Which countries are funding Israel’s ongoing genocide and global supply chains
These countries may not ship complete weapons, but they supply critical parts embedded in multinational platforms such as the F-35 and other systems:
- United Kingdom — aircraft components, electronics, subsystems
- Italy — aircraft and naval components
- France — dual-use electronics, sensors, avionics parts
These exports occur through licensed defense industry supply chains.
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Defense cooperation and joint development
India
- Joint production, drones, missiles, and surveillance systems
- Bilateral defense trade and technology partnerships
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Dual-use technology and licensed exports (varies by year)
These countries export technology that can have both civilian and military applications, depending on licensing and end use:
- Australia — electronics, optics, avionics parts
- Canada — machinery, electronics, dual-use tech under license
- Sweden — avionics and defense-related components
- Spain, Netherlands, Belgium — electronics and aerospace components under EU export rules
- Japan — advanced electronics entering global aerospace supply chains
These are not always weapons, but parts and technologies that can be integrated into military platforms.
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How the chain works
- Funding enables purchases.
- Complete weapons systems are delivered directly by some states.
- Components are manufactured across multiple countries and assembled into global platforms.
- Dual-use technology flows through licensed exports and industrial partnerships.
- The result is a distributed responsibility that is harder for the public to see.
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Why this matters
Modern warfare is not sustained by one country alone. It is supported by networks of policy decisions, export licenses, defense contracts, and alliances that cross continents. Public awareness of these links is essential for informed debate, oversight, and accountability in democratic societies.
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