The US Department of State has approved two foreign military sales to Qatar, totalling over $5 billion for air defence and precision weapons.
This decision, announced via emergency determination, enables Qatar to purchase PATRIOT Air and Missile Defence replenishment services and associated equipment valued at $4.01bn, as well as Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) rounds and support, amounting to $992.4m.
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Under the PATRIOT programme, Qatar has requested 200 Phased Array Tracking Radar to Intercept On Target (PATRIOT) Advanced Capability-2 (PAC-2) Guidance Enhanced Missile-Tactical units and 300 PATRIOT Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) Missile Segment Enhancement units.
The agreement also includes non-major defence equipment such as PAC-2 and PAC-3 missile and ground support equipment spare parts, missile canister consumables, repair and return actions, a PAC-3 field surveillance programme, and further technical, engineering, and logistics support provided by the US Government and contractors.
Separately, the Department of State has also approved the procurement of 10,000 APKWS-II all-up-rounds (single variant).
The deal covers supplementary items such as LAU-131 A/A launchers, MK-152 high explosive warheads, MK66 rocket motors, proximity fuzes, WTU-1/B practice warheads, inert MK66 rocket motors, technical documentation, and logistics support.
In both the deals, Congressional review requirements have been waived, with the Secretary of State providing “detailed justification” of an emergency that requires the immediate sale.
The sales aim to reinforce the security relationship with Qatar, described as an important force for regional stability and economic progress in the Middle East, as well as facilitating increased interoperability with US military units.
Qatar is expected to use the PATRIOT system to bolster its missile defence capabilities, support territorial defence, and deter regional adversaries.
Regarding the APKWS acquisition, the Department notes that “Qatar will have no difficulty absorbing these articles and services into its armed forces.”
Lockheed Martin and RTX have been appointed as contractors for the PATRIOT package, with BAE Systems handling the APKWS supply.
The US government asserts that no additional government or contractor personnel deployments to Qatar will be necessary for the implementation of these sales.
Theses FMS approvals come after Qatar entered a new defence agreement with Ukraine aimed at enhancing cooperation in countering missiles and uncrewed aerial systems.
According to GlobalData’s Qatar Defense Market 2026-2031 report, in 2026, the Qatari Government allocated an estimated $17bn to the country’s defence budget, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.5% from 2022 to 2026.