US approves possible 136 mln USD military sale to NATO

The United States has formally authorized a significant foreign military sale to NATO allies valued at approximately $136.1 million. The approval, granted by the Trump administration on Thursday, will facilitate the extension of service life for Stinger missile systems operated by key European partners.

According to the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA), the transaction responds to a formal request from the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA). The procurement package includes essential components such as booster pellets, flight motors, gas generator cartridges, and Stinger warhead sections. Additionally, the sale encompasses comprehensive technical support services provided by both US government experts and defense contractors.

The initiative falls under NSPA’s management of the Stinger Service Life Extension Program, which it administers on behalf of three NATO members: Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands. As NATO’s primary organization for multinational defense acquisition and sustainment, NSPA coordinates these critical modernization efforts across alliance members.

Raytheon, the American defense corporation that manufactures the Stinger system, describes it as a lightweight, self-contained air defense platform capable of rapid deployment by ground forces. The portable surface-to-air missile system has been a cornerstone of NATO’s air defense capabilities for decades.

The DSCA emphasized that this proposed arms transfer would directly support mutual US and NATO defense objectives by enhancing alliance readiness and strengthening collective air defense capabilities. The agency further noted that the recipient nations would encounter no logistical challenges integrating these upgraded components into their existing military infrastructure.