An Explosion has Hit Tomer, the Israeli State-owned Company that Builds the Rocket Engines for Israel’s Arrow 2 and Arrow 3 Missile Defense Systems, the very Systems Designed to Intercept Iranian Ballistic Missiles
By LauraAboli
The official explanation claims it was a “controlled test carried out according to plan,” but several things don’t add up:
• No advance public warning was issued, which is standard procedure for planned detonations.
• Emergency services reportedly responded immediately, not the reaction you’d expect for a scheduled event.
• The scale of the blast is far more consistent with an accidental ignition of solid rocket propellant.
This is not some minor facility.
Tomer manufactures the propulsion systems for Arrow 2 and Arrow 3, two of the most critical layers of Israel’s missile shield against Iran.
The timing is difficult to ignore.
Iran has recently become far more aggressive and emboldened, and now, at precisely this moment, the facility responsible for producing Israel’s anti-ballistic missile engines suffers a major explosion.
If this was an industrial accident, it could seriously disrupt interceptor production during an active regional conflict.
If it was sabotage, then someone may have just struck Israel’s missile defense infrastructure without launching a single missile.
Either scenario points to the same strategic consequence:
A weakening of Israel’s ability to defend itself against future ballistic missile attacks.
Original source: https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel/84543

