Spain unilaterally cancelled a multi-million-dollar contract to buy bullets from an Israeli company following pressure from the Socialist-led government’s far-left coalition partner.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, one of the most outspoken critics of Israel’s military operations in Gaza, halted weapons transactions with Israel after the outbreak of the war following Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
The interior ministry sought to terminate the 6.8-million-euro ($7.8 million) contract with Israeli firm IMI Systems, which was to supply bullets to the Spanish Civil Guard police force.
But on Wednesday, the ministry said it had abandoned its attempt to cancel the deal after state legal services advised against it “due to the advanced stage of the processing of the contract” and because it would have had to pay without receiving the bullets.
The far-left Sumar party, the junior partner in Sanchez’s ruling coalition, reacted angrily, calling the reversal “a blatant violation” of the government’s pledge not to trade weapons with Israel.
“The investment board for dual-use material will deny this company permission to import this equipment to our country for reasons of general interest, and immediately afterwards, the interior ministry will terminate the contract,” the sources added.
Sumar’s Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Diaz said she had personally “negotiated” with the interior minister and the prime minister to pull the plug on the contract.
Spain “cannot buy arms from a government that massacres the Palestinian people”, she told reporters.
Israel’s military offensive has devastated Gaza and killed more than 50,000 people in the tiny coastal territory, according to the health ministry there.
The row over the contract came as Sumar was still reeling from Sanchez’s announcement on Tuesday that Madrid will boost defence spending to two percent of annual economic output this year — the benchmark agreed by NATO allies.
The government had previously aimed to meet this target in 2029 but brought it forward under pressure from Washington.
Sanchez’s minority government has struggled to pass legislation since he secured a new term in 2023 by cobbling together an alliance of left-wing and regional separatist parties traditionally hostile to NATO and alignment with US foreign policy.