Switzerland's freeze on payments for delayed US Patriot air-defence systems is being circumvented, as the US redirects funds already allocated for F-35 fighter jets to cover the Patriot costs, a move confirmed by Swiss procurement officials.

"This is very unsatisfactory."
"A low three-digit million amount."
Switzerlandâs attempt to flex its financial muscle has been met with a cold reality check from Washington. More than CHF 100 million intended for F-35 fighter jets has been unilaterally redirected by the United States to cover costs for delayed Patriot missile systems. This bold maneuver effectively castrates the payment freeze Swiss authorities implemented last autumn. Bern had hoped to signal its displeasure over multi-year delivery delays, but the US government has proven that when it comes to arms deals, they hold the ledger. This circumvention confronts Swiss sovereignty with the rigid mechanics of American military bureaucracy, leaving Swiss procurement officials scrambling to explain how a 'freeze' resulted in a massive outflow of capital.
A staggering 'low three-digit million amount'âsurpassing CHF 126 millionâhas already vanished from the F-35 account. The mechanism behind this is the US Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program, a centralized fund where all Swiss military payments are pooled. While Bern views these as separate pots of money for separate projects, the US treats the fund as a fungible reservoir. If the Patriot program lacks liquidity due to Swiss freezes, the US simply taps into the F-35 reserves. Urs Loher, Switzerlandâs director of national armaments, confirms this practice is ongoing despite Swiss protests. This structural loophole ensures that the US defense industry remains paid, regardless of whether Swiss politicians approve of the delivery schedule.
The financial hit is compounded by a dramatic 50% surge in the projected cost of the Patriot system. Switzerland now faces a total bill of CHF 3 billionâa staggering CHF 1 billion increase over the original contract. Meanwhile, the delivery timeline has utterly collapsed. Originally slated for arrival this year, the batteries are now delayed by at least five years. Washingtonâs decision to prioritize Ukraine, coupled with the outbreak of war in Iran, has pushed Switzerland to the back of the queue. As global demand for long-range air defense soars, Switzerland finds itself paying significantly more for a system that will not protect its airspace until the end of the decade at the earliest.
Bern is now grappling with a self-inflicted budgetary wound. By the end of 2025, the Swiss Defense Ministry was forced to transfer tens of millions of francs ahead of schedule just to plug the holes left by the US redirection of funds. This 'unsatisfactory' situation, as Loher describes it, creates a domino effect across the military budget. With the F-35 account depleted to pay for the Patriot, the ministry must find new ways to fund the very jets the money was originally for. This financial shell game intensifies existing struggles to fund approved procurements, leaving the Swiss Army in a precarious position where it is paying for two major systems but currently possesses neither.
This crisis exposes the vulnerability of a neutral nation in an era of global rearmament. Switzerlandâs neighbors increasingly view the country as a 'weak link' in European security, yet the very tools intended to bolster Swiss defense are now pawns in a larger geopolitical game. While Loher defends the payment freeze as a necessary 'political signal' that forced transparency from the US, the practical result is a loss of both capital and time. As the Swiss government considers reducing its F-35 order from 36 to 30 jets to balance the books, the nation must confront a hard truth: in the modern arms market, neutrality does not buy priority. Switzerland is learning that in a world at war, even the most ironclad contracts are subject to the strategic whims of superpowers.