Target: McDonald’s Corporation
Audit Phase: V-MIL (Military Forensics)
Research Date: 2026-05-01
Prepared From: Training-data sourced research memo; no live web search conducted. All claims sourced exclusively from the research memo below.
No verified contracts, tender awards, framework agreements, or memoranda of understanding have been identified between McDonald’s Corporation (or its Israeli franchisee Alonyal Ltd) and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the Israel Defence Forces as an institutional procurer, the Israel Prison Service, or the Israel Border Police.828 A cross-reference of the US federal procurement database (USASpending.gov) returned no listings for McDonald’s Corporation in any defence-related category.26
The documented activity closest to military provisioning is the October 2023 decision by Alonyal Ltd — the Israeli McDonald’s franchisee — to provide free meals to Israeli military reservists and soldiers mobilising in the aftermath of the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack.12917 This was a unilateral commercial decision by the franchisee, executed at civilian commercial restaurant premises. It was not a state procurement contract, a tendered supply arrangement, or an institutional catering agreement. McDonald’s Corporation publicly distanced itself from the action within days of the reports emerging.1927
McDonald’s Corporation does not appear in the SIBAT Israel Defence Export and Defence Cooperation Directorate listings or in any Israeli defence exhibition catalogue.15 A cross-reference conducted against the Israeli Ministry of Defence SIBAT catalogue returned no responsive result for McDonald’s or Alonyal Ltd.15[^32] McDonald’s does not appear in any international defence procurement registry in connection with Israeli state security contracts.26
No corporate press releases, Israeli government announcements, IDF communications, or defence trade press reports document defence cooperation, joint ventures, or formal partnership agreements between McDonald’s (corporate or franchise level) and any Israeli defence entity.828 McDonald’s Corporation’s October 2023 public statement explicitly characterised the Alonyal franchise meal giveaway as inconsistent with corporate values and as not sanctioned by corporate headquarters.1927
No public evidence identified of formal defence contracting or procurement relationships between McDonald’s Corporation and Israeli or any other state security bodies.
McDonald’s is a quick-service restaurant operator and international franchisor. Its commercial output is prepared food products, beverages, and restaurant services. It does not manufacture, market, licence, or supply ruggedised, tactical, military-specification, or defence-grade variants of any product.8 No evidence has been identified of McDonald’s producing or seeking to produce any product line that would attract dual-use classification.
McDonald’s commercial output is exclusively civilian in character. Prepared food products and restaurant services are not subject to dual-use classification under any standard export control taxonomy — including the EU Dual-Use Regulation (2021/821), the US Export Administration Regulations (EAR) and Commerce Control List (CCL), or the Wassenaar Arrangement’s lists of controlled goods and technologies.8 No product or service in McDonald’s portfolio falls within a controlled category that would require end-user certification or strategic export authorisation.
No public evidence has been identified of export licence applications, end-user certificates, or government export control reviews relating to McDonald’s sales to Israeli defence or security end-users in any jurisdiction.828
No public evidence identified across all dual-use sub-categories.
McDonald’s is not a manufacturer of heavy machinery, construction equipment, engineering plant, or military vehicles. It does not appear in the Who Profits Research Center, AFSC Investigate, Amnesty International, or UN OHCHR A/HRC/43/71 databases in relation to construction, demolition, or earthmoving activity in occupied territories in any machinery or infrastructure capacity.222430
The UN OHCHR A/HRC/43/71 (2020) database of businesses with activities in Israeli settlements has been cited by civil society organisations in the context of McDonald’s Israel (via Alonyal Ltd), but those citations relate exclusively to the presence of restaurant branches at settlement-proximate commercial locations, not to construction or engineering activity.227 This distinction is addressed further under Logistical Sustainment & Base Services.
No public evidence has been identified of McDonald’s holding contracts — directly or through any subsidiary or affiliated party — for the construction, maintenance, or expansion of military checkpoints, detention facilities, IDF bases, the West Bank separation barrier, or settlement infrastructure of any kind.828
Not applicable. McDonald’s does not procure, supply, or trade construction materials, and no indirect supply chain link to settlement construction or military infrastructure has been identified in any source reviewed.
No public evidence identified for heavy machinery, construction, or military infrastructure contracting.
McDonald’s is not a component manufacturer, industrial supplier, or technical sub-contractor. No verified supply relationships have been identified between McDonald’s Corporation and Israeli defence prime contractors, including Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, or Israel Military Industries / IMI Systems.2425
A cross-reference of Elbit Systems’ 2023 Annual Report against McDonald’s as a supplier or customer returned no connection.24 A review of IAI’s publicly listed supplier registry likewise identified no McDonald’s or Alonyal Ltd entry.25
Not applicable. McDonald’s produces no optical systems, electro-optic or electro-magnetic sub-assemblies, propulsion components, structural defence materials, precision guidance systems, communications modules, armour materials, or any other category of defence-relevant component.
No public evidence has been identified of joint development programmes, co-production agreements, technology transfer arrangements, or licensed manufacturing agreements between McDonald’s Corporation (or any franchise entity) and any Israeli or other defence prime contractor or government defence research body.
No public evidence identified across all supply chain integration sub-categories.
No verified institutional contracts to provide catering, transport, fuel, or other support services to IDF bases, military training establishments, detention centres, or security installations have been identified in any reviewed source.826 The US federal procurement database confirmed no responsive records for McDonald’s in a defence logistics or base services capacity.26
The October 2023 Alonyal franchise meal giveaway — whereby Israeli McDonald’s branches offered free food to mobilising reservists — is the only documented instance of McDonald’s-branded food reaching active military personnel in the context of IDF operations.12917 This episode occurred at civilian commercial restaurant locations under a franchisee’s own initiative and does not constitute a base service contract, a catering framework agreement, or an institutional supply arrangement with the IDF or any Israeli security body.19
Who Profits Research Center (2023) and associated civil society databases document McDonald’s Israel (Alonyal Ltd) operating restaurant branches at locations within or proximate to Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including at commercial zones in disputed or settlement-adjacent areas such as the Malha Mall in Jerusalem.712 Visualizing Palestine’s 2023 documentation also references McDonald’s West Bank and settlement-adjacent branch locations.23 The Alonyal corporate profile compiled by the Corporate Occupation database similarly flags this geographic presence.18
This constitutes a civilian commercial retail presence in contested geographic territory. The UN OHCHR A/HRC/43/71 (2020) database of businesses with settlement activities has been cited by NGOs in this context.22 No source reviewed confirms that any of these branches directly served military installations or provided contracted services to IDF or security force personnel at those locations. A complete, verified branch-by-branch geographic audit was not identified in open sources within the scope of this research.
McDonald’s Corporation completed the acquisition of the Israeli franchise from Alonyal Ltd in February 2024, converting approximately 225 locations to direct corporate operation.3413 The post-acquisition operating structure, and whether any settlement-located branches were closed or retained under corporate ownership, is not fully documented in sources reviewed.
McDonald’s is not a shipping, freight forwarding, or port handling operator. No public evidence has been identified of McDonald’s holding contracts servicing Israeli defence logistics, military cargo, or dual-use goods transit.
No public evidence identified of formal military base service contracts. Settlement-adjacent civilian restaurant presence is documented above and is a matter of civil society record rather than defence contracting.
McDonald’s is not a weapons manufacturer and has no role as a prime contractor, tier-one subcontractor, or licensed manufacturer for any lethal platform. No public evidence has been identified of any such role.8
No public evidence has been identified of any supply by McDonald’s of ammunition, explosive ordnance, chemical propellants, warhead components, or munitions precursor materials in any commercial, contractual, or incidental capacity.
No public evidence has been identified of any McDonald’s role in the manufacture, systems integration, maintenance, overhaul, or component supply for Israeli strategic or missile defence systems — including Iron Dome, David’s Sling, or Arrow — or for fighter aircraft programmes, main battle tank platforms, naval vessels, or ballistic missile systems.
Not applicable. McDonald’s produces no guidance electronics, fire-control systems, radar or sensor components, propulsion units, warhead casings, or any other militarily relevant sub-system. No cross-reference with Elbit Systems or IAI supplier records identified any responsive entry.2425
No public evidence identified across all munitions, weapons systems, and strategic platforms sub-categories.
No public evidence has been identified of any government decision — in any jurisdiction — to grant, deny, suspend, or revoke an export licence for McDonald’s products or services to Israeli military or security end-users.828 McDonald’s food products and restaurant services are not subject to strategic export controls in any reviewed regulatory framework, and no licensing file or published administrative decision referencing McDonald’s in this context has been located.
No investigations, citations, administrative findings, or enforcement actions related to McDonald’s compliance with arms embargoes, strategic export control regimes, or sanctions affecting defence trade with Israel — or with any other state — have been identified in reviewed sources.828 McDonald’s does not operate in the strategic goods trade that would bring it within the scope of such regulatory regimes.
No court proceedings, judicial reviews, arbitral proceedings, or administrative legal challenges brought against McDonald’s Corporation, Alonyal Ltd, or any related entity regarding a defence supply relationship with Israel have been identified in any reviewed source.828
No public evidence identified across all export licensing, regulatory, and legal sub-categories.
Who Profits Research Center (2023) documents McDonald’s Israel (Alonyal Ltd) in its corporate occupation database on two grounds: (a) the operation of restaurant branches in or proximate to Israeli settlements in the West Bank; and (b) the October 2023 free-meal provision to IDF reservists.712 Who Profits classifies this activity under civilian economic normalisation of occupation rather than direct military contracting. The characterisation is of facilitation of occupation-linked economic activity, not weapons or defence supply.
BDS National Committee launched a formal global boycott campaign against McDonald’s following the October 2023 Alonyal soldier-meal announcement, citing the franchisee’s conduct as constituting material support for IDF operations in Gaza.611 Middle East Eye documented the BDS campaign’s framing and public uptake contemporaneously.11
War on Want (2023) included McDonald’s in its corporate complicity in occupation fast-food sector survey, referencing both the settlement branch presence and the October 2023 episode as illustrative of civilian corporate entrenchment in occupied territory.14
Amnesty International (2022–2023) fast-food and corporate occupation mapping referenced settlement-adjacent commercial operations by multiple fast-food operators including McDonald’s Israel, situating the presence within a broader pattern of civilian corporate activity in Israeli settlements.30
AFSC Investigate database (2024) lists McDonald’s in its Israel-related corporate screening tool, flagging the franchisee’s soldier-meal giveaway and settlement commercial presence as the primary factors of concern.21
UN OHCHR A/HRC/43/71 (2020) — the UN Human Rights Office database of businesses with activities in Israeli settlements — has been cited by multiple NGOs in relation to McDonald’s Israel.22 McDonald’s Corporation has not confirmed or denied listing status in the UN database in any public filing reviewed. The precise status of McDonald’s Israel in the primary OHCHR document text was not independently verified against the source document within the scope of this research.
Al Jazeera English provided contemporaneous coverage in October 2023 of the soldier-meal controversy and its international reception.9 Haaretz covered the franchise controversy from an Israeli media perspective in November 2023.27 The Times of Israel documented the franchise background and corporate response.17 The Washington Post reported McDonald’s corporate rebuke of the franchisee decision.19
The BDS National Committee issued a formal call to boycott McDonald’s globally in October 2023, with the Alonyal meal giveaway as the immediate trigger.611 The campaign attracted significant public uptake in Muslim-majority markets and generated measurable commercial consequences. McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski stated in the January 2024 Q4 2023 earnings call that boycotts linked to the Middle East conflict had negatively impacted sales in the Middle East, Malaysia, Indonesia, and parts of Europe.10 The Financial Times reported on the resulting sales decline.5 The Guardian reported ongoing sales weakness in Middle Eastern and Muslim-majority markets through April 2024.20 BBC News documented the McDonald’s boycott as part of its broader survey of companies facing Gaza-related consumer campaigns.16
McDonald’s Corporation completed the buyback of the Israeli franchise from Alonyal Ltd in February 2024, acquiring approximately 225 locations for an undisclosed sum.3413 The Associated Press and Reuters both reported the buyback as occurring against the backdrop of the boycott and associated commercial damage.34 McDonald’s did not formally characterise the acquisition as a direct response to the boycott in public statements, though the Q4 2023 earnings call acknowledged material sales impact.10
No institutional divestment decisions by pension funds or sovereign wealth funds specifically citing McDonald’s military or defence supply activities have been identified. Documented divestment pressure and civil society scrutiny relates to the franchise’s civilian conduct — the meal giveaway and settlement commercial presence — and not to any weapons, weapons systems, or defence contracting activity.21
In October 2023, McDonald’s Corporation issued a statement asserting that “McDonald’s corporate has no involvement with the independent Israeli franchise’s decision” to provide free meals to soldiers and characterising the company as standing “for communities and against hate of any kind.”1917 In February 2024, McDonald’s completed the acquisition of the Israeli franchise, converting it to direct corporate operation without issuing a formal public statement attributing the acquisition to the boycott.34
McDonald’s 2022 Global Human Rights Policy Statement does not contain specific provisions addressing military or security force catering, end-use monitoring for franchise operations in conflict-affected areas, or governance of supply to conflict zones.29 The 2023 Form 10-K and associated SEC filings acknowledge geopolitical risk and the sales impact of the boycott at a high level but contain no disclosures relating to defence contracting or military supply.828
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/13/mcdonalds-israel-soldiers-free-meals-reservists ↩↩
https://apnews.com/article/mcdonalds-israel-franchise-buyback-boycott-gaza-war ↩↩↩↩
https://www.reuters.com/business/mcdonalds-buy-back-israeli-franchise-amid-boycott-2024-02-05/ ↩↩↩↩
https://www.ft.com/content/mcdonalds-boycott-sales-israel-gaza ↩
https://bdsmovement.net/news/mcdonalds-israel-soldiers-meals ↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0000063908&type=10-K&dateb=&owner=include&count=10 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/10/13/mcdonalds-israel-soldiers-free-meals ↩↩↩
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/01/29/mcdonalds-ceo-chris-kempczinski-boycott-sales-impact.html ↩↩
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/mcdonalds-bds-boycott-israel-soldiers ↩↩↩
https://whoprofits.org/company/mcdonalds-israel-settlements ↩↩
https://www.reuters.com/business/mcdonalds-completes-israel-franchise-buyback-alonyal-2024-02 ↩↩
https://waronwant.org/resources/corporate-complicity-occupation-fast-food ↩
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-67922943 ↩
https://www.timesofisrael.com/mcdonalds-israel-franchise-soldiers-free-food ↩↩↩↩
https://corporateoccupation.org/companies/alonyal ↩
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2023/10/mcdonalds-israel-franchise-rebuke ↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/apr/mcdonalds-sales-middle-east-boycott ↩
https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-of-businesses ↩↩↩↩
https://visualizingpalestine.org/visuals/mcdonalds-west-bank ↩
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-11/mcdonalds-israel-franchise-controversy ↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0000063908&type=10-K&dateb=&owner=include&count=10 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://corporate.mcdonalds.com/corpmcd/our-purpose-and-impact/people/human-rights.html ↩
https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde15/corporate-occupation-settlements ↩↩