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    Home > Headlines > Wartime innovation boosts Israeli defence tech growth, drawing global interest
    Headlines

    Wartime innovation boosts Israeli defence tech growth, drawing global interest

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on July 8, 2025

    5 min read

    Last updated: January 23, 2026

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    Tags:innovationtechnologyventure capital

    Quick Summary

    Israeli defence tech innovation is booming, attracting global interest and investment, particularly in Europe, amid changing defence needs.

    Wartime innovation boosts Israeli defence tech growth, drawing global interest

    By Emily Rose

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli army reservist Zach Bergerson felt he had to take action when he saw fellow soldiers having to rely on their eyes and ears to detect swarms of enemy drones overhead.

    So the high-tech professional, 36, developed a wearable device that uses mobile phone technology to warn troops of aerial threats. Like other reservists, Bergerson has leveraged his civilian expertise and military experience to bolster Israel's defence industry.

    Known as SkyHoop, his startup has since emerged from stealth mode - a period when startups typically work in secrecy - to be piloted in Ukraine with discussions under way for a trial by the U.S. Defense Department. 

    While U.S. President Donald Trump brokers a Gaza ceasefire, Israeli startups like Bergerson's are drawing investment from U.S. and Israeli venture capital firms and looking to build on a growing European market for Israeli defence exports.

    More than a third of all defence tech startups registered with the country's Startup Nation Central, an organization that tracks Israeli innovation, were created since a deadly Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, launched the war in Gaza.

    In June, while Israel attacked Iranian nuclear and ballistic missile targets, their 12-day air war highlighted the efficacy of Israel's aerial defences. Israel successfully intercepted 86% of Iran's ballistic missile launches, the Defence Ministry said.

    The changing nature of war has led to shifts in defence procurement worldwide. Western armies demand new battle-tested technology, refined by soldiers in combat. Some 20% of Israeli reservists work in the robust high-tech sector. 

    Israeli defence startups have drawn investment from major American venture capital firms that previously avoided the sector as it was considered riskier and mired in regulation. Israeli VC firms have emerged as well to invest in defence. 

    Lital Leshem, an Israeli reservist, in December co-founded Protego Ventures, a fund that has studied some 160 defence companies and raised around $100 million. She expects the fund will invest in around four companies by year's end. 

    “Reservists are coming out of the battlefield and are actually putting together new companies to solve real problems that they have experienced in real time on the battlefield,” Leshem told Reuters.

    These companies will face major challenges scaling up to the global market and overcoming regulatory hurdles, Leshem said, but she predicts that, like Israel's cyber industry, it is a field in which Israeli entrepreneurs can thrive.

    These startups formerly viewed the U.S. as the "holy grail" for their target market, Leshem said, but that is also changing. 

    EYES ON EUROPE

    Israeli startups are hoping to benefit from Trump's demand that European countries take over from the U.S. more of the burden of defending their continent.

    Under a new NATO defence spending plan, countries will spend 5% of GDP - up from 2% - on defence. The figure includes 3.5% of GDP on "core defence" such as weapons and troops and 1.5% on security-related investments.

    Such an increase - to be phased in over 10 years - will mean hundreds of billions of dollars more spending on defence.

    Israel’s defence exports hit a record $14.8 billion in 2024, according to Defence Ministry figures released last month, while exports to Europe comprised more than 50% of these sales, up from 35% in 2023.

    Despite calls from some countries to boycott Israeli weapons, “when one side is purchasing, in the end, they want to buy the best product possible,” said Reserve Brigadier General Yair Kulas, head of the Defence Ministry International Defence Cooperation Directorate.

    Largely as a result of the Russia-Ukraine war, Kulas said, European states are upgrading their militaries, sending older equipment to Ukraine and replacing it with new products, many of them from Israel. Kulas said the story of Israeli weapons exports is also part of a larger global trend.

    The political backlash is worrisome, Kulas said, because on the one hand Israel’s innovation is groundbreaking and world-class but there has been a “delegitimization of Israel". 

       More than 57,000 Palestinians have been killed, most of them civilians, local health officials have said, in the 21 months since Israel launched its assault on Gaza, displacing the population and leaving the territory in ruins. 

    “I don’t know how it will impact the results in 2025,” Kulas told Reuters. He said it is “certainly a huge challenge.”

    Avi Hasson from Startup Nation Central said the surge of new defence startups created by reservists is reminiscent of a technological revolution 20 years ago that would later evolve into smartphones.

    Startups may prompt larger Israeli defence companies such as Elbit, Rafael and Israel Aerospace Industries to either try to acquire more Israeli startups and help bring them up to scale or develop their own technology at a faster pace. 

    "We are now in a different world," Hasson told Reuters.

    (Reporting by Emily Rose; Editing by Howard Goller)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Israeli defence tech is growing due to wartime innovation.
    • •Startups like SkyHoop are attracting global investments.
    • •Israeli defence exports to Europe are increasing.
    • •Reservists leverage military experience for tech solutions.
    • •Venture capital firms are investing in Israeli defence.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Wartime innovation boosts Israeli defence tech growth, drawing global interest

    1What is the purpose of the wearable device developed by Zach Bergerson?

    The wearable device, known as SkyHoop, uses mobile phone technology to warn troops of aerial threats, addressing the need for better detection of enemy drones.

    2How has the geopolitical landscape influenced Israeli defense startups?

    The changing nature of warfare and the demand for battle-tested technology have led to increased investment in Israeli defense startups, particularly from U.S. and European venture capital firms.

    3What are the expected changes in European defense spending?

    Under a new NATO defense spending plan, European countries are set to increase their defense budgets from 2% to 5% of GDP, leading to hundreds of billions of dollars more in defense spending over the next decade.

    4What challenges do Israeli defense startups face in scaling up?

    Israeli defense startups must navigate significant regulatory hurdles and the complexities of entering global markets, despite their innovative technologies being developed in response to real battlefield needs.

    5What record did Israel's defense exports achieve in 2024?

    Israel's defense exports reached a record $14.8 billion in 2024, with more than 50% of these sales directed towards European countries, reflecting a growing interest in Israeli defense technology.

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