Well why don't we start with the facts about the Raytheon story. After all, I am certain you would agree that all the readers here should know all the facts to prevent them from jumping to some erroneous conclusion. There is, after all, "plenty to see", and that transparency is due to the effective investigatory efforts of the US Government and the strength of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. That effort will cost the new RTX corporation, which was created through the merger of Raytheon and United Technologies in 2020, a nearly billion dollar write off, and an extensive period of compliance overwatch.
The corruption occurred under Raytheon between 2012 and 2018 in two forms. The first was an over charge to the US government of $111 million for the cost of three Patriot Batteries. This was discovered through a Raytheon whistleblower and criminal charges were brought through the DOJ for damages. The other, was discovered through the Securities and Exchange Commission, where the company was demonstrated to have bribed a Qatari official in order to win a competitive contract for the Qatari armed forces.
The two issues were combined in a settlement with the corporation where it essnetially pled no contest. For the over charge the company will pay a $146.8 million criminal liability and a further $428 million civil claim under the False Claims Act. In addition, the whistleblower herself will receive $4.2 million for reporting the incident. The bribery allegation was settled through a $252.3 million dollar penalty along with other forfeitures. They are also required to increase their compliance monitoring and remain under direct federal compliance supervision for three years.
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act has been pretty effective since 1977 in stopping most US corporate efforts to buy contracts abroad. It actually puts US corporations at a competitive disadvantage in the developing world. The result has been, that countries tend to purchase critical must haves from the US and less critical assets from European or Asian sources where considerations flow more freely.
Anyway, my takeaway is that our government and its regulatory system worked as designed and caught a bad corporate actor. That is what is to see here.
With respect to the security breach and Israel, you can believe whatever makes you happy, but you know nothing more than me or anyone else on this site. Just to add to the conspiracy file, a new one on the left is that the administration leaked the data in conjunction with the Israeli government in order to let Israel off the hook in trying to respond militarily to Iran - something it has limited capability to do. I also suspect that Israeli missile defense assets are pretty low after fighting off two huge barrages from Iran. Who knows? No one here - yet.