Federal News
DoD Faces Oversight on Cluster Munitions Purchase
March 25, 2026
The Department of Defense awarded a $210 million no-bid contract to Israeli government-backed Tomer, Ltd. for the procurement of XM1208 cluster munitions under an indefinite delivery/quantity contract with a ceiling value of $829.1 million, awarded September 30, 2025. Representative Sara Jacobs and members of the House Armed Services Committee have initiated an oversight inquiry demanding detailed information on the rationale, safety, and future use of these munitions, reflecting concerns about humanitarian impact and policy consistency with international norms.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should be aware of increased congressional scrutiny on controversial defense contracts, which may affect future contracting processes and transparency requirements.
- The no-bid nature of this contract and its humanitarian implications could influence DoD procurement policies and vendor selection criteria going forward.
- Contractors in the defense sector should evaluate the potential for heightened oversight and compliance demands related to sensitive weapons systems.
- Organizations involved in munitions manufacturing or supply chains may find evolving regulatory and political factors impacting contract awards and execution.
We write to request detailed information regarding your Department’s reported purchase of $210 million in XM1208 cluster munitions from Tomer, Ltd.
— Rep. Sara Jacobs
Agencies
Department of Defense, House Armed Services Committee
Vendors
Tomer, Ltd.
Contracts
$829.1 million ceiling value, $210 million purchase reported