JERUSALEM (AFP) — During the war in the Gaza Strip and two wars with Iran in the space of a year, Israel has used artificial intelligence to fine-tune its missile early warning system.
In last year’s 12-day conflict with Iran, incoming missiles would spark city-wide air raid alerts, and Israelis would have to rush for cover, often several times a day.
But now the systems that warn of an impending attack have become increasingly more sophisticated and localized.
Sarah Chemla is a 32-year-old mother whose second child was born in a delivery room set up in an underground hospital bunker in Tel Aviv during the 2025 war with Iran.
Back then, every alert that sounded applied to the whole city, she said, but now the system has become more precise.
“We spend less time in shelters, even if the stress is still there,” Chemla said.
As the new war with Iran rages, Chemla said the refined warning systems are making lives easier.
She no longer has to shake her children awake whenever a siren sounds, and some nights they even manage to sleep through.
“Before, alarms would sound across all of Tel Aviv whenever a missile targeted the area,” she told AFP. “Now alerts are ultra-localized. If a projectile is heading for the south of the city, I only get a pre-alert and no longer have to wake my children.”
Between the wars with Iran and during the Gaza conflict, Israeli civil defense has significantly upgraded its public warning system, to make daily life more manageable under the constant threat of missile fire.
Behind the shift lies the growing use of artificial intelligence, AI, to predict where incoming projectiles are likely to hit.
Continuous surveillance
Since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas that triggered the Gaza war, “more than 60,000 missiles, rockets, drones and aerial threats have been fired at Israel,” former air defense commander Ran Kochav told AFP.
“Each launch has been the subject of a full analysis … incorporating all its characteristics: trajectory, timing, weather, launch angle, radar signature,” Kochav said.
This data is “processed … with the help of AI,” added Kochav, now an associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute think tank in Britain.
Israel’s defense firm Elbit Systems has also deployed its “SkyEye” system to analyze launches, media reports say.
“The system has the capability to continuously monitor vast areas, intercept events and maintain multiple regions of interest (ROI) under constant surveillance with high spatial resolution,” Elbit Systems says on its website.
Experts say AI is processing data at a speed and depth beyond human capacity.
“AI gathers millions of data points and performs what is known as data fusion,” Yehoshua Kalisky, a laser specialist and researcher at Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies, told AFP.
“It provides strategic planning and forecasting tools at levels the human brain cannot reach, thereby supporting decisionmakers,” Kalisky said.
For each launch from Iran or Lebanon — where Israel is also at war with Tehran-backed Hezbollah — the prediction is passed on to the military’s Home Front Command, which is responsible for civilian protection.
1,700 alert zones
Nearly 20 years ago, during the 2006 war with Hezbollah, “the country was divided into 25 alert zones,” a Home Front Command source told AFP on condition of anonymity. “Today there are 1,700.”
Major cities are now split into subzones to avoid unnecessarily confining millions of people to shelters during frequent alerts.
The command relies on multiple channels to reach the public: street sirens, a dedicated website, the media, and a silent radio frequency that activates only in emergencies for observant Jews who switch off their phones during the Sabbath.
But above all else, it is the smartphone that has transformed the management of life during wartime.
The Israeli military says an app downloaded on more than 4 million phones in a country of 10 million people delivers real-time geo-located alerts, the time needed to reach a shelter and “all-clear” messages when the threat recedes.
During the June 2025 war with Iran, civil defense added cell broadcast technology, enabling alerts to be sent to all switched-on phones within range of relay antennas.
At dawn on June 13, 2025, thousands of phones across the country sounded a piercing tone, warning that Israel had struck Iran and urging people to brace for retaliation, which followed within hours.
Since Feb. 28 this year, for many Israelis that noise has become the soundtrack of war.
Tel Aviv resident Chemla said the improvements in the early warning system over the past year have been “life-saving.”
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By YAELLE IFRAH Agence France-Presse
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