Lockheed Martin’s US$15 Billion THAAD missile deal to Saudis at risk after Khashoggi killing
- Lockheed Martin executives break silence over Khashoggi killing and their business with Saudi Arabia

Lockheed Martin’s potential US$15 billion sale to Saudi Arabia of its THAAD air-defence system may be the unfinished deal most vulnerable to growing congressional demands to stop providing arms to the desert kingdom after the killing of critic Jamal Khashoggi.
It also underscores that the US$110 billion package of arms sales that US President Donald Trump announced on his visit to the Gulf nation last year – and has vowed to protect despite Khashoggi’s death – was always aspirational at best.
“That number is not analytically helpful, that number is politically helpful,” said Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
“It’s not close to US$110 billion in hardware, and it doesn’t go this year or next year.”
The pending Saudi deals for arms, logistics and training includes sales started during President Barack Obama’s administration.
Only US$14.5 billion of that involves signed “letters of offer and acceptance” that spell out final terms and prices, according to the Pentagon.