
Sources told The Jerusalem Post that the decision was a result of France taking a hostile attitude toward Israel over the last two years.
Israel has halted selling defense products to France, three senior Israeli sources confirmed to The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday.
Defense Minister Israel Katz formally ordered the halt, but a decision of such significance could only happen if it was a priority of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Sources told the Post that the decision was a result of France taking a hostile attitude toward Israel over the last two years, forcing it to reevaluate how much it could trust sharing its defense products with the country.
It was unclear exactly how the decision would impact the countries, given that France has been boycotting Israeli weapons since mid-way through the Israel-Hamas War in Gaza, and given that a source clarified that existing contracts would be honored and private companies could still make deals.
Israel may still purchase defense products from France
While economic ties between the two nations remain intact, defense cooperation has cooled significantly. Also, Israel may still purchase defense products from France if Paris is open to that, though this has also been reduced in recent years.
However, for larger deals requiring government-to-government involvement, and even for Israeli products that have only defensive characteristics, France may lose significant opportunities.
Germany and other NATO countries have been jumping to purchase Israeli air defense and other systems in response to new threats posed by Russia since Moscow began its still ongoing war to try to take over Ukraine in 2022.
Some of the major points of friction between Israel and France have been over Paris's push to end the Gaza war prior to a point where Israel's government believed it could bring Israeli hostages home and keep Hamas down as a future threat.
France led a wave of countries recognizing a Palestinian state in September 2025, viewed in Jerusalem as a penalty for continuing the war.
In addition, France has pressured Israel to reduce its attacks on Hezbollah during the 2023-2024 conflict, while full hostilities were reduced but not gone in 2024, and during the current conflict.
Despite the disagreements, France helped defend Israel from Iranian missiles and drones in 2024, and the countries are still cooperating in various intelligence and other capacities. For example, France helped snap back global nuclear sanctions on Iran in the summer of 2025.
Nevertheless, President Emmanuel Macron halted the flow of French weaponry to Israel in late 2024, citing the humanitarian toll of the war in Gaza and for the past two years has blocked Israeli defense companies from exhibiting at arms fairs in the country.
Anna Ahronheim contributed to the report
LATEST POSTS
- 1
4 Jeep Models: Dominating Execution and Flexibility for Each Experience - 2
How C-reactive protein outpaced ‘bad’ cholesterol as leading heart disease risk marker - 3
Experience Is standing by: History's Most noteworthy Travelers - 4
6 Robot Vacuum Cleaners for Easy Home Cleaning - 5
IDF begins destroying homes used by Hezbollah as forces move deeper into southern Lebanon
Timex Gives Its Classic Affordable Field Watch a Tactical, Milspec Makeover
China’s new condom tax will prove no effective barrier to country’s declining fertility rate
Reviving Your Home with Nutritious Indoor Plants
Spanish woman, 25, dies by legal euthanasia in case that drew national spotlight
A definitive Manual for 2024's Most In vogue Wedding Dresses
James Webb Space Telescope finds strongest evidence yet for atmosphere around rocky exoplanet: 'It's really like a wet lava ball'
7 Moves toward a Sound and Dynamic Way of life
Honda’s Biggest Flex Isn’t Its Superbikes, It’s Selling 500K Bikes In One Month
Burkina Faso must 'forget' about democracy, military leader says













