OpenIntel Logo Black

Contents

Radware political Audit

POLITICAL RISK AUDIT: RADWARE LTD. (NASDAQ: RDWR)

SUBJECT: Political Complicity and Ideological Footprint Analysis

REFERENCE: GOV-AUDIT-2026-RDWR

DATE: January 17, 2026

1. Audit Scope and Methodology

1.1 Governance and Objective

This report constitutes a comprehensive forensic audit of Radware Ltd. (NASDAQ: RDWR), conducted to determine the entity’s “Political Complicity” regarding the State of Israel, the occupation of Palestinian territories, and the associated military-industrial complex. The objective is to move beyond superficial corporate social responsibility (CSR) statements and analyze the structural, operational, and ideological tethering of the corporation to state power. The audit operates under the “Governance Auditor” persona, utilizing a rigorous methodology to document evidence across four Core Intelligence Requirements (CIRs): Governance Ideology, Lobbying & Trade, the ‘Safe Harbor’ Test, and Internal Policy.

The ultimate deliverable is a data-driven classification of Radware on a complicity scale ranging from Neutrality (Level 1) to State Instrument (Level 4). This classification is not a moral judgment but a functional assessment of the company’s utility to state actors. The audit utilizes open-source intelligence (OSINT), corporate filings, executive statements, and technical threat advisories to reconstruct the company’s political geography.

1.2 The Concept of “Political Complicity” in Tech

In the context of the Israeli technology sector, political complicity is defined not merely by direct participation in violence, but by the “dual-use” nature of technology, the seamless transfer of human capital between intelligence units and corporate boardrooms, and the alignment of corporate foreign policy with state diplomatic objectives. This audit examines whether Radware functions as a sovereign commercial entity or as a privatized extension of the state’s security apparatus. The analysis focuses heavily on the “Zisapel Ecosystem”—the network of companies under the RAD Group umbrella—to understand how ownership structures facilitate the transfer of military capabilities to the private sector and back again.

.2. Governance Ideology: The Zisapel Dynasty and the Military-Industrial Pipeline

The ideological footprint of a corporation is often encoded in its genesis. Radware is not a Silicon Valley garage startup; it is a direct commercial spin-off of the Israeli defense establishment’s elite intelligence capabilities. The corporate DNA is inextricably linked to the Zisapel family, often referred to as the “Bill Gates of Israel” or the “founding fathers of the Start-Up Nation,” who effectively industrialized the transfer of military know-how to the global market.

2.1 The Foundational Mythos: Unit 8200 and the Commercialization of State Intelligence

The governance of Radware is dominated by the Zisapel family. Their biographies are not incidental; they represent the structural fusion of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the private high-tech economy.

Roy Zisapel (CEO and Co-Founder):

The current President and CEO, Roy Zisapel, explicitly grounds his executive authority and technical expertise in his military service. Zisapel served as a team leader in Unit 8200 1, the IDF’s signals intelligence (SIGINT) corps. Unit 8200 is frequently compared to the US National Security Agency (NSA), responsible for collecting signal intelligence, code decryption, and cyber warfare operations. Zisapel has utilized this affiliation as a primary marketing tool, stating in interviews that “In the IDF, I was a member of the 8200 Intelligence Unit. This unit has produced presidents and CEOs of many of Israel’s leading hi-tech companies”.1

This governance profile suggests that the company’s leadership views their corporate role as a continuation of their military function. The “Unit 8200” brand is leveraged to signal competence to investors, but it also signals deep ideological and social integration with the security state. The transition from military intelligence to Radware is portrayed as seamless, with Zisapel noting that he brought his military understanding of technology directly into the commercial sphere.3 This creates a corporate culture where the distinction between “defense of the state” and “defense of the enterprise” is blurred.

Zohar Zisapel (The Late Co-Founder and Defense Architect):

The late Zohar Zisapel (uncle to Roy) was a titan of the Israeli defense establishment. Before founding the RAD Group, he served as the Head of the Electronic Research Department of the Ministry of Defense (MoD) in Tel Aviv.4 His contributions to state security were so significant that he was awarded the Israel Defense Prize in 1979.4 Zohar’s transition to the private sector established the model for the entire Israeli cyber-tech industry: the commercialization of state-funded military R&D. His governance role ensured that Radware and its sister companies remained aligned with the strategic needs of the MoD, creating a feedback loop where the private sector innovates on behalf of the military, and the military provides the “combat-proven” stamp of approval for exports.

Yehuda Zisapel (The Patriarch and Largest Shareholder):

Yehuda Zisapel, Roy’s father, holds the largest block of shares in Radware 5 and serves as the Chairman of the RAD-Bynet Group. His background includes degrees from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, the primary academic feeder for the defense industry. Yehuda’s governance influence extends beyond the boardroom into high-level industrial policy, having served as the Chairman of the Israel Electronics & Software Industries Association.6 In this capacity, he acts as a lobbyist for the integration of the tech sector with national economic and security goals.

2.2 Board of Directors Analysis: The State-Private Nexus

The composition of Radware’s Board of Directors reveals a network of affiliations that tie the company to the Israeli government, the academic-security complex, and the financial establishment. The board is not “neutral” or purely international; it is heavily weighted towards figures with deep roots in the Israeli state apparatus.

Table 1: Board of Directors – Political and State Affiliations

Board Member Role Relevant Affiliation & Background Audit Significance
Roy Zisapel CEO & Director Unit 8200 Team Leader.1 Direct operational link to IDF intelligence.
Yehuda Zisapel Major Shareholder Founder RAD-Bynet; Technion Major Donor; Chair of Electronics Industry Association.6 Strategic architect of the defense-tech ecosystem.
Avraham Asheri Director (Former) Former Director General of Ministry of Industry & Trade; Former Ministry of Finance official (23 years service).7 Executive branch linkage; industrial policy alignment.
Yair Tauman Director Dean at IDC Herzliya (Reichman Univ.).8 Link to the academic institution most closely tied to Israeli security policy and strategy (Herzliya Conference).
Yael Langer Director General Counsel for RAD-Bynet Group.9 Ensures legal cohesion across the group’s dual-use entities (civilian/military).
Yuval Cohen Chairman Venture Capital (StageOne); Background in Israeli high-tech investment. Represents the financialization of the sector.

Governance Insight: The presence of Avraham Asheri is particularly significant. As a former Director General of the Ministry of Industry and Trade and a senior official in the Ministry of Finance, Asheri represents the state’s economic interest within the company. His tenure suggests that Radware’s growth strategy was developed in consultation with, or at least with the deep understanding of, government industrial policy. Similarly, Yair Tauman’s position at IDC Herzliya connects the board to the primary think-tank of the Israeli security establishment. IDC is known for its annual conference which sets the agenda for Israeli national security policy; having a Dean from this institution on the board ensures ideological alignment with the state’s strategic outlook.

2.3 Philanthropic Nationalism and the Technion Connection

A critical component of the Zisapel governance ideology is their “philanthropic” investment in the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. In the context of the Israeli occupation, the Technion is not a neutral academic institution; it is the primary R&D laboratory for the IDF, developing technologies for aerospace, missile defense (Iron Dome), and cyber warfare.

The Zisapels have directed massive capital flows toward the Technion, specifically in fields with high military applicability:

The Sara and Moshe Zisapel Nanoelectronics Center: Yehuda and Zohar Zisapel donated $4.5 million to establish this center.10 Nanoelectronics is a dual-use technology critical for next-generation surveillance sensors, miniaturized weaponry, and advanced computing.

The Zisapel Electrical and Computer Engineering Building: The brothers funded a major new facility for the Electrical and Computer Engineering faculty.11 This faculty is the primary recruiting ground for Unit 8200 and the technological directorates of the IDF.

Strategic Fundraising: Yehuda Zisapel served as the Israeli Chair of the Technion’s Global Fundraising Campaign, tasked with raising $1.8 billion.11 This role indicates a commitment to sustaining the institutional infrastructure of Israel’s technological superiority.

Audit Finding: These donations function as “strategic capability building.” By funding the infrastructure of the Technion, the Zisapels ensure a steady supply of trained engineers who transition into the IDF (specifically units like 8200) and then into companies like Radware. This creates a closed loop of personnel and ideology, reinforcing the national strategy of maintaining a “Qualitative Military Edge” (QME) through technological dominance.

.3. Operational Footprint: Project Nimbus and the Bynet Nexus

While Radware presents itself globally as a civilian cybersecurity firm, an audit of its operational ecosystem—specifically through the RAD-Bynet Group and its direct contracts—reveals material support for the Israeli occupation infrastructure. The company functions as a crucial node in the state’s digital defense architecture.

3.1 The RAD-Bynet Ecosystem: The Sister Company Risk

Radware is a member of the RAD Group. To audit Radware, one must analyze the “RAD-Bynet” ecosystem, as these companies share ownership (Yehuda Zisapel), often bid jointly on projects, and share a common pool of technology and leadership.5 The separation between Radware (software) and Bynet (integration/hardware) is a legal convenience that obscures operational unity.

Bynet Data Communications and the Ministry of Defense (MoD):

Bynet, fully owned by the Zisapels, is a major defense contractor.

MoD Communications Tender: In 2013, Bynet won a massive tender (estimated at $150 million) to supply and maintain the communications network for the Israeli Ministry of Defense and the IDF.14 This network is the nervous system of the military, carrying data for command and control.

Operation Protective Edge (2014): Following the 2014 war on Gaza, Bynet received a certificate of appreciation from the MoD for its service during the conflict.14 This indicates that the company provided essential, real-time support to the military during active combat operations involving the bombardment of civilians.

Radware’s Integration: Radware’s technology (DDoS protection, load balancing) is typically the security layer integrated into these large-scale networks built by Bynet. The “solution” sold to the MoD is often a package of Bynet integration and Radware software.

SecurityDAM and the Israel Police:

SecurityDAM was a sister company founded by Yehuda Zisapel, which Radware acquired in 2022 for $42.5 million.15 This acquisition internalized the legacy and contracts of SecurityDAM directly into Radware.

Body Cameras for Surveillance: In 2018, the RAD-Bynet group (leveraging SecurityDAM tech) won a tender to supply 8,000 to 12,000 body cameras to the Israel Police.14 The Israel Police are the primary enforcers of the occupation in East Jerusalem and operate extensively in the West Bank.

Data Security: The contract included providing data security services for police centers.14

Audit Implication: By acquiring SecurityDAM, Radware absorbed the intellectual property and personnel responsible for equipping the police force that enforces the apartheid system (as defined by Amnesty International and HRW). The revenue streams and technological capabilities are now merged.

3.2 “Project Nimbus” and the Sovereign Cloud

“Project Nimbus” is the flagship $1.2 billion project to migrate the Israeli government and military IT infrastructure to a “sovereign cloud” provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google (GCP). The project is controversial because it contractually obligates the providers to service all arms of the government, including the Israel Land Authority (ILA) and the MoD, without the possibility of boycott or service denial due to political pressure.

Radware’s Role as Gatekeeper:

AWS Partner: When AWS won the Nimbus tender, Radware was explicitly cited in press releases as a key AWS Partner in Israel.16

The Function: The transition to the cloud creates vulnerability. The Israeli military and government require “sovereign” security layers to ensure that their data cannot be blocked or inspected by foreign entities. Radware provides this critical security layer (DDoS protection, WAF, bot management).

Complicity: Radware is effectively the security gatekeeper for the Israeli military cloud. By integrating its solutions into the Nimbus ecosystem, Radware ensures the availability and integrity of the digital infrastructure used for military targeting (e.g., AI systems running on the cloud), settlement administration (via the ILA), and population surveillance. This is not a passive commercial transaction; it is the provision of defensive fortification for the occupation’s digital nervous system.

3.3 The “Cyber Dome” Initiative

Radware is a key player in the “Cyber Dome,” a national cyber defense initiative mirroring the physical “Iron Dome” missile defense system.

State-Private Fusion: The Cyber Dome initiative represents the total integration of private tech capabilities with state military needs. Radware provides the threat intelligence and automated mitigation systems that protect “critical infrastructure” (energy, water, banking, government) from cyberattacks.18

Wartime Activation: During the “Iron Swords” war (2023-2024), Radware openly stated it was protecting Israeli critical infrastructure.20 This active defense allows the state to maintain economic and functional resilience while prosecuting the war in Gaza, mitigating the costs of the conflict and enabling prolonged military operations.

.4. The ‘Safe Harbor’ Test: A Geopolitical Forensic Analysis

A critical methodology for auditing political complicity in the 21st century is the “Safe Harbor” test. This test compares a multinational corporation’s response to aggression against Western allies (e.g., the Russian invasion of Ukraine) against its response to state violence perpetrated by its country of domicile (e.g., Israel’s occupation and bombardment of Gaza). This comparison reveals whether the company operates under universal human rights principles or nationalistic double standards.

4.1 Response to the Russia-Ukraine War (2022)

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Radware adopted a stance of moral activism and punitive disengagement. The company aligned itself strictly with Western sanctions and went beyond legal requirements to signal ideological support for Ukraine.

Operational Suspension: Radware explicitly announced the “indefinite suspension of operations in Russia and dealings with Russian entities”.21 This was a voluntary surrender of revenue and market share.

Rhetorical Framing: The company issued threat advisories titled “Cyberattacks and Threats Amidst Russian Invasion of Ukraine”.23 The language used was clear and accusatory, identifying Russia as the aggressor and the “Kremlin’s special military action” as the catalyst for cyber threats.

Support for Resistance: Radware’s analysis highlighted the actions of “Ukrainian cyber soldiers” who hacked Russian parliamentarians.24 The tone of these reports was neutral to positive, framing these hacks as legitimate acts of resistance against an invader.

Risk Disclosure: In SEC filings, the company listed the suspension of Russian operations as a material risk but framed it as a necessary compliance and ethical measure.21

4.2 Response to the Israel-Gaza War (2023-2025)

In the aftermath of the October 7 attacks and the subsequent Israeli invasion of Gaza, Radware’s conduct shifted from “neutral multinational” to “national champion.” There was no suspension of operations, no condemnation of the scale of destruction in Gaza, and no reference to international law.

Business Continuity & Support: Instead of suspending operations, Radware emphasized “Business Continuity” and assured investors that its Israeli operations were fully functional.20 The CFO noted that the company had “reallocated internal resources to cover for a number of employees who have been called for reservists for the Israel defense force” 20, effectively subsidizing the mobilization.

CEO’s Political Declaration: Roy Zisapel explicitly stated in an earnings call: “Israel is now fighting to free those who are being held hostage and remove the threat of Hamas… We truly appreciate you standing with Israel“.20 This statement is a political endorsement of the war effort and its objectives.

Operational Surge: Radware increased its support for the state. Zisapel noted, “We are blocking attacks for some of Israel’s critical infrastructure as well as prominent government offices… Radware is standing at the forefront”.20 This confirms that Radware assets were actively deployed to defend the government ministries conducting the war.

Rhetorical Framing:
“Cyber Aggression”: Palestinian cyber operations are consistently framed as “terrorism,” “cyber aggression,” or “hate-driven”.25

“Iron Swords”: The company adopts the IDF’s operational name for the war (“Operation Iron Swords”) in its technical reports 25, signaling an acceptance of the state’s narrative.

Victimization: The reports focus heavily on the victimization of Israeli digital assets.25 Unlike the Ukraine reports, which acknowledged the physical war’s impact on civilians, Radware’s Gaza reports (in the snippets provided) do not mention Palestinian casualties or the destruction of telecommunications infrastructure in Gaza.

Table 2: The Safe Harbor Test – Comparative Data

Metric Response to Russia (Ukraine Invasion) Response to Israel (Gaza War)
Operational Status Indefinite Suspension of all operations. Enhanced Support; “Standing at the forefront” of defense.
Moral Stance Condemnation of invasion; compliance with sanctions. “Standing with Israel”; explicit support for war objectives.
Service Provision Withdrawal of services to Russian entities. Protection of critical infrastructure and government offices.
Rhetoric Russia as aggressor; Ukraine as victim/defender. Israel as victim of “cyber aggression”; IDF operations stated as fact.
Staff Policy (No data on Russian staff support). Subsidizing Reservists (holding jobs, covering duties).

Audit Finding: Radware fails the Safe Harbor test. The company applies a double standard: it wields corporate power to punish aggression by Russia but utilizes corporate power to shield and facilitate the military operations of Israel. This confirms the company’s status as an ideological actor aligned with the Israeli state.

.5. Lobbying, Trade, and “Brand Israel”

Radware participates actively in the “Brand Israel” strategy, which seeks to normalize the Israeli state by promoting its technological prowess while obscuring the military occupation that incubates that technology.

5.1 The “Cyber Soldier” Marketing Strategy

Radware’s marketing fetishizes its military origins. The company does not hide the fact that its intellectual property is derived from military intelligence; it highlights it.

The Narrative: Press releases and media appearances frequently cite the “Unit 8200” background of its executives and engineers.1

Function: This serves to rebrand military operatives as “entrepreneurs,” softening the image of the surveillance state. It frames the skills honed in occupation-focused intelligence gathering as benign “cyber security” expertise.

Global Export: By marketing this pedigree, Radware monetizes the prestige of the IDF. When foreign entities purchase Radware solutions, they are buying into the mythos of Israeli military superiority.

5.2 Trade Associations and Lobbying

Radware is embedded in trade ecosystems that lobby for Israeli interests.

Israel Electronics & Software Industries Association: Yehuda Zisapel has served as Chairman of this association.6 This body lobbies the Israeli government for favorable policies for the high-tech sector and promotes Israeli tech exports globally. It functions as a force multiplier for the “Start-Up Nation” diplomacy, which is used by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs to counter diplomatic isolation.

“Good Deeds” and CSR: Radware’s CSR activities 30 focus on safe, apolitical causes (book recycling, “Good Deeds Day”) or Israeli domestic cohesion. There is no evidence of CSR initiatives directed toward Palestinian communities or digital rights advocacy for Palestinians living under Israeli surveillance. The “community” served is strictly the Israeli domestic polity.

.6. Internal Policy and Human Capital

The internal culture of Radware is homogenized with the Israeli security state.

6.1 The Reservist Subsidy

The most significant data point regarding internal policy is the company’s support for reservists during the Gaza war.

Direct Support: The CFO’s statement regarding the reallocation of resources to cover for mobilized employees 20 is a material contribution to the war effort.

Implication: In Israel, the mass mobilization of reservists (300,000+ in 2023) places immense strain on the economy. By absorbing this cost—maintaining salaries, holding positions open, and redistributing work—Radware effectively subsidizes the IDF. It allows the military to access high-skilled labor without collapsing the economic base of the country.

6.2 The Absence of Dissent

While reports exist of employees at US tech giants like Google and Microsoft being fired for pro-Palestine protests 31, no such reports exist for Radware in the available data.

Interpretation: The absence of visible dissent at Radware is not evidence of neutrality, but of hegemony. Given the CEO’s explicit “Standing with Israel” statement and the company’s deep roots in Unit 8200, the corporate culture is likely an extension of the military culture. The workforce is largely drawn from the same pool of veterans, creating an ideological monoculture where solidarity with Palestine would be viewed as antithetical to the company’s mission.

.7. Ranking on the Complicity Scale

Based on the evidence gathered across the four Core Intelligence Requirements, Radware Ltd. is classified as follows:

COMPLICITY SCALE:

1.Neutrality: Purely commercial, no political bias.

2.Passive Complicity: Operating in the market, paying taxes, complying with local laws.

3.Active Complicity: Supplying goods/services to occupation forces; ideological support.

4.State Instrument: Functioning as a strategic arm of the state; deep structural integration.

RADWARE RANKING: LEVEL 4 (STATE INSTRUMENT)

Data-Driven Justification:

Radware transcends “Active Complicity” due to the structural nature of its relationship with the state.

1.Genealogy: It is a commercial spinoff of the MoD/Unit 8200, led by the same personnel (Zisapels).

2.Functionality: It secures the “Sovereign Cloud” (Project Nimbus) and Critical Infrastructure (Cyber Dome), serving as a defensive shield for the state during wartime.

3.Ideology: Its foreign policy mirrors the State of Israel’s (Sanction Russia / Defend Israel).

4.Ecosystem: Through the RAD-Bynet Group, it is financially and operationally linked to the direct supply of surveillance hardware (body cams) and military networks to the occupation forces.

Radware is not merely a company in Israel; it is a vital organ of the Israeli security state’s projection of power, both domestically and globally.

.8. Data Appendix

Table 3: The “Unit 8200” to Radware Pipeline

Individual Role at Radware Military Background Significance
Roy Zisapel CEO & Co-founder Unit 8200 Team Leader Explicitly leverages unit prestige for marketing.1
Zohar Zisapel Co-founder Head of MoD Electronic Research Bridged MoD needs with private tech sector.4
Lior (FundGuard) Former Radware Dev Unit 8200 Officer Illustrates Radware as a standard post-8200 career path.34
Bremler Former Product Mgmt Unit 8200 Officer Another example of the talent pipeline.35

Table 4: Key State Contracts & Tenders (RAD-Bynet Group)

Year Entity Client Project Scope Evidence
2013 Bynet Ministry of Defense $150M comms network (Cisco gear). 14
2014 Bynet Ministry of Defense Operational support during Gaza War. 14
2018 SecurityDAM/Bynet Israel Police 8,000 Body Cameras & Data Security. 14
2021 Radware Gov of Israel (via AWS) Project Nimbus Partner (Cloud Security). 16
2023 Radware Critical Infrastructure Cyber Dome / Iron Swords Defense. 20

Table 5: Philanthropic & Ideological Investments

Beneficiary Donor Amount/Asset Purpose Evidence
Technion Yehuda & Zohar Zisapel $4.5 Million Nanoelectronics Center (Dual-use tech). 10
Technion Zisapel Brothers New Building Electrical & Computer Engineering Faculty. 11
Unit 8200 Alumni Radware/Zisapel Employment/Funding Maintaining the intelligence network. 3

Works cited

1.Radware – Cyber Soldiers – J-Wire, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.jwire.com.au/radware-cyber-soldiers/

2.Management | Radware, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/management/

3.Ofer Ben-Noon’s billion-dollar journey to Palo Alto Networks: Mentored by Zohar Zisapel, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.calcalistech.com/ctechnews/article/8w5xo097z

4.RAD Founders: Yehuda & Zohar Zisapel | Data Network Pioneers, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.rad.com/rad-founders/

5.Radware – Wikipedia, accessed January 17, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radware

7.zk1312745.htm – SEC.gov, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1027664/000117891313000674/zk1312745.htm

8.RADWARE LTD., accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/workarea/downloadasset.aspx/?ID=6442451929

10.Zohar Zisapel – Wikipedia, accessed January 17, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zohar_Zisapel

11.Zisapel Brothers To Donate New Building – הטכניון-מכון טכנולוגי לישראל, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.technion.ac.il/en/blog/2019/06/zisapel-brothers-to-donate-new-building/

12.The Technion Mourns Mr. Zohar Zisapel – הטכניון-מכון טכנולוגי לישראל, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.technion.ac.il/en/blog/2023/05/the-technion-mourns-mr-zohar-zisapel-2/

13.Form 20-F for Radcom LTD filed 03/30/2023, accessed January 17, 2026, https://radcom.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/20-F-2023-03-30.pdf_.pdf

14.The Israeli Occupation Industry – Rad-Bynet – Who Profits, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.whoprofits.org/companies/company/6526

15.Radware buys Israeli cybersecurity co SecurityDAM – Globes English – גלובס, accessed January 17, 2026, https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-radware-buys-israeli-cybersecurity-co-securitydam-1001402922

16.WA-AMAZON-WEB-SERVICES | Business Wire, accessed January 17, 2026, https://via.ritzau.dk/pressemeddelelse/13623962/wa-amazon-web-services?publisherId=90456

17.AWS to Open Data Centers in Israel – Business Wire, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210610006031/en/AWS-to-Open-Data-Centers-in-Israel

18.Israel and the Cyber Threat: How the Startup Nation Became a Global Cyber Power 9780197677728, 019767772X – DOKUMEN.PUB, accessed January 17, 2026, https://dokumen.pub/israel-and-the-cyber-threat-how-the-startup-nation-became-a-global-cyber-power-9780197677728-019767772x.html

19.Israel’s Cyber Force Development Model: Synergistic Integration of Military, Private Sector and Academia in Countering Evolving Threats – https://debuglies.com, accessed January 17, 2026, https://debuglies.com/2025/07/01/israels-cyber-force-development-model-synergistic-integration-of-military-private-sector-and-academia-in-countering-evolving-threats/

20.REFINITIV STREETEVENTS – EDITED TRANSCRIPT – RDWR.OQ – Q3 2023 Radware Ltd Earnings Call EVENT DATE/TIME, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx/?ID=9498065c-5184-4be3-aaf6-fd366b7ee2a9

22.radware announces 2025 annual general meeting – SEC.gov, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1094366/000117891325003864/exhibit_99-1.htm

24.Developments in cybercrime cases. Threat trends. Notes from the hybrid war against Ukraine. – CyberWire, accessed January 17, 2026, https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/162

25.Cyber Aggression Rises Following the October 2023 Israel-Hamas Conflict – Radware, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/security/threat-advisories-and-attack-reports/cyber-aggression-rises-following-the-october-2023-israel-hamas-conflict/

27.Radware Cybersecurity Advisory, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx/?ID=70b3869c-8bb8-4456-81d0-5b1227f677fe

28.October 7: Post-Threat Analysis – Radware, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/security/threat-advisories-and-attack-reports/october-7-post-threat-analysis/

29.Veterans of Israel’s secretive Unit 8200 head many successful high-tech start-ups, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20120605-veterans-of-israel-s-secretive-unit-8200-head-many-successful-hightech-startups?page=0,1

30.People | Corporate Responsibility – Radware, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.radware.com/corporategovernance/people/community/activities/

31.Google employee fired after staging pro-Palestine protest at tech event: Report, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/google-employee-fired-after-staging-pro-palestine-protest-at-tech-event-report/3159687

32.Former Microsoft employees claim retaliation after being fired over Palestinian vigil, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUzhpEYJMXM

33.Former Google employees speak out after firing from pro-Palestine protests – YouTube, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkMds1e48s4

34.About FundGuard – A New Era of Investment, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.fundguard.com/about/

35.Registration No. 333 – SEC.gov, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1725332/000121390018008788/ff12018_safetgroupltd.htm

36.Israel Cybersecurity Market Size, Share, Trends & Industry Report 2030, accessed January 17, 2026, https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/israel-cybersecurity-market

Related News & Articles