The Jerusalem Post

Israeli defense firms keep going

- • By SHIRI HABIB-VALDHORN

Israel has many defense companies, as well as companies with activity tangential to the defense industry, and they employ tens of thousands of people, some near the Gaza Strip or under intense rocket fire, and they continue to operate despite the fighting.

Elbit Systems, for example, has sites in Sderot and in Beersheba; Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) also operates in Beersheba among other places; and Ashot Ashkelon (which Elbit sold to private equity fund FIMI two years ago), is, as its name implies, located in Ashkelon. There are also many defense companies located in the north of the country; if hostilitie­s on the northern border escalate, they are liable to be affected.

In recent years, Israel’s defense companies, especially the big three — Elbit, IAI, and Rafael — have experience­d a boom. Industry sources say that this is the best period it has ever had, and the companies report growth in their orders. Among other things, this is because of the war in Ukraine, which has led European and NATO countries to expand their defense budgets.

In the first half of 2023, IAI’s revenue grew by 7.7% in comparison with the first half of 2022, to over $2.5 billion, while Elbit Systems’ revenue growth was 7.2%, to over $2.8b.

How is the war affecting these companies? “Unfortunat­ely, Israel is the biggest ‘beta’ market there is for defense technology and know-how,” says a senior defense industry source. “We have the most real test ground in the world; we have been under attack for 75 years, and we have no choice but to be strong. There are therefore countless excellent defense companies, and also companies that derive from the defense industry, such as in the hi-tech industry.”

Most of the defense industry is located in the periphery of the country, including in areas hit in the current round of fighting and suffer from air-raid sirens. “I have to say that the guys there are lions,” the source says. He mentions a specific factory in the South where work carries on as usual, despite the difficulti­es and the constant sirens. “I was extremely impressed by the strength of their spirit,” he says.

Some of the workers have been drafted into the IDF reserves, but the source says that the companies know how to deal with this. Some workers live in places that have been attacked. “It’s very tough; each has a wife, children, some story. And they come to work as normal because that’s part of their responsibi­lity,” the source says. (Globes/TNS)

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