Iron Beam, the Laser-Based Aerial Defense, Now Operational All Over Israel

Peloni:  This will be a game changer on the battlefield.

By | Jan 1, 2025

Iron Beam.  Photo by Unknown author - https://www.rafael.co.il/system/iron-beam/, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=151649431Iron Beam. Photo by Unknown author – Rafael.co.il, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikipedia

The Iron Beam is the first laser-based aerial defense in the world to be operational; other countries are working on laser-based weapons but have yet to complete them, much less to put any such weapons into operation. The Iron Beam is fantastically cheap; each “burst” of light costs a few dollars, compared to the $40,000 to $100,000 that each Iron Dome kinetic interceptor costs. And it has many more advantages: it travels at the speed of light — faster than any other weapon — and thus can intercept an incoming missile or drone much earlier in its flight, knocking it out before it comes close to Israel, and thus obviating the need for Israelis to run to their shelters. This means far less disruption to civilian life. When Iron Beam is fully deployed, Israelis won’t have to interrupt, several times a day, their civilian lives by having to rush to shelters when an incoming missile is detected. With the Iron Beam, that incoming missile will have been intercepted almost as soon as it is launched.

More on Iron Beam’s advantages can be found here: “Defense Ministry rolls out Iron Beam laser air defense system across Israel,” by Yonah Jeremy Bob, Jerusalem Post, December 28, 2025:

The Iron Beam laser-based, air-defense system has been deployed in the field, the Defense Ministry reported Sunday.

In June, the Defense Ministry and Rafael – the lead company among several defense technology firms, including Elbit, which provides core aspects of the laser itself – announced that Lite Beam, a smaller relative of Iron Beam, was operational.

In mid-September, the Defense Ministry announced that Iron Beam was operational, and that a full series of batteries would be deployed throughout the country to provide cutting-edge air-defense capabilities within the coming months.

On December 1, the head of the Defense Ministry’s Directorate of Defense, Research and Development (DDR&D), Brig.-Gen. (res.) Daniel Gold, announced that full deployment would take place by December 30.

In June, the Defense Ministry disclosed that Israeli laser defense systems had shot down around 40 Hezbollah drones in October 2024.

Compared with Lite Beam, Iron Beam has more power, a longer range, and can be used to defend against a wider array of threats.

In addition to being able to shoot down drones, Iron Beam can also defend against missiles, rockets, and mortars. That makes it far more formidable than if it were only capable of shooting down drones, which are relatively slow-moving threats.

The announcement also means that Iron Beam batteries will be produced and dispersed around the country at scale, as opposed to serving in just one or two locations where their impact would take time to be judged.

The Defense Ministry and the IDF expect Iron Beam to immediately reduce the cost of intercepting aerial threats, a major challenge for Israel during the recent war, when tens of thousands of projectiles were launched from six fronts.

Firing Arrow interceptors can cost millions of shekels, and Iron Dome interceptors can cost tens of thousands of shekels. Firing the Iron Beam is as cheap as turning a light on….

Stop for a moment and think of what that means: each Iron Beam burst of light will cost not millions of shekels, like each Arrow interceptor, nor tens of thousands of shekels that each Iron Dome interceptor costs, but only a few dollars, at most, for each burst of light with which Iron Beam can take down drones, missiles, rockets, and mortars.

The Defense Ministry said that while the US-based Raytheon and countries including Britain, Russia, China, Germany, and Japan are developing laser defense systems, Iron Beam is the only one that has moved beyond test firings to operational field use.

Think of that. Tiny Israel is farther along in its development, and now in its deployment in the field, of a laser-based aerial defense system, than those defense giants, the U.S., U.K, Russia, China, Germany, and Japan, all of which are still in the stage of test firings of their own laser systems. .

The Iron Beam, the first laser-based weapon to be operational, and to have proved its value on the battlefield, is one more marvel from those Israeli scientists at Rafael, and Elbit, and Israel Aerospace Industries. Collectively, they are the gift that keeps on giving. Isn’t it comforting to know that Israel is on our side?

January 2, 2026 | Comments »

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