Israel announced Wednesday the operational deployment of the Iron Beam, the world’s first high-energy laser defense system ready for combat, a breakthrough officials hailed as a strategic game-changer in modern warfare.
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, in partnership with Israel’s Ministry of Defense, confirmed completion of final development trials for the Iron Beam 450, demonstrating the ability to intercept rockets, mortars, and drones “with unmatched speed, precision, and near-zero cost per engagement.”
Defense Minister Israel Katz called the achievement a “historic milestone” and emphasized its strategic significance. “Achieving operational laser interception capability places Israel at the forefront of global military technology,” Katz said. “This is not only a moment of national pride but a major enhancement of our defense envelope, enabling rapid, precise interception at marginal cost.”
The system has been renamed Or Eitan (“Eitan’s Light”) in memory of Captain Eitan Oster, a 22-year-old Egoz Commando commander killed fighting Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. Oster’s father, an engineer with the Defense Ministry’s research division, contributed to the project.
The economic implications are stark. Each Iron Dome interceptor costs roughly $50,000, while an Iron Beam laser shot costs around $5. Officials stress this is crucial in Israel’s multi-front war against Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran-backed militias in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen, where tens of thousands of projectiles have been fired.
Rafael’s technology uses adaptive optics to deliver a 100-kilowatt beam through a 450-millimeter aperture, neutralizing threats at the speed of light — before they can reach Israeli airspace. Rafael Chairman Yuval Steinitz said the Iron Beam, built with this adaptive optics technology, “will undoubtedly be a game-changing system with unprecedented impact on modern warfare.”
Defense sources emphasized that the system’s speed-of-light engagement means Israelis may no longer need to run to shelters in most attacks, as projectiles can be destroyed almost immediately after launch, often while still over enemy territory.
The Iron Beam family includes the vehicle-mounted Lite Beam (ten-kilowatt), the mobile Iron Beam M (50-kilowatt), and the flagship Iron Beam 450 for maximum-range interceptions. Field testing over the past year already saw smaller variants deflect “scores” of Hezbollah drones and rockets.
Defense Ministry Director-General Maj. Gen. (res.) Amir Baram called the deployment “only the foundation stone to start the process, which will change battle zones worldwide until they become filled invariably with cheaper laser platforms.” The Knesset had allocated extensive funding two years ago, an investment that officials say is already paying dividends.
Reservists operating the systems in northern Israel described the technology as transformative. “We received the system, we made adjustments while operating in the field, and we improved with the industry developers after we got a better understanding of what we needed to increase our shoot-down success,” said Master Sergeant “A.”
By integrating Iron Beam alongside Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow, Israel has created what officials describe as an unprecedented protective umbrella — one that combines layered interception with economic sustainability. While nations including the U.S., Russia, China, and Britain race to field their own directed-energy weapons, Israel has become the first to move from testing to operational combat deployment.
As Israel faces escalating aerial attacks across multiple fronts, the Iron Beam 450 is both a technological triumph and a strategic necessity — cementing Israel’s lead in directed-energy warfare and delivering a cost-effective, high-speed defense essential for a long war.
Joshua Klein is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jklein@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshuaKlein.
Read the full article here