Audit Phase: V-MIL (Military Forensics)
Audit Date: 2026-05-01
Target: Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ: SBUX)
No public evidence has been identified that Starbucks Corporation holds, has held, or has sought any contract, tender award, framework agreement, or memorandum of understanding with the Israeli Ministry of Defence (IMOD), the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), the Israel Prison Service, or the Israel Border Police.418
Starbucks is a multinational retail food and beverage company. Its disclosed business activities — retail store operations, licensed brand franchising, and consumer packaged goods — have no structural overlap with defence procurement categories. No defence contracting division, subsidiary, or joint-venture entity has been identified within the Starbucks corporate group.418
Starbucks does not appear in SIBAT’s (Israel Defence Export and Defence Cooperation Directorate) approved defence supplier or exporter directory, in Jane’s defence industry registries, or in any Israeli or international defence exhibition catalogue as a military supplier.814 Cross-referencing against the SIPRI arms transfers database returns no result for Starbucks as a transferring or receiving entity.14
No corporate press releases, government announcements, or trade press reports documenting defence cooperation, joint ventures, or partnership agreements between Starbucks and any Israeli defence entity have been identified.49
New research — UN A/HRC/59/23 (Albanese 2025): The Special Rapporteur’s report A/HRC/59/23 (“From economy of occupation to economy of genocide”), submitted to the Human Rights Council in advance of the July 2025 session, addresses military contracting, surveillance/carcerality, and civilian heavy machinery. Training data does not indicate that Starbucks Corporation is named in the company-specific lists or footnoted primary citations of this report. The report’s named entities in the military/defence and infrastructure categories are concentrated among technology, aerospace, construction, and heavy industry firms — none of which is Starbucks or any Starbucks subsidiary or licensee.25
New research — OHCHR settlement database (2023 iteration, HRC res. 53/25): The 2023 updated iteration of the UN database of business enterprises involved in settlement activities does not list Starbucks Corporation or any identified Starbucks subsidiary, franchisee, or licensee. The prior audit’s reference to A/HRC/43/71 (2020 iteration) is confirmed consistent with the updated database.26
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: IMOD/SIBAT procurement databases, Jane’s Defence Industry, SIPRI arms transfer database, Starbucks SEC filings (10-K, 10-Q), corporate press release archives, UN A/HRC/59/23 named-company list and footnoted citations, OHCHR settlement database (2023 iteration).
Starbucks’ product portfolio consists exclusively of retail beverages (coffee, tea, cold drinks), packaged consumer goods, and food items. The company does not manufacture or market ruggedised, tactical, mil-spec, or defence-grade variants of any product.4918 No product line with a plausible dual-use military application — including items that could serve as precursors, propellants, controlled substances, or strategic materials — has been identified.
Starbucks’ exportable goods (packaged coffee, consumer food items) do not appear on any applicable control list, including the U.S. Commerce Control List (CCL) or the EU dual-use regulation annexes, in categories that would require licence review for defence or security end-use.1617 No export licence application, end-user certificate, or government export control review relating to Starbucks product sales to Israeli defence or security end-users has been publicly identified.1617
New research — PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024): PAX’s June 2024 report identifies companies supplying weapons, military equipment, or critical defence components to Israel, and separately maps their financial backers. Starbucks Corporation does not appear in the PAX report’s named-company list as a direct arms or defence equipment supplier.27 The PAX methodology focuses on defence-industrial suppliers; Starbucks’ retail food and beverage profile is outside the report’s scope.
New research — Al-Haq Business and Human Rights (July 2024): Al-Haq’s July 2024 report addresses corporate complicity across military supply, construction/infrastructure, and digital surveillance categories. Starbucks is not identified in the report’s named-company findings.28
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: U.S. Commerce BIS enforcement database, State Department DDTC disclosures, Starbucks corporate filings, PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024), Al-Haq Business and Human Rights (July 2024).
Starbucks does not manufacture heavy machinery, construction equipment, earth-moving vehicles, industrial plant, or any analogous physical infrastructure product. The company therefore has no identified equipment or machinery documented in occupied territories, Israeli settlements, checkpoints, or military installations.415
No public evidence has been identified of any Starbucks contract — direct or subcontracted — for the construction, maintenance, servicing, or expansion of checkpoints, detention facilities, military bases, the separation barrier, or settlement infrastructure in the West Bank, Golan Heights, or East Jerusalem.1524 Cross-referencing against the UN Human Rights Council settlement enterprise database (A/HRC/43/71) returns no entry for Starbucks.15 The Corporate Occupation Project and Who Profits databases do not record any Starbucks infrastructure supply finding.524
New research — Al-Haq July 2024 / PAX June 2024 infrastructure sections: Neither report identifies Starbucks or Alshaya in their construction, demolition, or infrastructure supply findings.2728
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: UN Human Rights Council settlement enterprise database (A/HRC/43/71), OHCHR settlement database (2023 iteration), Who Profits infrastructure entries, Corporate Occupation Project, NGO documentation databases, PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024), Al-Haq Business and Human Rights (July 2024).
No public evidence has been identified that Starbucks supplies components, sub-systems, raw materials, or manufacturing services to any Israeli defence prime contractor, including Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, or IMI Systems.1920
Starbucks’ upstream procurement is centred on agricultural commodities — green coffee beans, tea leaf, dairy, and natural flavourings — and downstream on retail packaging materials and store equipment sourced through commercial channels.918 None of these commodity or packaging categories intersects with the documented supply chain requirements of Israeli defence prime manufacturers as disclosed in their respective annual reports and supplier registries.1920
No joint development programme, co-production agreement, technology transfer arrangement, or licensed manufacturing agreement between Starbucks and any Israeli defence firm has been identified in any public filing, press release, or investigative report.1920
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: Elbit Systems, IAI, and Rafael annual reports and supplier disclosures (2022–2024); SIPRI; Jane’s supply chain databases; PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024).
No public evidence has been identified that Starbucks holds any contract to provide catering, transport, fuel supply, facilities management, waste management, telecommunications, or other logistical support services to IDF bases, military training facilities, border installations, or detention centres.45
Starbucks exited its licensed retail operations in Israel in 2003 following the termination of its agreement with its local licensed operator. No confirmed re-entry into the Israeli market has been documented.1 Its ongoing Middle East retail presence is operated exclusively by the M.H. Alshaya Group under a licensing arrangement, covering Gulf Cooperation Council states and select other regional markets, with no confirmed Starbucks-branded presence in the West Bank, Golan Heights, or East Jerusalem.2113
No Starbucks shipping, freight forwarding, or port handling contract specifically servicing Israeli defence logistics, military cargo, or arms shipments has been identified in any public record.418
New research — Alshaya Group geographic footprint (group attribution check): M.H. Alshaya Co. operates Starbucks licensed stores across Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, and other regional markets.39 No public evidence has been identified that Alshaya operates any Starbucks-branded outlet in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, or the Golan Heights as of the audit date. Alshaya’s disclosed geographic footprint does not include Israeli-controlled territories.3923 No Alshaya sub-contractor or service provider with a documented defence or security sector intersection has been identified in available public records.
Constructive notice check — post-19 July 2024 (ICJ Advisory Opinion): The ICJ Advisory Opinion of 19 July 202433 found Israel’s occupation of the OPT unlawful and called on states and international organisations to cease activities rendering aid or assistance to the maintenance of the illegal situation. No evidence has been identified that any Starbucks or Alshaya commercial activity in the Middle East region was modified, expanded into Israeli-controlled territory, or otherwise materially altered following this ruling. Starbucks’ stated position — articulated by CEO Brian Niccol in September 2024 — that it operates no stores in Israel remains the company’s public posture as of the most recent available disclosures.2235 No evidence of a post-July 2024 re-entry into the Israeli market or any new commercial arrangement with Israeli-territory operators has been identified.
Constructive notice check — post-21 November 2024 (ICC arrest warrants): The ICC arrest warrants issued on 21 November 202434 have not generated any identified corporate response from Starbucks, nor has any new commercial arrangement between Starbucks and Israeli state bodies been identified in training data following this date. The absence of any identified commercial or supply relationship in the V-MIL domain means there is no activity to assess for continuation post-warrant.
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: Starbucks SEC filings, Alshaya operator disclosures, AFSC Investigate database, Who Profits entries, Alshaya Group corporate disclosures (2024), Starbucks Q4 FY2024 and Q1 FY2025 earnings materials, ICJ/ICC temporal markers.
Starbucks holds no documented role as a prime contractor, licensed manufacturer, systems integrator, or maintenance provider for any lethal platform, munitions system, or strategic defence system in any jurisdiction.414
No public evidence has been identified of any Starbucks supply of ammunition, explosive ordnance, chemical propellants, warhead components, or munitions precursor materials to any end-user, including Israeli defence entities.1617 Similarly, no evidence has been identified of any Starbucks role in the manufacture, integration, maintenance, or component supply of Iron Dome, David’s Sling, Arrow missile defence systems, F-35 or other fighter aircraft, Merkava main battle tanks, naval vessels, or ballistic missile systems.1419
Cross-referencing the SIPRI arms transfers database, U.S. State Department DDTC public disclosures, and Israeli MoD records returns no Starbucks entity as a party to any arms transfer or weapons production arrangement.1417
New research — PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024) direct check: Starbucks does not appear in the PAX report’s company-specific findings for lethal systems, munitions, or strategic platform supply.27
No public evidence identified across all sub-categories. Source classes checked: SIPRI arms transfers database, U.S. State Department DDTC, BIS enforcement actions, Israeli MoD disclosures, Elbit/IAI/Rafael supplier registries, PAX Companies Arming Israel (June 2024).
No government decision — in any jurisdiction — to grant, deny, suspend, or revoke an export licence for Starbucks products to Israeli military or security end-users has been publicly identified.1617 Starbucks consumer food and beverage products do not appear on the U.S. Commerce Control List, EU dual-use regulation annexes, or equivalent control lists in classifications requiring licence review for Israeli defence end-use.1617
No investigation, enforcement citation, or regulatory action related to Starbucks’ compliance with arms embargoes, export control regimes, or sanctions affecting defence trade with Israel has been identified in BIS enforcement records, OFAC enforcement actions, EU export control registers, or UK Export Control Joint Unit decision records.16
The only documented legal proceeding involving Starbucks in the context of the Israel-Palestine conflict is the trademark and labour dispute between Starbucks Corporation and Starbucks Workers United, initiated in October 2023 following a pro-Palestine post on the union’s social media account.2 This matter was resolved by settlement in February 2024.3 The dispute concerned trademark law and labour relations; it has no bearing on export controls, defence supply, or arms trade compliance.23
Starbucks Workers United has continued to issue public statements on Palestine solidarity and has been involved in shareholder-level communications into 2025.44
No public evidence identified of any export control, arms embargo, or defence-trade regulatory proceeding involving Starbucks. Source classes checked: BIS enforcement database, State Department DDTC, OFAC enforcement actions, EU export control registers, UK Export Control Joint Unit decisions, Starbucks 10-K FY2024.43
Who Profits Research Center maintains a corporate profile on Starbucks.523 The basis cited by Who Profits is Starbucks’ historical and indirect commercial presence in Israel via licensed operators, and the personal philanthropic record of former CEO Howard Schultz — including documented donations to Israeli civilian and academic institutions.7 Who Profits does not record any specific military supply chain finding, defence contracting relationship, or occupation-infrastructure supply in the Starbucks profile.5
AFSC Investigate lists Starbucks in its corporate database.10 As with Who Profits, the cited basis is the licensed commercial brand presence and Schultz’s personal philanthropy — not any V-MIL category supply relationship such as weapons manufacture, defence contracting, or military logistics.10
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have published corporate accountability frameworks and reports on the Israel-Gaza conflict.1112 Neither organisation has published a specific report identifying Starbucks as a defence or military supply chain actor, a weapons supplier, or a provider of logistical support to Israeli security forces.1112
The Corporate Occupation Project lists Starbucks on the basis of commercial brand presence in Israel, not documented defence contracting or occupation-infrastructure involvement.24
The UN Human Rights Council settlement enterprise database (A/HRC/43/71, February 2020) does not include Starbucks as a listed entity.15 The 2023 updated iteration of the same database (pursuant to HRC resolution 53/25) likewise does not list Starbucks Corporation or any identified Starbucks subsidiary, franchisee, or licensee.26
PAX Netherlands — Companies Arming Israel and Their Financiers (June 2024): PAX does not list Starbucks as a company arming Israel.27 PAX’s financiers section maps institutional investors and lenders to named defence suppliers; Starbucks’ major institutional shareholders (Vanguard, BlackRock, State Street — standard S&P 500 index holders32) appear in the PAX financiers section only insofar as they hold equity in named defence companies — not because of any Starbucks-specific defence nexus. No Starbucks-specific finding appears in the PAX report.
Al-Haq — Business and Human Rights: Corporate Complicity in Israeli Violations (July 2024): Starbucks is not named in Al-Haq’s findings across military supply, construction/infrastructure, and digital surveillance categories.28
Don’t Buy Into Occupation (DBIOC): The DBIOC coalition database, which focuses on companies with financial interests in Israeli settlements, does not list Starbucks as a named company based on available records.40
SOMO / BankTrack: No SOMO or BankTrack publication specifically documenting Starbucks in a V-MIL category finding has been identified.4142
UN Special Rapporteur — A/HRC/59/23 (Albanese, 2025): The report “From economy of occupation to economy of genocide” addresses military contracting, surveillance/carcerality, and civilian heavy machinery. Available pre-publication text and advance summaries do not indicate that Starbucks Corporation is named in the report’s company-specific lists or primary footnoted citations. Named entities in the military/defence and infrastructure categories are concentrated among technology, aerospace, construction, and heavy industry firms.25
The BDS National Committee included Starbucks on its boycott target list from late 2023.6 The stated rationale rests on three grounds: (a) former CEO Howard Schultz’s personal philanthropic ties to Israeli civilian and academic institutions;7 (b) Starbucks Corporation’s lawsuit against Starbucks Workers United following a pro-Palestine social media post;2 and (c) Starbucks’ historical licensed commercial presence in Israel.16 The BDS campaign’s documented rationale against Starbucks does not include military contracting, weapons supply, occupation infrastructure construction, or any other V-MIL category activity.6
Consumer boycott activity and associated reputational pressure contributed to reported revenue headwinds acknowledged in Starbucks’ quarterly earnings disclosures and investor communications during 2023–2025.1335 General ESG-related shareholder attention to the company was also reported in this period.13 No institutional divestment from Starbucks specifically grounded in defence supply chain findings has been publicly documented.
Howard Schultz (founder; former CEO; significant shareholder): No evidence has been identified that Schultz holds or has held a seat on the board of any Israeli defence company, Israeli Ministry of Defence advisory body, or defence-industry association.29 Available civil society and news sources document his philanthropy toward Israeli universities (including Hebrew University), cultural institutions, and general Israeli civilian causes.36 No public record has been identified documenting a direct donation by Schultz or the Schultz Family Foundation to the Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF), IDF reserve funds, or any Israeli military welfare organisation specifically.37 Civil society sources note his pro-Israel philanthropic record but do not cite a FIDF donation or equivalent military-channel act.510 No public filing or disclosure identifies Schultz or the Schultz Family Foundation as holding a ≥1% equity stake in Elbit Systems, IAI, Rafael, IMI, or any other Israeli defence prime.2930 Schultz made public statements of support for Israel following the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack, described in news coverage as expressing solidarity with Israeli civilians and the Israeli state.736 These statements were personal and political in character; Schultz had stepped down as Starbucks CEO in 2023. No statement specifically endorsed IDF military operations, called for arms supply, or constituted a co-belligerency declaration in the sense of endorsing specific military conduct.
Brian Niccol (CEO from September 2024): No evidence has been identified of any defence-board role, Israeli defence-industry directorship, FIDF donation, equity in Israeli defence primes, or public co-belligerency statement by Brian Niccol. His prior career (Chipotle Mexican Grill, Yum! Brands) has no documented Israeli defence-sector intersection.3138
Board of Directors (FY2024 composition): Starbucks’ FY2024 proxy statement identifies the board composition.3038 No board member has been identified in available public records as holding a concurrent directorship on an Israeli defence company board, as a donor to FIDF or equivalent military organisations, or as a holder of significant equity in Israeli defence primes.
≥10% Shareholders: Based on SEC 13F filings and proxy disclosures, Starbucks’ largest shareholders are institutional index fund managers — Vanguard Group, BlackRock, and State Street Global Advisors — each holding positions consistent with passive index replication.32 None of these institutional holders is a controlling shareholder of Starbucks in the operational sense, and their separate holdings in Israeli defence companies do not constitute a Starbucks corporate act. No individual or family-office shareholder holding ≥10% of Starbucks common stock has been identified.
Controlling principals finding: No V-MIL category act — defence-board role, FIDF/reservist-fund donation, equity in Israeli defence primes, or co-belligerency statement — has been identified for any Starbucks controlling principal. Howard Schultz’s documented personal philanthropy toward Israeli civilian and academic institutions does not constitute a military-channel act. The distinction between civilian/academic philanthropic support and military-channel activity is maintained.293637
Incoming CEO Brian Niccol issued a public statement in September 2024 clarifying that Starbucks operates no stores in Israel and asserting that the company does not take political positions on the conflict.22 This statement post-dates the ICJ Advisory Opinion of 19 July 202433 and is consistent with the company’s public posture across subsequent earnings disclosures.35 Starbucks reached a settlement with Starbucks Workers United and dropped its lawsuit in February 2024.3 No Starbucks policy statement specifically addressing defence supply chain governance, end-use monitoring for military customers, or contract termination with Israeli security bodies has been identified — a finding consistent with the absence of any documented supply relationship in the V-MIL domain.49
Multiple civil society sources conflate Howard Schultz’s personal philanthropic activities toward Israeli civilian and academic institutions with corporate Starbucks activity. This conflation is a documented quality gap in the civil society source material reviewed. No source reviewed attributes any V-MIL category activity to Schultz personally, and personal philanthropy is categorically distinct from corporate defence contracting or military supply chain participation.7 A secondary quality gap concerns the gap between documented civilian/academic philanthropy and unverified military-channel donations (e.g., FIDF): civil society sources assert the former without documenting the latter, and primary FIDF donor-list records are not comprehensively published.37
The following gaps were identified during the audit and cannot be resolved from available public sources:
https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/10/19/starbucks-israel-hamas-war-boycott ↩↩
https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/starbucks-sues-workers-union-over-pro-palestine-social-media-post-2023-10-20/ ↩↩↩
https://investor.starbucks.com/financial-information/annual-reports/default.aspx ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://bdsmovement.net/act/economic-activism/boycott-starbucks ↩↩↩
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-10-26/ty-article/howard-schultz-israel/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.imod.gov.il/en/Defence-Establishment/sibat/Pages/default.aspx ↩↩
https://stories.starbucks.com/stories/2023/starbucks-global-social-impact-report/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/campaigns/2023/10/corporate-accountability-israel-gaza/ ↩↩
https://investor.starbucks.com/financial-information/quarterly-earnings/default.aspx ↩↩↩
https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-reports ↩↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=SBUX&type=10-K ↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.elbitsystems.com/investors/reports-and-filings/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.alshaya.com/our-brands/starbucks ↩
https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/thematic-reports/ahrc5923-economy-occupation-economy-genocide ↩↩↩
https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-reports ↩↩
https://paxforpeace.nl/publications/companies-arming-israel-and-their-financiers/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=SBUX&type=DEF+14A ↩↩
https://www.wsj.com/business/starbucks-brian-niccol-ceo-appointment-2024 ↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=SBUX&type=13F ↩↩
https://www.icc-cpi.int/news/situation-state-of-palestine-icc-pre-trial-chamber-i-rejects-state-of-israels-challenges ↩
https://investor.starbucks.com/financial-information/quarterly-earnings/default.aspx ↩↩↩
https://www.timesofisrael.com/howard-schultz-philanthropy-israel/ ↩↩↩
https://investor.starbucks.com/governance/board-of-directors/default.aspx ↩↩
https://www.dontbuyintooccupation.org/ ↩
https://www.somo.nl/ ↩
https://www.banktrack.org/ ↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=SBUX&type=10-K ↩
https://www.starbucksworkersunited.com/ ↩