U.S. Set to Sell F-35 Jets to Saudi Arabia in Major Strategic Shift
President Donald Trump announces a landmark armament deal as Riyadh seeks advanced air-defence capabilities
The United States has moved to approve the sale of up to 48 F-35 stealth fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, marking a significant pivot in Washington’s defence posture and Riyadh’s long-standing procurement ambitions.
President Donald Trump declared on 17 November 2025 that the U.S. would proceed with the deal, made public on the eve of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Washington visit.
Saudi Arabia is seeking to modernise its air force amid regional security concerns.
The F-35 transfer would represent its first acquisition of America’s most advanced combat aircraft, and it comes as the kingdom pledges substantial investment in U.S. technology ventures, including artificial intelligence and civil-nuclear partnerships.
The sale triggers two fast-emerging strategic issues.
First, U.S. law requires that Israel retain a qualitative military edge in the Middle East; officials say the jets destined for Saudi Arabia may lack certain top-tier systems present in the Israeli variant.
Second, concerns about technology security loom large: Riyadh’s expanding defence ties with China and deepening technology links raise oversight questions about protecting U.S. aviation secrets.
Israeli officials, while not opposing in principle, are reportedly lobbying for the sale to be conditioned on Saudi normalisation with Israel.
The crown prince has reiterated that a pathway to Palestinian statehood remains a precondition for full diplomatic ties with Jerusalem.
In Washington, Congressional scrutiny appears imminent.
Past humanitarian concerns, including the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and regional technological risks may shape the fate of the deal.
Nonetheless, the Trump administration argues the move reinforces Saudi-U.S. strategic alignment, supports U.S. defence industry interests and advances regional deterrence against Iranian influence.
While delivery of the jets may take years, the announcement itself signals a deeper U.S.–Saudi defence partnership and recalibrates air-power dynamics across the Gulf and beyond.