Israeli Startup Develops Affordable System to Intercept Hundreds of Drone Swarms Simultaneously
Israeli defense startup Skapion has unveiled plans to develop a groundbreaking system capable of intercepting hundreds of hostile drones simultaneously at a cost below $10,000 per target. After raising $36 million from American and Israeli investors, the company is collaborating closely with the Israeli Ministry of Defense and is progressing toward live firing and interception trials. Founded by former defense and high-tech experts including Pini Youngman, a key figure behind Israel's Iron Dome and David's Sling programs, Skapion aims to address the growing threat of drone swarms used extensively by Iran, Russia, and other actors.
The proliferation of suicide drones has become a critical battlefield challenge, with recent conflicts such as Russia-Ukraine and Iranian attacks in the Gulf region demonstrating the scale and frequency of swarm assaults. Skapion CEO Ido Bar-On highlighted that recent attacks involved over 600 drones in a single night, and Iran reportedly launches such swarms almost nightly. Current defense systems, designed for single-target threats, struggle to cope with the volume and cost of intercepting large drone swarms, with missile interceptors costing hundreds of thousands of dollars each compared to drones valued between $15,000 and $35,000.
Skapion's system is envisioned as a compact, mobile "Iron Dome" for drone swarms, integrating detection, classification, prioritization, and salvo launches of small interceptors. Initially focusing on larger drones capable of striking strategic targets, the company plans to expand to smaller drones later. The system is also designed to counter advanced drones flying without GPS or communication signals and coordinated swarm tactics. A key goal is mass production capability, targeting annual output of 10,000 units across multiple countries to avoid supply bottlenecks.
If successful, Skapion aims to deploy an operational system by 2027, potentially transforming defense against the escalating threat of drone swarm attacks that current systems cannot effectively handle. The startup’s approach addresses both the tactical challenge and the economic imbalance between the cost of drones and their interception.
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