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Contents

Subway

Key takeaways
  • Roark Capital's 2024 acquisition links Subway financially to dual-use tech (GPRS) and Israeli cyber investments, increasing structural complicity.
  • Supply chain evidence shows UK distributor Reynolds imports avocados and dates from Galilee Export, tying Subway to settlement produce.
  • Digital stack and payments rely on Israeli-linked vendors (Wiz, SentinelOne, Adyen/Zooz), creating technological dependency and data exposure.
  • Governance favors revenue over rights: UBO donations to pro‑IDF groups, refusal to exit Russia, and silence on Gaza reveal ideological bias.
BDS Rating
Grade
C
BDS Score
441 / 1000
1.14 / 10
3.53 / 10
3.09 / 10
5.50 / 10
links for more information

1. Executive Dossier Summary

Company: Subway IP LLC (Subsidiary of Roark Capital Group)

Jurisdiction: United States (Global HQ: Shelton, Connecticut / Miami, Florida)

Sector: Quick Service Restaurant (QSR) / Global Franchising

Leadership: Neal K. Aronson (Founder & Managing Partner, Roark Capital Group); John Chidsey (CEO, Subway)

Intelligence Conclusions

Forensic Assessment of Structural Complicity The forensic intelligence assessment of Subway IP LLC, conducted through the rigorous lens of the BDS-1000 methodology, reveals a corporate entity characterized by a stark and calculated dichotomy. Operationally, the target maintains a “Tier 0” kinetic footprint within the State of Israel, evidenced by the total absence of active storefronts as of the 2025 audit period.1 This operational void, however, serves as a deceptive veneer that masks a “Tier 3” structural, capital, and supply chain integration with the Israeli military-industrial complex and the settlement economy. The acquisition of Subway by Roark Capital Group in 2024 2 has fundamentally altered the brand’s risk profile, transitioning it from a private family-held entity into a strategic asset within a private equity portfolio that is deeply entangled with dual-use military technology, Zionist narrative warfare, and the economics of occupation. The complicity is not defined by the sale of sandwiches in Tel Aviv, but by the flow of capital from global franchises to a parent entity that invests in the technological architecture of the Israeli security state.

Economic and Supply Chain Entanglement The investigation has identified a “Critical” vulnerability within Subway’s European supply chain, specifically the “Aggregator Nexus” in the United Kingdom. Forensic analysis of customs declarations from early 2025 confirms that Reynolds Catering Supplies Ltd, the primary produce aggregator for Subway in the UK, acts as the Importer of Record for Galilee Export Agricultural Cooperative Society Ltd.3 This establishes a verifiable trade lane for high-risk commodities—specifically fresh avocados and Medjool dates—sourced from the illegal settlements of the Jordan Valley and the occupied Golan Heights.3 Furthermore, the strategic pivot to PepsiCo as the exclusive beverage partner for US operations, commencing January 1, 2025 4, integrates Subway into the revenue ecosystem of SodaStream. This partnership inextricably links Subway’s revenue stream to the industrialization of the Negev (Naqab) and the historic displacement of Bedouin communities associated with SodaStream’s operations.1

Ideological and Governance Positioning The ideological posture of the target is dictated by the “Roark Mandate.” The Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO), Neal K. Aronson, has been forensically linked to the financing of the Friends of the IDF (FIDF), an organization that provides direct material support to Israeli military bases, and OpenDor Media, a soft-power entity dedicated to shaping Zionist narratives and countering BDS activism on university campuses.5 This capital-centric complicity is compounded by a catastrophic failure of the “Safe Harbor” test. While Subway’s parent entity has pledged humanitarian aid to Ukraine and faced designation as an “International Sponsor of War” for refusing to exit Russia 6, it has maintained absolute silence regarding humanitarian conditions in Gaza. This asymmetry indicates a governance model that prioritizes revenue retention over human rights compliance, shielded by a fractured franchise liability structure that allows the parent company to disavow responsibility for the political positioning of its assets.

.2. Corporate Overview & Evolution

Origins & Founders

Subway was founded in 1965 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, by Fred DeLuca and Peter Buck as “Pete’s Super Submarines.” For nearly six decades, the company operated as a privately held family business, focusing relentlessly on unit expansion to become the largest restaurant chain by store count globally. The brand’s initial entry into Israel occurred in 1992, part of the post-Cold War wave of American corporate expansion into the Levant.7 However, the historical significance of the founders has been eclipsed by the financial engineering of its modern era.

The Roark Capital Acquisition: In April 2024, the sale of Subway to Roark Capital Group was finalized for approximately $9.6 billion.2 This transaction represented a paradigm shift in the company’s complicity profile. Roark Capital, an Atlanta-based private equity firm named after the protagonist of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead 8, manages over $37 billion in assets.9 The acquisition integrated Subway into a massive portfolio of franchised brands, subjecting it to the strategic imperatives of institutional capital that prioritizes “Tech-Enabled Services” and cross-portfolio synergies.

Leadership & Ownership Assessment

The governance of Subway is now inextricably linked to the leadership of Roark Capital Group and its managing partners.

Neal K. Aronson (Founder & Managing Partner, Roark Capital): Aronson sits at the apex of the capital structure. His background includes a tenure at U.S. Franchise Systems and a deep involvement in the private equity sector. A forensic review of his philanthropic and political activity reveals a pattern of support for Zionist causes. Aronson has been identified as a donor to the Friends of the IDF (FIDF), an organization that channels funds directly to the welfare and infrastructure of Israeli soldiers.5 Additionally, he is a board associate and donor to OpenDor Media (formerly Jerusalem U), which produces media content designed to combat “anti-Israel bias” and delegitimize the BDS movement.5 In the US political sphere, Aronson donated $5,600 to Senator David Perdue, a key co-sponsor of the Israel Anti-Boycott Act, signaling a preference for a legislative environment hostile to economic activism.10
Roark Capital Portfolio Ecosystem:
The ownership group controls Inspire Brands (holding company for Dunkin’, Arby’s, Baskin-Robbins, Sonic, and Buffalo Wild Wings) and Driven Brands. This portfolio creates “Portfolio Contagion” for Subway.
Baskin-Robbins: This sister brand actively operates franchise locations in illegal West Bank settlements, including Ariel, Ma’ale Adumim, and Efrat.5
Ground Penetrating Radar Systems (GPRS): Acquired by Roark in January 2025 11, this subsidiary specializes in subsurface mapping and tunnel detection, a “dual-use” technology with high military relevance.1

Assessment: The leadership structure presents a Critical Risk. The Ultimate Beneficial Owner is not a passive investor but an active participant in the ideological support of the State of Israel. His financial patronage of the FIDF creates a direct ethical breach, implying that profits extracted from Subway franchises contribute to a pool of wealth that subsidizes the occupying military force. The recurring engagement of Roark Capital with Israeli venture funds and the signing of the “Spirit of Peace and Unity” statement 12 indicate a sustained economic dependency on, and ideological alignment with, the Israeli tech-security ecosystem.

Analytical Assessment

Structural Alignment with State Interests:

Subway’s integration into Roark Capital represents a sophisticated form of “Capital Complicity.” While Subway IP LLC effectively has no operations in Israel, it serves as a liquidity engine for a parent company that is structurally complicit. The capital is fungible; revenue from a Subway franchise in London or New York flows upward to Roark, where it is commingled with revenue from settlement-operating brands (Baskin-Robbins) and used to fund acquisitions of dual-use military technology (GPRS). This structure allows the parent company to leverage the cash flow of a politically “neutral” brand (Subway) to finance investments in politically “active” sectors (Israeli cyber-tech and settlement infrastructure).

The Private Equity Shield:

Roark’s private equity structure creates an opacity that shields Subway from the type of shareholder activism that impacts public companies. Unlike public corporations subject to annual general meetings and shareholder resolutions, Roark is accountable only to its Limited Partners (LPs). This structure allows Subway to weather reputational storms—such as the “International Sponsor of War” designation in Ukraine—with a higher tolerance for negative publicity. It suggests that any future decision to re-enter the Israeli market would be driven purely by economic calculus, disregarding human rights concerns, as the feedback loop for ethical accountability is severed.

.3. Timeline of Relevant Events

Date Event Significance
1992 Market Entry (Israel) Subway opens its first location in Israel, expanding to 23 branches. Marks the initial normalization of the brand in the region.7
2004 Market Exit (Israel) Operations cease following the death of the master franchisee. Exit is due to commercial failure, not ethical boycott, leaving the door open for re-entry.7
2009 Failed Re-Entry Bid Investor Gur Gal attempts to revive the franchise with plans for 130 stores. The deal collapses in arbitration.7
2014 Re-Entry Announcement Subway explicitly announces a search for new franchisees in Israel, confirming intent to operate despite the political climate.7
2018 PepsiCo Acquires SodaStream PepsiCo buys the Israeli carbonation firm for $3.2B. SodaStream is a primary BDS target due to its history in Mishor Adumim and the Negev.13
Jan 2020 Adyen Partnership Subway partners with Adyen for North American payments. Adyen utilizes Zooz (Israeli tech) for smart routing, integrating Tel Aviv code into the financial stack.14
2021 NSO Group Link Exposed Investigative reports link Yair Tamir (Subway Israel Master Franchisee) to Q Cyber Technologies/NSO Group, connecting the brand to surveillance tech.3
Feb 2022 Refusal to Exit Russia Following the invasion of Ukraine, Subway refuses to close 450 Russian locations, citing “independent franchisees.”.15
Aug 2023 Roark Acquisition Announced Roark Capital agrees to buy Subway for $9.6B, moving the brand into a PE portfolio with settlement ties.16
Oct 2023 Roark Signs “Unity” Statement Roark Capital signs the “Spirit of Peace and Unity” statement, pledging to “engage with Israeli startups” and support the state following Oct 7.12
Jan 2024 Ukraine Designation Ukraine NACP designates Subway an “International Sponsor of War” for its continued Russian operations.6
Mar 2024 PepsiCo Deal Signed Subway signs a 10-year exclusive beverage deal with PepsiCo (owner of SodaStream), effective Jan 1, 2025.4
Apr 2024 Roark Deal Closes The acquisition is finalized. Subway formally enters the Roark portfolio.2
Jan 2025 PepsiCo Rollout Begins Subway US stores begin transitioning to Pepsi products, structurally linking revenue to the SodaStream parent entity.4
Jan 2025 Roark Acquires GPRS Roark Capital acquires Ground Penetrating Radar Systems (GPRS), a dual-use technology firm with military tunnel-detection applications.11
Feb 2025 Labor Violations (US) US Dept of Labor sanctions Subway franchises for wage theft, indicating a breakdown in central governance and ethical oversight.13
Feb 2025 Customs Confirmation UK trade data confirms Reynolds Catering Supplies (Subway distributor) importing avocados/dates directly from Galilee Export.3
Nov 2025 Audit of Operations Current audit confirms zero active stores in Israel but high capital and supply chain complicity.1

.4. Domains of Complicity

Domain 1: Military & Intelligence Complicity (V-MIL)

Goal:

The objective of the Military & Intelligence Complicity domain analysis is to rigorously determine if Subway IP LLC, through its direct operations, parent company ownership, or strategic partnerships, provides material support, dual-use technology, or logistical sustainment to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) or the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD). This assessment necessitates a distinction between “Kinetic Support” (direct provisioning of the military, such as catering contracts) and “Structural Defense Adjacency” (ownership of technologies critical to the military apparatus).

Evidence & Analysis:

The Roark-GPRS Nexus (Dual-Use Technology): The most critical forensic finding in the military domain is the acquisition of Ground Penetrating Radar Systems (GPRS) by Roark Capital in January 2025.11 While GPRS markets itself as a provider of subsurface damage prevention for civilian infrastructure (e.g., locating utilities before excavation), the technology it controls—Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR)—is classified as a high-value “Dual-Use” asset in the context of the Israel-Palestine conflict.1
Technological Application: GPR technology utilizes electromagnetic radiation in the microwave band (UHF/VHF frequencies) to image the subsurface. This specific capability is the primary method used by military engineering corps for the detection of subterranean tunnels and bunkers. In the Gaza theater, the IDF’s combat engineering units (Yahalom) rely heavily on advanced GPR sensors to locate and destroy tunnel networks.
Portfolio Adjacency: By acquiring GPRS, Roark Capital has integrated a defense-relevant capability into the same portfolio that houses Subway. Profits generated by the global sales of Subway sandwiches contribute to the liquidity of Roark Capital, enabling it to scale and develop GPRS technologies. This creates a “Portfolio Adjacency” risk where capital is fungible; the financial success of the consumer brand effectively subsidizes the development of technologies with direct application in asymmetric warfare and the fortification of military bases. The acquisition aligns with Roark’s stated investment mandate for “Tech-Enabled Services,” suggesting a strategic interest in technologies that bridge the civilian-defense divide.10
Supply Chain Integration (The PepsiCo/SodaStream Vector): Effective January 1, 2025, Subway implemented a landmark 10-year exclusive beverage agreement with PepsiCo.4 This contract replaces the brand’s legacy relationship with Coca-Cola and integrates Subway’s massive global transaction volume into the PepsiCo revenue ecosystem.
SodaStream Complicity: PepsiCo is the parent company of SodaStream, acquired in 2018 for $3.2 billion.13 SodaStream has a documented history of complicity, having operated its primary manufacturing facility in the illegal West Bank settlement of Mishor Adumim for years. Following international pressure, the factory was relocated to the Negev (Naqab).
The “Prawer Plan” Link: The relocation to the Negev is structurally linked to the Israeli government’s “Prawer Plan” and the broader industrialization of the region. This policy often involves the displacement of unrecognized Bedouin villages and the confiscation of ancestral lands to construct industrial parks, such as Idan HaNegev where the SodaStream factory is located.1 By locking into a decade-long contract with PepsiCo, Subway is providing sustained economic support to a conglomerate that has been a primary target of the BDS movement for its role in the “economic exploitation of occupied production.”
Normalization: The deal includes the potential rollout of “SodaStream Professional” dispensers 17, which would physically place a brand synonymous with displacement into Subway locations, normalizing the entity in the eyes of the consumer.
Operational Absence (Tier 0 Kinetic): Forensic analysis confirms that Subway currently has zero active locations in Israel.18 Unlike competitors such as McDonald’s, whose Israeli licensee was documented donating thousands of meals to IDF soldiers during the 2023-2024 bombardments 19, Subway has no kitchens on the ground to provide such kinetic support. This absence of a physical footprint prevents direct “meal-washing” or soldier discounts, rendering the brand “Non-Kinetic” in the immediate operational sense. However, this absence is due to commercial failure rather than ethical boycott, as evidenced by multiple failed attempts to re-enter the market in 2009 and 2014.7

Counter-Arguments & Assessment: It could be argued that because Subway has no stores in Israel and GPRS is a US-based infrastructure company, the military link is tenuous or non-existent. Defense counsel would likely assert that GPRS scans concrete for construction, not tunnels for the IDF, and that PepsiCo is a broad conglomerate where SodaStream is a minor asset. Rebuttal: This argument ignores the nature of “Dual-Use” technology exports and the fungibility of capital. The expertise and capital accumulated in GPRS strengthen the broader sector of subsurface detection, a capability the IDF actively procures. Furthermore, the Roark portfolio is managed as a totality; the firm’s explicit pledge to “engage with Israeli startups” 12 suggests that cross-pollination of technology (including GPR or cyber-tech) between its assets and the Israeli market is a strategic goal, not an accidental byproduct. The lack of current direct IDF contracts does not negate the capacity for support inherent in the ownership structure. The PepsiCo contract is a deliberate choice of a partner with known complicity issues, prioritizing commercial terms over ethical supply chain vetting.

Analytical Assessment:

Confidence: High.

The structural link via Roark Capital’s ownership of GPRS and the supply chain integration with PepsiCo/SodaStream establishes a “Structural Defense Support” profile. While Subway does not feed soldiers, its parent company effectively owns the “eyes” (GPR) that see underground, and its primary vendor owns the “industry” (SodaStream) that displaces communities. The complicity is financial and technological, not kinetic.

Named Entities / Evidence Map:

Roark Capital Group: Parent Company (Owner of GPRS).
GPRS (Ground Penetrating Radar Systems): Subsidiary of Roark (Dual-Use Tech).
PepsiCo: Strategic Partner (Parent of SodaStream).
SodaStream: PepsiCo Subsidiary (Settlement/Negev history).
IDF (Israel Defense Forces): User of GPR tech / Recipient of FIDF funds (via Roark UBO).

.Domain 2: Digital & Technological Complicity (V-DIG)

Goal:

This section investigates Subway’s “Digital Complicity Score,” specifically analyzing the extent to which its operational infrastructure—cybersecurity, cloud governance, and financial technologies—relies upon vendors domiciled in, or materially supportive of, the Israeli technology sector (“Silicon Wadi”) and Unit 8200. The goal is to map the “Unit 8200 Stack” embedded within the brand’s digital transformation.

Evidence & Analysis:

The “Unit 8200” Stack (Cybersecurity & Cloud): Subway’s “Project Future” digital transformation initiative has migrated the brand toward a technology stack dominated by Israeli firms, driven by the “Roark Mandate” to unify technology across Inspire Brands and Subway.20
Wiz (Cloud Security): Subway, following the lead of its sister company Inspire Brands, utilizes Wiz for Cloud Native Application Protection (CNAPP).20 Wiz was founded by Unit 8200 alumni Assaf Rappaport and Ami Luttwak. The technology uses an “agentless” scanning method that connects via API to the cloud provider (AWS/Azure) and scans the entire disk image of the cloud environment. This grants an Israeli firm deep, structural insight into the digital topology, vulnerabilities, and data structures of Subway’s global operations. It represents a surrender of “Digital Sovereignty” to a firm with deep ties to the Israeli intelligence apparatus.
SentinelOne (Endpoint Security): Roark Capital holds a direct investment position in SentinelOne.20 This creates a circular economy where Subway’s franchise revenues potentially subsidize the investment portfolio’s growth in Israeli cyber-tech. Operationally, SentinelOne agents run on Subway’s Point of Sale (POS) terminals, collecting telemetry data (process execution, network connections) and streaming it to servers for analysis by AI models trained in Israel. This constitutes a direct data pipeline from the sandwich shop to the Israeli tech ecosystem.
Check Point Software: Identified as a strategic partner for Inspire Brands’ network perimeter security.20 As the “original Unit 8200 startup,” Check Point provides the “digital iron dome” for the franchise network, filtering traffic through inspection engines designed in Tel Aviv.
The Adyen-Zooz Nexus (Financial Sovereignty): Subway’s North American payment processing overhaul relies on Adyen.14 Crucially, Adyen’s “Unified Commerce” capability is built upon the acquisition of Zooz, an Israeli fintech firm.22
The Mechanism: Zooz developed the “Smart Routing” layer that analyzes credit card transactions in milliseconds to determine the best path for bank approval. Adyen maintains a significant R&D center in Tel Aviv based on the Zooz team.20
Implication: When a customer buys a sandwich on the Subway app, the decision-making logic—the algorithm determining how that money moves—is governed by code maintained in Adyen’s Tel Aviv R&D center. A portion of the merchant fees paid by Subway supports the operational costs of this Israeli R&D hub. Subway has effectively outsourced its financial transaction logic to Tel Aviv, creating a dependency on Israeli IP for its revenue cycle efficiency.
Surveillance Retail (Biometrics & IoT): Subway has actively piloted PopID facial recognition kiosks.20 While PopID is US-based, the normalization of “face pay” lowers the barrier for Israeli firms like Oosto (formerly AnyVision) and Trigo, which dominate the “Surveillance Retail” sector. Furthermore, the “Smart Fridge” pilots at locations like UCSD utilize weight-sensor shelves, a technology where the Israeli firm Shekel Brainweigh holds a near-monopoly on OEM kits.20 This suggests the physical integration of Israeli IoT hardware into the retail footprint of the brand.

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

It could be argued that using industry-standard cybersecurity tools like Wiz or SentinelOne is a necessity, not a political choice, as these are “best-of-breed” solutions in the market.

Rebuttal: The choice is structural and financial, not just technical. Roark Capital’s investment in SentinelOne removes the element of neutral vendor selection. Subway is being steered toward these vendors to validate and inflate the value of the parent company’s portfolio assets. Furthermore, the reliance on Unit 8200-derived tech is not neutral; it supports the “Human Capital FDI” of the Israeli defense sector, where skills honed in military surveillance are monetized in the civilian market. By purchasing these tools, Subway subsidizes the R&D engines of the Israeli security state.

Analytical Assessment:

Confidence: High.

Subway exhibits “Systemic Technological Integration.” The brand’s digital nervous system—its security, its payments, and its cloud governance—is heavily dependent on the “Unit 8200 Stack.” The direct investment by Roark in SentinelOne elevates this from vendor reliance to active capital support, creating a closed loop of profitability between the sandwich chain and the cyber-surveillance sector.

Named Entities / Evidence Map:

Wiz: Cloud Security (Unit 8200 Founders).
SentinelOne: Endpoint Security (Roark Investment).
Adyen / Zooz: Payment Processing (Tel Aviv R&D / Smart Routing).
Shekel Brainweigh: IoT Hardware (Smart Fridge Sensors).
Unit 8200: IDF Intelligence Corps (Origin of key vendor leadership).

.Domain 3: Economic & Structural Complicity (V-ECON)

Goal:

This domain audits the supply chain and capital flows to determine if Subway engages in “Sustained Trade” with settlement enterprises or if its revenue subsidizes the occupation economy. The focus is on the “Aggregator Nexus” and the provenance of fresh produce within the European supply chain.

Evidence & Analysis:

The Aggregator Nexus (Reynolds & Galilee Export): Subway utilizes the Independent Purchasing Cooperative (IPC) structure to decentralize procurement, specifically IPC Europe for its European operations. However, forensic analysis of UK customs data from 2025 confirms that Reynolds Catering Supplies Ltd, the primary distributor for Subway UK, acts as the Importer of Record for Galilee Export Agricultural Cooperative Society Ltd.3
The Smoking Gun: The trade data identifies specific imports of Fresh Avocados (HS 08044000) and Medjool Dates (HS 08041000).
Galilee Export Profile: Galilee Export is Israel’s second-largest fresh produce exporter and is a cooperative owned by agricultural settlements (kibbutzim and moshavim). A significant portion of its produce is grown in the occupied Golan Heights and the Jordan Valley.24
The “Winter Window”: During the “Winter Window” (December to April), European sourcing options for avocados and fresh herbs are limited. Israel positions itself as the primary supplier during this gap. The reliance on Reynolds, who imports directly from Galilee Export, means that Subway’s “Eat Fresh” promise is fulfilled by settlement produce during these months.
Settlement Laundering: The audit notes a high risk of “settlement laundering,” where produce from the Golan Heights is labeled as “Produce of Israel” to benefit from trade agreements, despite being from occupied territory. Reynolds’ direct importation facilitates this opacity.
Franchise Leadership (The NSO Connection): The audit of the Israeli Master Franchise reveals a disturbing intersection with the cyber-weapon industry. Yair Tamir, the long-standing Director of Subway Israel, was identified as a founder of Maravilhas and an executive at Q Cyber Technologies, the parent company of NSO Group (Pegasus Spyware).3
The Complicity Loop: Although Subway operations in Israel are currently dormant, the historical royalties generated by the franchise link the brand to an individual deeply embedded in the “Surveillance Industrial Complex.” The wealth generated by selling sandwiches was intermingled with the capital structures used to proliferate military-grade spyware used to target journalists and activists.
Capital Extraction & Roark’s Role: Subway generates billions in revenue which flows upwards to Roark Capital. Roark is an active investor in the Israeli economy (SentinelOne) and a signatory to the “Spirit of Peace and Unity” statement.12
Pension Fund Exposure: US public pension funds (e.g., Maryland, New York) are invested in Roark.10 This creates a mechanism where the labor of US public sector workers is invested in a PE firm that extracts value from Subway to invest in Israeli defense-adjacent tech (GPRS, SentinelOne).

Counter-Arguments & Assessment: Subway might argue that IPC Europe operates independently and that they cannot track every box of avocados delivered by Reynolds. Rebuttal: Subway enforces “Gold Standard” quality controls which require full traceability via GS1 standards.3 They know the origin. The use of the IPC structure is a liability shield, not an operational reality. The “Winter Window” sourcing reality makes Israeli imports economically inevitable without a specific exclusion policy, which Subway lacks.

Analytical Assessment:

Confidence: High.

The customs data linking Reynolds to Galilee Export is definitive forensic evidence of settlement trade. The presence of Yair Tamir in the franchise history links the brand to the NSO Group. The economic complicity is structural and active within the supply chain.

Named Entities / Evidence Map:

Reynolds Catering Supplies: UK Distributor (Importer of Record).
Galilee Export: Israeli Exporter (Settlement Produce).
Yair Tamir: Master Franchisee (NSO Group / Q Cyber Founder).
IPC Europe: Procurement Entity (The Liability Shield).

.Domain 4: Political & Ideological Complicity (V-POL)

Goal:

This section examines the “Governance Ideology” of Subway’s leadership and its adherence to ethical standards across different geopolitical conflicts (“Safe Harbor” test).

Evidence & Analysis:

Governance Ideology (Neal Aronson & Roark):
The Ultimate Beneficial Owner, Neal Aronson, exhibits a clear ideological bias.
FIDF Support: Aronson has been linked to the Friends of the IDF (FIDF), providing material support (gyms, facilities) to the occupying army.5 This crosses the line from political opinion to material sustainment of military forces.
Narrative Warfare: Aronson is a donor to OpenDor Media (formerly Jerusalem U), an organization dedicated to shaping Zionist narratives and combating BDS on campuses.5 This funds the “soft power” war against Palestinian solidarity.
Anti-BDS Lobbying: Aronson donated to Senator David Perdue, a key sponsor of anti-BDS legislation, aligning the firm with the criminalization of economic activism.10
The “Safe Harbor” Failure (Russia vs. Gaza):
Subway’s response to geopolitical crises reveals a systemic double standard.
Russia: Following the invasion of Ukraine, Subway refused to exit Russia, keeping 450+ stores open. This led to its designation as an “International Sponsor of War” by the Ukrainian NACP.6 Subway used the “Independent Franchisee” defense to justify this. However, they pledged profits to Ukrainian humanitarian aid.25
Gaza: In contrast, Subway has maintained absolute silence regarding the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. There is no record of profits being pledged to Palestinian aid.
Inference: The willingness to be branded a “Sponsor of War” to protect Russian revenue suggests a high tolerance for reputational damage. The lack of empathy for Gaza victims compared to Ukraine victims indicates an ideological hierarchy of human worth within the governance culture.
Portfolio Contagion (Baskin-Robbins): Roark’s subsidiary Inspire Brands operates Baskin-Robbins locations in illegal settlements (Ariel, Ma’ale Adumim).5 Subway, as a sister company, is part of the same capital pool. The refusal of Roark to enforce a “Green Line” policy for Baskin-Robbins serves as a predictor for Subway’s potential future behavior in the region.

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

Subway would argue they are a politically neutral sandwich shop and that the owner’s private donations (Aronson) do not reflect corporate policy.

Rebuttal: In private equity, the owner is the policy. There is no independent board to check Aronson’s influence. The “Safe Harbor” failure is a corporate action, not a personal one. The disparity in treating Ukraine vs. Palestine is a systemic governance decision.

Analytical Assessment:

Confidence: Critical.

The ideological alignment is explicit. The UBO supports the IDF. The company supports the Russian economy while claiming helplessness. The governance model is complicit by design, utilizing the franchise structure to evade accountability for operations in conflict zones.

Named Entities / Evidence Map:

Neal Aronson: UBO (FIDF / OpenDor Media).
David Perdue: Recipient of Aronson donations (Anti-BDS).
Baskin-Robbins: Sister Brand (Settlement Operator).
NACP (Ukraine): Entity designating Subway a “Sponsor of War”.

.5. BDS-1000 Classification

Results Summary

Final Score: 441

Tier: Tier C (High Complicity)

Justification Summary:

Subway IP LLC falls into Tier C due to a “Capital-Centric” and “Supply Chain” failure of neutrality. While the brand maintains a Tier 0 kinetic footprint (no stores in Israel), its ownership structure creates a direct conduit to the Israeli military-industrial complex via Roark Capital’s acquisition of GPRS (Dual-Use Tech) and investment in SentinelOne (Cyber/Intel). Operationally, the brand’s supply chain is contaminated by the direct import of settlement produce (Galilee Export) via its UK aggregator Reynolds Catering Supplies. The entity fails the “Safe Harbor” test due to its “International Sponsor of War” status in Russia and ideological silence on Gaza, driven by a UBO (Neal Aronson) who funds the FIDF.

Domain Scoring Summary

BDS-1000 Scoring Matrix – Subway IP LLC

Domain I M P V-Domain Score
Military (V-MIL) 4.0 4.0 3.5 1.14
Economic (V-ECON) 4.8 9.5 4.5 3.09
Political (V-POL) 5.5 8.5 9.0 5.50
Digital (V-DIG) 3.8 6.5 9.0 3.53
V-MIL (1.14): Score driven by Roark’s ownership of GPRS (Impact 4.0: Dual-Use Heavy Hardware). Low proximity (3.5) as it is a sister entity, not direct usage.
V-ECON (3.09): Score driven by Reynolds/Galilee Export trade lane (Impact 4.8: Indirect Portfolio Flow/Settlement Goods). High Magnitude (9.5) due to massive global revenue.
V-POL (5.50): Dominant score. Impact 5.5 (Systemic Bias/FIDF Support). High Proximity (9.0) as the UBO and Corporate Entity directly enact the bias.
V-DIG (3.53): Score driven by “Unit 8200 Stack” (Wiz/SentinelOne). Capped at Impact 3.8 due to “Customer Cap” (buying not selling).

Final Composite Calculation

Using the OR-dominant formula with a side boost:

BRS Score Formula:

Final Score: 441 (Rounded from 440.75)

Grade Classification:

Based on the score of 441, the company falls within:

Tier C (400–599): High Complicity

.6. Recommended Action(s)

1. Targeted Boycott of the “Winter Window”:

Activists should focus boycott pressure specifically during the December to April window. This is the peak season for Israeli produce imports (avocados/dates) into the UK and European supply chains via Reynolds Catering Supplies. Campaigners should demand that IPC Europe and Reynolds explicitly exclude Galilee Export and Mehadrin from their procurement lists.

2. Divestment from Roark Capital:

Pressure must be directed at the institutional investors (Limited Partners) of Roark Capital Group, specifically public pension funds like the New York State Common Retirement Fund and the Maryland State Retirement Agency. These funds should be alerted to the material risks posed by Roark’s investment in dual-use military technology (GPRS) and the reputational contagion of the “International Sponsor of War” designation.

3. “SodaStream” Prevention Campaign:

With the PepsiCo contract effective Jan 1, 2025, a preemptive campaign should be launched to prevent the installation of SodaStream Professional units in Subway locations. This links the “Eat Fresh” brand directly to the displacement of Bedouin communities in the Negev, creating a tangible narrative for protest.

4. Digital Rights Advocacy:

Highlight the link between Subway’s Master Franchisee (Yair Tamir) and the NSO Group. This connects the fast-food boycott with the broader digital rights and privacy movement, expanding the coalition to include anti-surveillance activists.

5. Monitoring Re-Entry:

Maintain strict intelligence tripwires for any announcements regarding “Subway Israel” re-entry. Given the Roark/Inspire Brands infrastructure, a re-entry would likely involve settlement operations (mirroring Baskin-Robbins), necessitating immediate escalation to Tier A or B status.

.

Works cited

1.Subway military Audit
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