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Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin
Key takeaways
  • Lockheed Martin acts as an indispensable structural pillar of the Israeli military and occupation, rated Tier A Upper-Extreme complicity.
  • Primary supplier and maintainer of the F-35I Adir and AGM-114 Hellfire, with embedded technical teams at Nevatim and Tel Nof enabling operations.
  • Architect of Israeli digital sovereignty via Project 5/9, underground data centers, 1LMX rapid software updates, and reliance on a Unit 8200 vendor stack.
  • Economic circularity: FMF securitization, Citibank arrangement, and UICA offsets recycle U.S. aid into Israeli suppliers like IAI and Elbit.
  • Governance and lobbying align with pro-Israel ideology; board links to JINSA and major asset managers shield accountability, prompting calls for divestment.
BDS Rating
Grade
A
BDS Score
965 / 1000
9.8 / 10
9.6 / 10
9.2 / 10
9.4 / 10
links for more information

1. Executive Dossier Summary

Company: Lockheed Martin Corporation (NYSE: LMT)

Jurisdiction: United States (Headquarters: Bethesda, Maryland)

Sector: Aerospace & Defense / Government Services / Advanced Technologies

Leadership: James D. Taiclet (Chairman, President & CEO), Frank A. St. John (COO), John C. Aquilino (Board Director)

Intelligence Conclusions:

The forensic corporate intelligence assessment of Lockheed Martin Corporation reveals a level of involvement with the State of Israel that transcends the traditional boundaries of a commercial vendor-client relationship. The entity does not merely sell defense articles; it functions as a structural, indispensable pillar of the Israeli military apparatus and the occupation infrastructure in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). The corporation exhibits “Upper-Extreme” complicity across all audited domains—Military, Digital, Economic, and Political—effectively operating as a parastatal organ of the U.S.-Israel “special relationship.”

Operational Integration and Kinetic Capability: Lockheed Martin provides the foundational platforms for the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) aerial supremacy and force projection. The corporation manufactures the F-35I “Adir,” the only variant of the Joint Strike Fighter globally to receive a “sovereign exception” allowing the integration of indigenous electronic warfare and munitions systems. This platform has been forensically linked to mass-casualty events in Gaza, including the July 2024 Al-Mawasi airstrike.1 Beyond the airframe, the corporation is the primary supplier of the AGM-114 Hellfire missile, the munition of choice for targeted assassinations and urban warfare in densely populated areas like Gaza and the West Bank. The presence of embedded technical teams at Nevatim and Tel Nof Airbases demonstrates that the corporation is not a remote supplier but a direct enabler of sortie generation during high-intensity combat operations.1

Structural Economic Symbiosis: The corporation serves as the central node in a “circular economic” system designed to sustain the Israeli defense industrial base. Through the “Citibank Arrangement” and complex offset obligations, U.S. Foreign Military Financing (FMF) grants are securitized and recycled back into the Israeli economy. This mechanism creates a mutual dependency where Israeli firms like Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and Elbit Systems are integrated into Lockheed Martin’s global supply chain—producing wings and helmets for every F-35 flown worldwide.2 This structural fusion insulates the Israeli defense sector from external economic pressure and effectively subsidizes its R&D with U.S. taxpayer funds.

Digital Sovereignty and Architecture: Lockheed Martin is the architect of the IDF’s “nervous system.” Through “Project 5/9” and the construction of fortified underground data centers in Jerusalem and the Negev, the corporation is building the sovereign cloud infrastructure that aggregates intelligence from Unit 8200 and combat divisions. This infrastructure ensures the continuity of the Israeli military and government during total war, rendering the corporation complicit in the long-term viability and resilience of the occupation regime.3 Furthermore, the corporation’s internal adoption of a “Unit 8200 Stack” of cybersecurity vendors validates and funds the very ecosystem that develops surveillance tools used against Palestinians.

Ideological Entrenchment: Corporate leadership exhibits a profound ideological alignment with Zionist strategic imperatives, evidenced by governance overlaps with advocacy groups such as the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA). The presence of retired Admiral John C. Aquilino on the board and former JINSA Managing Director Yola Johnston in management positions signals that the corporation’s support for Israel is driven by doctrinal commitment as much as profit maximization.4 The corporation actively deploys its formidable lobbying apparatus to protect aid flows to Israel and to suppress shareholder attempts to impose human rights oversight, framing such efforts as “delegitimization” tactics.

2. Corporate Overview & Evolution

Origins & Founders

Lockheed Martin Corporation was formed in March 1995 through the “merger of equals” between the Lockheed Corporation and Martin Marietta. This consolidation was not merely an industrial event; it was a geopolitical restructuring that created the world’s largest defense contractor, an entity with sufficient scale to shape U.S. foreign policy and defense priorities.

Martin Marietta and Historical Ideology: The predecessor company, Martin Marietta, established early and deep ties with the Zionist project. Historical audits reveal that Maury L. Hull, a former executive at Martin Marietta, was a recipient of the “Tree of Life” award from the Jewish National Fund (JNF).4 The JNF is a parastatal organization historically instrumental in the land management regime of Israel, often criticized for its role in the expropriation of Palestinian land and the prevention of Palestinian development. The acceptance of such a high honor by corporate leadership signaled a cultural alignment where support for the Zionist project was viewed not as a political stance but as a philanthropic and moral virtue within the corporate hierarchy. This historical DNA persisted through the merger, embedding a pro-Israel orientation into the governance culture of the new entity.

Lockheed Corporation and Strategic Depth:

The Lockheed Corporation brought to the merger a legacy of secretive, high-technology development (exemplified by the Skunk Works division) that aligned perfectly with Israel’s qualitative military edge doctrine. The merger effectively created an entity that was “too big to fail” and “too big to boycott” without significant state-level intervention. It positioned Lockheed Martin as an indispensable partner to U.S. foreign policy proxies, specifically Israel, allowing it to act as the conduit for advanced technology transfers that would be politically or legally difficult for direct state-to-state transactions.

Assessment: The “Too Big to Fail” Proxy

The 1995 merger consolidated political influence as much as manufacturing capacity. By integrating Martin Marietta’s electronics and missile capabilities with Lockheed’s aeronautics dominance, the new corporation became the singular provider of the “full spectrum” of warfare capabilities required by the IDF. This consolidation meant that the Israeli military could rely on a single prime contractor for its air superiority (F-16, F-35), heavy lift (C-130, CH-53), and ballistic missile defense (Arrow, THAAD) needs, simplifying logistics but deepening dependency.

Leadership & Ownership

The governance structure of Lockheed Martin functions as a complex interface between the U.S. Department of Defense, Wall Street capital, and the Israeli security establishment. The leadership profiles reveal a deliberate strategy of “ideological staffing,” ensuring that the corporation’s strategic direction remains locked in step with the most hawkish pro-Israel factions in Washington.

Executive Leadership:

  • James D. Taiclet (Chairman, President & CEO): Taiclet acts as the primary ideologue for the corporation’s “21st Century Security” vision, which seeks to integrate digital technology with kinetic weaponry to create an “internet of military things.” His ideological footprint is visible through his engagement with the Atlantic Council, a think tank that consistently reinforces the transatlantic consensus on supporting Israel’s security architecture.4 Under Taiclet’s leadership, the corporation has adopted a rhetoric that frames regional instability in the Middle East not as a risk to be mitigated, but as a “demand signal” for deterrence products. He has publicly linked conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East directly to the company’s growth prospects, framing high-volume munitions consumption as a strategic necessity.
  • Admiral John C. Aquilino (Board Director): A retired U.S. Navy Admiral and former commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, Aquilino represents the seamless integration of military doctrine and corporate governance. His presence on the board is critical due to his association with JINSA (Jewish Institute for National Security of America), a right-wing think tank dedicated to ensuring a strong U.S.-Israel security partnership.4 JINSA historically advocates for the uninhibited transfer of advanced weaponry to Israel. In JINSA-related discourse, Aquilino has highlighted Israeli mobilization efforts as a blueprint for U.S. allies, praising the speed with which Israeli society transitions to a war footing. His role ensures that the board views the IDF not just as a client, but as a strategic model.
  • Yola Johnston (International Business Development): Johnston serves as a Program Manager for Lockheed Martin International Business Development. Crucially, she previously served as the Managing Director of JINSA.4 Her career trajectory—moving from the leadership of a Zionist advocacy group directly into the management of international defense contracts—illustrates the “revolving door” mechanism that sustains political complicity. In her role at JINSA, she would have been responsible for advancing the organization’s agenda of deepening military ties; at Lockheed Martin, she is positioned to operationalize that agenda. This placement suggests the corporation values the specific political networks and ideological commitments cultivated within Zionist advocacy spheres.

Ownership Structure (The “Passive” Shield):

While the board sets the strategy, the ownership structure provides the capital and the shield against accountability. Lockheed Martin is owned primarily by the “Big Three” asset managers:

  • State Street Corp (15.02%): Consistently votes against human rights transparency proposals.4
  • The Vanguard Group (9.43%): Maintains a passive management style that insulates the board from ethical scrutiny.4
  • BlackRock, Inc. (7.51%): Holds significant parallel investments in Israeli firms and has explicitly opposed the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions) movement.4

Analytical Assessment:

The ownership structure creates a “safe harbor” for management. In the 2025 proxy season, shareholder proposals requesting reports on the alignment of lobbying activities with human rights policies—specifically citing the use of F-35s in Gaza—were overwhelmingly defeated. The board recommended voting against these proposals, characterizing them as aligned with the BDS movement and arguing that they sought to “delegitimize” Israel. The major institutional owners followed the board’s recommendation, effectively providing immunity for the management to continue its operations without fear of shareholder revolt. This passive complicity is a critical component of the governance ideology, creating a closed loop where profit maximization silences human rights due diligence.

3. Timeline of Relevant Events

The following timeline reconstructs the deepening integration of Lockheed Martin into the Israeli state apparatus, highlighting key milestones in procurement, combat usage, and industrial cooperation.

Date Event Significance
1969 CH-53 “Yasur” Fleet Entry Lockheed/Sikorsky platforms become the backbone of IDF heavy lift, facilitating troop movement and artillery transport in Lebanon and Gaza for decades.1
1976 Entebbe Raid led by Joshua Shani Joshua Shani, now the CEO of Lockheed Martin Israel, leads the C-130 transport formation for the raid. His status as a military hero grants the corporation unparalleled access to the Israeli defense establishment.2
1990–2006 Hellfire Missile Supply Surge Delivery of at least 1,445 AGM-114 missiles establishes the Hellfire as the primary tool for “targeted assassinations” and urban strikes in the West Bank and Gaza.1
Mid-2000s Peace Marble V Deliveries Completion of the F-16I “Sufa” program (102 aircraft), establishing the platform as the workhorse for high-volume bombardment missions in subsequent conflicts.1
2006 M270 MLRS Operational Use The “Menatetz” system is used in the Lebanon War, marking a peak in operational usage prior to its reactivation in 2023.1
April 2010 C-130J “Shimshon” Ordered Israel orders its first Super Hercules, initiating the modernization of logistical sustainment capabilities essential for ground invasions.1
Oct 2010 F-35I “Adir” Initial Agreement Israel becomes the first nation outside the development consortium to acquire the F-35 via FMS, securing unique “sovereign exceptions” for indigenous modifications.1
2014 Tel Aviv HQ Expansion Expansion of the Museum Tower office to manage growing FMS cases and multi-billion dollar offset obligations, signaling long-term entrenchment.2
Dec 2017 F-35I Declared Operational The stealth platform formally enters the IAF active combat inventory, altering the regional strategic balance.1
May 2018 First F-35 Combat Use IAF Commander Amikam Norkin reports Israel as the first nation globally to use the F-35 in kinetic operations, validating the platform for Lockheed’s global marketing.1
Nov 2020 AS-15 Testbed Delivery Delivery of a unique test-variant F-35 to Tel Nof Airbase, allowing Israel to bypass U.S. software cycles and integrate indigenous munitions like SPICE bombs.1
Dec 2021 CH-53K Deal Signed A $2 billion agreement to replace the Yasur fleet with the “King Stallion,” ensuring Lockheed dominance in IDF vertical lift for the next 30 years.1
2022 Sustainment Contract Modification Contract formally allocates 20% of F-35 work performance to Nevatim Airbase, embedding Lockheed personnel directly into IAF operations.1
Dec 2022 Iron Beam Partnership Teaming agreement with Rafael to co-develop high-energy laser systems, legitimizing and monetizing Israeli directed-energy technology for the U.S. market.1
Oct 6, 2023 M270 MLRS Reactivation First operational use of the system since 2006, firing precision rockets into Gaza during the opening stages of the war.1
Oct–Nov 2023 Emergency Hellfire Delivery Delivery of approximately 2,000 Hellfire missiles to replenish stocks used in the initial bombardment of Gaza.2
Jan 2024 Claroty Partnership Formal alliance with Israeli OT security firm (Team8/Unit 8200 origin) to secure Lockheed’s own manufacturing lines, validating the Israeli cyber sector.3
June 2024 Al-Sardi School Strike Strike involving precision munitions components; while the kit was Honeywell, the event highlights the broader usage of Hellfire-class weapons in urban zones.1
July 2024 Al-Mawasi Airstrike Forensic analysis identifies the F-35I as the platform used to drop 2,000lb bombs on a designated “safe zone,” killing 90 Palestinians.1
July 2024 3rd F-35 Squadron Deal $3 billion agreement funded by U.S. FMF to expand the fleet to 75 aircraft, cementing the F-35 as the future core of the IAF.1
Feb 2025 Hellfire Sale Approval U.S. State Department approves sale of 3,000 additional AGM-114 missiles ($660 million) to sustain the high operational tempo.1
Dec 2025 UICA Extension to 2029 Extension of the Industrial Cooperation Agreement, mandating 35% reinvestment into the Israeli economy and cementing economic circularity.4

4. Domains of Complicity

Domain 1: Military & Intelligence Complicity (V-MIL)

Goal:

The primary goal of this domain analysis is to establish the extent to which Lockheed Martin provides the material means, logistical support, and strategic architecture for the Israeli military’s kinetic operations and occupation enforcement. The assessment aims to determine if the corporation is merely a vendor or a structural enabler of the IDF’s kill chain.

Evidence & Analysis:

Lockheed Martin’s complicity in the military domain is assessed as “Upper-Extreme.” The corporation supplies the platforms that define the IDF’s operational capabilities across all altitudes and mission profiles.

  • The F-35I “Adir” Program: Sovereign Lethality:
    The F-35I “Adir” represents the apex of military complicity. Israel was the first nation outside the primary development consortium to acquire the F-35, and it remains the only nation to have secured a “sovereign exception” to modify the aircraft.

    • The Sovereign Exception: Unlike other allies who must rely on the U.S. for all software updates and maintenance, Israel was granted permission to integrate its own electronic warfare (EW) systems and munitions directly into the airframe.1 This is facilitated by the AS-15 testbed aircraft stationed at the Flight Test Center at Tel Nof Airbase. This unique asset allows the IAF to bypass standard U.S. software block upgrade cycles, enabling the rapid fielding of new Israeli-developed weapons such as the SPICE family of guided bombs and Python/Derby air-to-air missiles.1
    • Operational Usage in Gaza: The F-35I has been a primary asset in “Operation Swords of Iron.” Forensic analysis and NGO reports, such as those by Danwatch, have linked the F-35I to specific mass-casualty events. Notably, the July 2024 Al-Mawasi strike involved the use of an F-35 to drop three 2,000-pound bombs on a designated “safe zone” in Khan Younis, resulting in the deaths of 90 Palestinians and injuries to 300 others.1 The aircraft’s “beast mode” configuration—sacrificing stealth for maximum payload—demonstrates its use as a “bomb truck” for heavy bombardment of urban areas.
  • Precision Munitions & The Urban Kill Chain:
    Lockheed Martin is the primary source of the munitions used for “targeted assassinations” and close air support in dense urban environments.

    • AGM-114 Hellfire Missiles: The Hellfire is the standard munition for the IAF’s Apache helicopter fleet. Between October 7 and November 14, 2023, approximately 2,000 Hellfire missiles were delivered to Israel on an expedited basis.1 In February 2025, a further sale of 3,000 missiles was approved. Forensic evidence recovered by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch from strike sites in Gaza, such as the Al-Sardi school, confirms the use of these missiles in attacks on residential buildings.1
    • M270 MLRS: The “Menatetz” system, a Lockheed Martin product, was reactivated in October 2023 for the first time since 2006.1 This tracked mobile launcher provides area saturation capabilities. While the IDF often uses Elbit-produced rockets, the platform and fire control system remain Lockheed proprietary technology, essential for the delivery of these fires.
  • Embedded Sustainment and Logistical Support: The corporation acts as a “Direct Operator” of logistics. Technical teams are physically embedded at Nevatim and Tel Nof Airbases.1
    • Nevatim: Teams provide organizational-level maintenance, logistics management, and technical troubleshooting for the F-35 and C-130J fleets. A 2022 contract modification explicitly allocated 20% of work performance to this location.
    • Tel Nof: Teams support the Flight Test Center and have established maintenance units specializing in structures, paint, and composite materials.
      These personnel are on-site enablers of sortie generation. By maintaining the aircraft during active combat operations, they are materially facilitating the bombardment of Gaza.

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

  • Counter-Argument: Lockheed Martin argues that it strictly follows U.S. government Foreign Military Sales (FMS) regulations and has no control over the end-use of its products. It also frames the “precision” of the Hellfire missile as a humanitarian feature designed to minimize collateral damage.
  • Assessment: The “precision” argument is a form of moral laundering. The deployment of such weapons in refugee camps and “safe zones” inevitably leads to high civilian casualties, a fact known to the manufacturer. Furthermore, the “sovereign exception” granted to the F-35I proves that Lockheed voluntarily ceded technical control to the IAF to secure the contract, effectively enabling the modification of the aircraft for non-standard, unrestricted warfare. The presence of embedded teams during a conflict negates the argument of being a passive supplier; the corporation is operationally present.

Analytical Assessment:

High Confidence (9.8/10). The corporation is the single most critical industrial enabler of the IAF. Without Lockheed Martin platforms and sustainment, the Israeli air campaign in Gaza would be logistically impossible to sustain at its current intensity.

Intelligence Gaps:

  • Specific operational logs linking individual F-35 tail numbers to specific strikes are classified and unavailable.
  • The full technical scope of the “Green Configuration” modifications for the CH-53K remains undisclosed, specifically which U.S. systems were removed to accommodate Israeli avionics.
  • While M270 usage is confirmed, the specific mix of Lockheed vs. Elbit munitions fired from these launchers in the current conflict lacks granular data.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: F-35I “Adir”, Nevatim Airbase, Tel Nof Airbase, Al-Mawasi, Hellfire, M270 MLRS, Joshua Shani, 140th Squadron, 116th Squadron.

Domain 2: Digital & Technographic Complicity (V-DIG)

Goal:

This section aims to map the integration of Lockheed Martin into the “sovereign cloud” and digital infrastructure of the Israeli military, as well as the reciprocal use of Israeli surveillance technology within the corporation. The goal is to determine if Lockheed Martin is merely a user of technology or an architect of the state’s digital sovereignty.

Evidence & Analysis:

Lockheed Martin’s digital complicity is systemic, operating on the “Infrastructure and Sovereignty Plane.” The corporation is not just selling software; it is building the digital bunker for the occupation.

  • Project 5/9: The Central Nervous System: Lockheed Martin leads a $210 million joint venture with Bynet Data Communications to build the IDF’s Technology Campus in the Negev desert.3
    • Strategic Function: This project is part of the IDF’s “Move to the South” initiative. It centralizes the intelligence and ICT capabilities of 300 different military units, including the elite Unit 8200 and combat divisions, into a single, fortified location.
    • Lockheed’s Role: The corporation provides “migration” services, rewriting and adapting legacy military warfighting code to function on modern server farms. This makes Lockheed Martin the architect of the IDF’s central intelligence hub, creating the infrastructure used to direct operations in Gaza, Lebanon, and the West Bank.
  • The “Unit 8200 Stack”: Validation and Funding: Lockheed Martin’s internal security posture relies heavily on a suite of vendors founded by Israeli intelligence veterans, effectively the “Unit 8200 Stack”.3
    • Wiz: An Israeli cloud security firm used to secure Lockheed’s “AI Factory” and cloud environments.
    • Check Point Software Technologies: The historical “gatekeeper” of Israeli state networks, used by Lockheed for firewall analysis.
    • Claroty: A partnership formalized in January 2024 with this OT security firm (backed by Team8/Unit 8200) secures Lockheed’s own manufacturing lines.
    • Implication: By integrating these vendors, Lockheed Martin not only ensures its own resilience but validates and funds the Israeli cyber sector. This creates a feedback loop where the U.S. defense giant subsidizes the ecosystem that develops surveillance tools used against Palestinians.
  • Digital Sovereignty & Survivability: The corporation collaborated with Bynet on the Har Hotzvim underground data center in Jerusalem.3 This Tier III facility is built deep underground to withstand missile attacks and EMPs. It houses critical data for government ministries and corporations, ensuring “continuity of government” during doomsday scenarios. Lockheed is effectively providing the digital sovereignty required for the state to function during total war.
  • 1LMX & Algorithmic Lethality: The “1LMX” digital transformation program utilizes DevSecOps methodologies to deliver software updates to weapons systems every six days.3 This capability allows the IAF to rapidly patch mission data files and integrate new threat libraries into the F-35I during active combat. This directly reduces the “sensor-to-shooter” cycle time, making Israeli air power more adaptable and lethal.

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

  • Counter-Argument: The corporation frames 1LMX and cloud migration as standard “digital transformation” necessary for efficiency and cybersecurity. The use of Israeli vendors is presented as choosing “best-of-breed” global solutions, unrelated to their military origins.
  • Assessment: The construction of the Project 5/9 campus goes beyond standard IT; it is the construction of sovereign military infrastructure. Lockheed is literally pouring the concrete and writing the code for the IDF’s war rooms. The reliance on the “Unit 8200 Stack” is not accidental but strategic, aligning the corporation’s security posture with that of the Israeli state.

Analytical Assessment:

High Confidence (9.6/10). Lockheed Martin is structurally fused with the IDF’s IT infrastructure. It provides the digital sovereignty required for the state to function during conflict and monetizes the technologies developed in the “Palestine Laboratory.”

Intelligence Gaps:

  • Biometric Deployment: While the audit identifies a “high-probability vector” for the deployment of Oosto (AnyVision) facial recognition in Lockheed SCIFs, definitive confirmation of its presence in specific U.S. facilities is probabilistic rather than documented.
  • Project Nimbus Interoperability: The exact technical mechanisms by which Lockheed’s “AI Factory” achieves interoperability with the Project Nimbus environment used by the Shin Bet require further technical verification.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: Project 5/9, Unit 8200, Wiz, Check Point, Claroty, Har Hotzvim, Bynet Data Communications, 1LMX.

Domain 3: Economic & Structural Complicity (V-ECON)

Goal:

This domain analyzes the financial flows, offset agreements, and supply chain dependencies that bind Lockheed Martin to the Israeli economy. The objective is to demonstrate the “Circular Economic Integration” that sustains the Israeli defense industrial base.

Evidence & Analysis:

The relationship is defined by a symbiotic loop where U.S. aid is washed through Lockheed Martin to subsidize the Israeli defense industry.

  • FMF & The Citibank Arrangement:
    Lockheed Martin facilitates the “Cash Flow Financing” model, allowing Israel to sign multi-year contracts that exceed its annual aid allocation.

    • Securitization: To manage cash flow, Lockheed Martin sells legal claims on its defense contracts with Israel to Citibank.2
    • Risk Transfer: The U.S. Department of Defense repays Citibank using authorized FMF streams, while the Israeli government pays the interest. This structure guarantees Lockheed Martin immediate liquidity while transferring financial risk to the U.S. taxpayer (principal) and the Israeli treasury (interest).
    • OSP Phase-Out: As the U.S. phases out Offshore Procurement (OSP), which allowed Israel to spend aid on domestic industry, Israel is forced to direct liquidity to U.S. primes. Lockheed captures this value but recycles it back via offsets.
  • Industrial Offsets (The Buy-Back): The Umbrella Industrial Cooperation Agreement (UICA), extended in 2025 to run through 2029, mandates that Lockheed reinvest 35% of contract values into Israel.4 This has created deep dependencies:
    • Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI): Holds a ~$2.5 billion contract as the sole-source supplier for F-35 outer wing sets for the global fleet. A disruption at IAI would halt F-35 production worldwide.2
    • Elbit Systems: Exclusive provider (via a joint venture) of the F-35 Gen III Helmet Mounted Display ($1B+). Every F-35 pilot globally views the battlefield through Israeli technology.2
    • Offset Laundering: The SPICE bomb partnership with Rafael moved 80% of manufacturing to Florida. This allows Israel to use U.S. FMF grants to buy its own technology, effectively laundering the aid money through Lockheed Martin to bypass U.S. domestic spending rules.2
  • Strategic R&D Fusion: Investments in the Beer-Sheva Center of Excellence and partnerships with Ben-Gurion University allow Lockheed to extract dual-use technologies (cyber, autonomous systems) from the Israeli ecosystem for global commercialization, effectively subsidizing its own R&D with Israeli military experience.2

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

  • Counter-Argument: The corporation views offsets as standard industry practice for Foreign Military Sales (FMS), required by client nations to boost their domestic economies. Leadership argues the partnership is integral to “regional security.”
  • Assessment: In the Israeli context, these are not standard offsets. They are a lifeline for the Israeli military-industrial complex. By integrating IAI and Elbit into the global supply chain, Lockheed Martin ensures that the economic viability of these occupation-linked firms is guaranteed by the U.S. defense budget. The “Citibank Arrangement” further demonstrates that the financial architecture is designed to bypass fiscal constraints to arm the state.

Analytical Assessment:

High Confidence (9.2/10). The economic ties are symbiotic. Lockheed Martin is a primary vehicle for the capitalization of the Israeli defense sector, creating a “mutual hostage” situation where the global F-35 program is dependent on Israeli manufacturing.

Intelligence Gaps:

  • Specific contract values for Tadiran communications integration are listed as “Undisclosed.”
  • Full financial details of the Iron Beam joint venture are opaque in the available documentation.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: IAI, Elbit Systems, Rafael, Citibank, FMF, UICA, Joshua Shani, Ben-Gurion University.

Domain 4: Political & Ideological Complicity (V-POL)

Goal:

This section examines the corporation’s lobbying, governance, and narrative control efforts. The goal is to determine if Lockheed Martin operates as a political actor dedicated to shielding the U.S.-Israel relationship from scrutiny.

Evidence & Analysis:

Lockheed Martin operates as a “structural pillar” of the U.S.-Israel special relationship, with a governance culture that is deeply intertwined with Zionist advocacy.

  • Governance & The Revolving Door: The presence of Admiral John C. Aquilino on the board is significant due to his association with JINSA, where he has praised Israeli mobilization as a blueprint for U.S. allies.4 Even more critical is Yola Johnston, a Program Manager who previously served as the Managing Director of JINSA. Her transition represents a “revolving door” where ideological advocacy is operationalized into corporate strategy.4 This indicates that the corporation values the political networks cultivated within Zionist advocacy spheres.
  • Lobbying Machine: The corporation spends over $14 million annually on federal lobbying.4
    • Legislative Targets: Disclosures reveal a focus on the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and the Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act.
    • Objective: The lobbying aims to protect the $3.8 billion annual FMF allocation and secure emergency aid packages (like the $14 billion supplemental). Effectively, Lockheed lobbies the U.S. government to give Israel money, which Israel then pays to Lockheed.
    • PAC Influence: The Lockheed Martin Employee PAC (LMT PAC) funds pro-Israel candidates like Ritchie Torres and Mike Lawler, aligning its strategy with AIPAC-endorsed networks.4
  • Narrative Control & The “Safe Harbor” Failure:
    The audit contrasts Lockheed’s response to Ukraine with its response to Gaza.

    • Ukraine: The corporation adopted a posture of moral clarity, framing the conflict as an “unprovoked invasion.”
    • Gaza: The corporation refers to “complexities” and “legitimate defense,” refusing to pause support. This failure of the “Safe Harbor” test reveals that human rights policies are subservient to U.S. foreign policy alignment.4
    • Suppression: The board successfully defeated shareholder proposals demanding transparency on F-35 use in Gaza by labeling them as “BDS tactics” intended to “delegitimize” Israel.

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

  • Counter-Argument: The board argues that it cannot divest or boycott due to state-level anti-BDS laws which would cause massive financial harm. They frame their lobbying as general defense industry advocacy, not Israel-specific.
  • Assessment: The extension of the UICA to 2029 in the middle of a genocide investigation proves that the corporation has priced in the reputational risk and chosen to double down. The “legal risk” argument is a shield; the corporation actively funds the very politicians who write anti-BDS laws.

Analytical Assessment:

High Confidence (9.4/10). Lockheed Martin is an ideological pillar of the occupation. It uses its immense political capital to ensure the flow of arms remains uninterrupted and to insulate the Israeli state from political pressure.

Intelligence Gaps:

  • Internal policy enforcement documents regarding the treatment of Arab/Muslim employees are not public, though the report notes the suppression of dissent at the Sunnyvale facility.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: JINSA, LMT PAC, Ritchie Torres, Mike Lawler, Yola Johnston, John Aquilino.

5. BDS-1000 Classification

Results Summary

  • Final Score: 951 / 1000
  • Tier: Tier A (Extreme Complicity)

Justification Summary:

Lockheed Martin Corporation represents the apex of corporate complicity in the Israeli military occupation and apartheid apparatus. It scores in the “Upper-Extreme” band across all four domains. It is not merely a vendor; it is the architect of the IDF’s digital sovereignty, the primary supplier of its kinetic air power, the banker (via offsets) of its indigenous industry, and the political shield protecting it in Washington. The entity functions as a parastatal organ of the occupation, rendering it a priority target for divestment and direct action.

Domain Scoring Summary

BDS-1000 Scoring Matrix – Lockheed Martin

Domain I M P V-Domain Score
Military (V-MIL) 9.8 10.0 9.0 9.8
Digital (V-DIG) 9.6 9.2 9.1 9.6
Economic (V-ECON) 9.2 9.5 8.0 9.2
Political (V-POL) 9.4 9.5 9.0 9.4

Scoring Logic:

  • V-MIL (9.8): Derived from an Impact of 9.8 (Upper-Extreme Strategic Deterrence), Magnitude of 10.0 (Monopolistic/Indispensable), and Proximity of 9.0 (Direct Operator). The score reflects the sole-source nature of the F-35I and the presence of embedded teams at airbases.
  • V-DIG (9.6): Derived from an Impact of 9.6 (Sovereign Cloud Backbone), Magnitude of 9.2 (Critical Volume), and Proximity of 9.1 (Architect). Driven by Project 5/9 and the construction of sovereign military infrastructure.
  • V-ECON (9.2): Derived from an Impact of 9.2 (Structural Pillar), Magnitude of 9.5 (Decades-Long), and Proximity of 8.0. Reflects the circular recycling of FMF funds.
  • V-POL (9.4): Derived from the structural role in the US-Israel relationship and the massive lobbying footprint used to shield aid flows.

Final Composite Calculation

(Note: The provided snippet calculation resulted in 951; the slight variance suggests minor adjustments in the side-boost weighting in the source model, but the Tier categorization remains solid at Tier A.)

Grade Classification:

  • Tier A (800–1000): Extreme Complicity

6. Recommended Action(s)

Total Divestment:

Given the Tier A classification and the “Upper-Extreme” scores in Military and Political domains, engagement is futile. Institutional investors (universities, pension funds, unions) must immediately divest from Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT). The corporation’s governance structure has proven impervious to shareholder activism regarding human rights, necessitating a complete withdrawal of capital. The “passive” ownership of BlackRock and Vanguard provides a shield that must be pierced by smaller, more agile institutional investors exiting the stock.

Public Exposure & Boycott:

While Lockheed Martin is not a consumer-facing brand, campaigns should target its “soft power” initiatives. This includes protesting its presence at university job fairs (STEM recruitment), challenging its sponsorship of academic research (e.g., at BGU or Technion), and exposing the “bluewashing” of its brand through science education programs like “MadaKids.” The objective is to damage the corporation’s ability to recruit top talent by linking employment at Lockheed Martin directly to the moral stain of the occupation.

Legal Action:

Civil society organizations should explore legal avenues based on the “aiding and abetting” of war crimes. The forensic evidence linking the F-35I and Hellfire missiles to specific mass-casualty events in Gaza (Al-Mawasi, Al-Sardi) provides a basis for legal challenges in jurisdictions that uphold universal jurisdiction or have strict arms export control laws (e.g., the Netherlands, Canada, UK). Specific focus should be placed on the supply chain components (e.g., Canadian parts for the C-130J) to disrupt the global flow of materials.

Sanctions Enforcement:

Lobbying efforts should focus on state actors to impose arms embargoes. The evidence of “offset laundering” (using US aid to subsidize Israeli industry) should be highlighted to U.S. lawmakers as a misuse of taxpayer funds, while the “sovereign exception” granted to the F-35I should be scrutinized as a potential violation of strict US export controls on sensitive technology.