing is AI-assisted and based on open-source material. It does not constitute investment, legal or operational advice. Acronyms are expanded on first use within each section.
ISC Commentary
The headline is the airframe count. The interesting reading is the institutional one. Israel has just signed the first tranche of a 350-billion-shekel buildup that explicitly assumes a multi-front, multi-decade contest, and it has done so within a fortnight of the Iran war ending. That speed is unusual.
It is also a signal to NATO procurement watchers. The Israeli model — FMS-acquired airframe + sovereign mission system + sovereign EW + sovereign weapons integration + sovereign software update cadence — is the model European NATO members increasingly want for their F-35As but cannot generally obtain. Israel achieves it through political weight and through a domestic industrial base (Elbit, IAI, Rafael) that few European states match. Watching how fast the third and fourth F-35I squadrons absorb new software, new EW configurations and new effectors will be the practical test of whether sovereign overlays can keep pace with a moving JPO baseline. If it works at scale, expect the sovereign-overlay argument to harden in Berlin, Rome, and Warsaw.
The structural risk is the delivery cliff in 2031–2034: F-15IA deliveries begin in 2031, F-35I third- and fourth-squadron deliveries are layered on top, and the IAF will be absorbing two distinct training pipelines, two distinct sustainment chains and a still-evolving C4ISR fabric simultaneously. Israeli industry has form on absorbing this kind of step-change — but it has rarely done two at once.