Table of Contents
Company: Superdrug Stores plc
Jurisdiction: United Kingdom (Headquarters: Croydon)
Sector: Retail / Health & Beauty / Pharmacy
Leadership: Peter Macnab (CEO), A.S. Watson Group (Intermediate Parent), CK Hutchison Holdings (Ultimate Parent)
Structural State-Building and Logistical Sustainment The forensic investigation concludes that while Superdrug Stores plc presents to the UK consumer market as a benign health and beauty retailer, it functions financially as a downstream cash-generating unit for a global conglomerate, CK Hutchison Holdings (CKHH), that acts as a strategic “State-Builder” in Israel. The ultimate parent entity does not merely invest in the Israeli economy; it operates critical national infrastructure essential for the state’s survival and military resilience. Specifically, CKHH’s subsidiary, Hutchison Water, retains the Operation and Maintenance (O&M) contract for the Sorek Desalination Plant, the largest Seawater Reverse Osmosis (SWRO) facility in the world.1 This facility provides approximately 20% of Israel’s municipal water supply, a resource classified as a strategic asset in the arid geopolitical context of the region. By securing this water supply, the parent company effectively “drought-proofs” the Israeli state, insulating it from resource scarcity and securing the water-energy nexus required for both civilian stability and military logistics near sensitive sites like the Palmachim Airbase.3
Economic Normalization of Settlement Enterprise At the direct retail interface, Superdrug is complicit in the economic normalization of the settlement enterprise. The audit confirms the continued stocking and sale of Ahava Dead Sea Laboratories products. Despite Ahava’s strategic relocation of its manufacturing label to Ein Gedi to evade European Union guidelines, the forensic analysis reveals that the company maintains its visitor center and extraction infrastructure in the illegal West Bank settlement of Mitzpe Shalem.2 By retailing these goods, Superdrug facilitates the monetization of pillaged natural resources (Dead Sea minerals) from occupied territory, directly contravening international consensus on the exploitation of occupied resources and the Fourth Geneva Convention.4
Operational Dependency on Military-Intelligence Complex Superdrug’s operational continuity is predicated on a “silent integration” of Israeli military-grade technology. The technographic audit reveals a structural dependency on the “Unit 8200 Stack”—cybersecurity and operational software rooted in the IDF’s signals intelligence corps. The retailer relies on Check Point (Network Security), CyberArk (Identity Security), and SentinelOne (Endpoint Protection) to secure British consumer data. Additionally, its revenue generation via the “Optimo” retail media network is powered by the Mabaya engine, developed and maintained in Tel Aviv.5 This creates a bi-directional flow: British consumer data flows through Israeli-secured infrastructure, and licensing revenue flows back to the Israeli high-tech sector, which functions as a strategic reserve for the state’s defense industry.5
Asymmetric Ethical Governance and Political Bias The investigation identifies a stark asymmetry in Superdrug’s corporate governance regarding geopolitical ethics. Following the invasion of Ukraine, the company moved swiftly to remove Russian-origin products and explicitly cited the conflict in risk assessments. Conversely, the company utilizes linguistic ambiguity regarding the occupation of Palestine (“conflict in the Middle East”) and refuses to apply the same divestment logic to settlement goods.4 This failure of the “Safe Harbor” test indicates a deliberate policy of commercial protectionism toward its Israeli supply chain, prioritized over its stated ethical commitments to modern slavery and human rights standards.4
Ideological Material Support to Military R&D The Li Ka Shing Foundation, controlled by the ultimate owners of Superdrug, provided a $130 million endowment to the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. The Technion is assessed within this dossier not merely as a university, but as the primary Research & Development engine for the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), responsible for developing the D9 remote-controlled bulldozer and advanced drone technologies.4 This donation constitutes “Upper-Extreme” ideological and material support, directly strengthening the Qualitative Military Edge (QME) of the Israeli military apparatus.4
Superdrug was originally founded in 1964 by the Goldstein family but has since been absorbed into the massive global conglomerate structure of the A.S. Watson Group, which was acquired by Hutchison Whampoa in 2002. The crucial genealogical link for this investigation is the ultimate parent, CK Hutchison Holdings (CKHH), formed from the merger of Cheung Kong Holdings and Hutchison Whampoa in 2015.2 The conglomerate is defined by the Li Family Dynasty: Li Ka-shing (Senior Advisor) and his son Victor Li Tzar-kuoi (Chairman and Group Co-Managing Director).4 The founding capital and strategic direction of the group have historically pivoted towards high-growth markets with heavy infrastructure needs.
The “Strategic Zionism” of the Li family differs fundamentally from the ideological Zionism of Western lobbying groups. It is characterized by heavy capital investment in immovable assets—ports, desalination plants, power stations—and deep technology transfer. This suggests a calculated, long-term bet on the permanence, stability, and military hegemony of the Israeli regime. The conglomerate treats Israel not as a volatile conflict zone, but as a stable node for high-tech innovation and critical infrastructure investment. This approach effectively normalizes the occupation through economic integration, viewing the state’s military prowess as a guarantor of asset security rather than a reputational liability.4
The ownership structure is vertical and absolute, creating a direct financial pipeline from the UK high street to the conglomerate’s treasury.
The investigation identifies Dr. Dan Eldar as the critical “human bridge” between the UK/Hong Kong corporate sphere and the Israeli state.
Dr. Eldar’s dual mandate signifies a unified strategic command. The same governance structure that oversees the sale of cancer drugs in the UK (via the wider group’s healthcare interests) is simultaneously overseeing the construction of hydroelectric power plants in the Jordan Valley. Eldar, holding a PhD in Government from Harvard and degrees in Public Administration from Hebrew University, represents the sophisticated integration of private capital with Israeli state administration. This ensures that CKHH’s investments remain aligned with Israel’s national strategic priorities, effectively merging corporate profit motives with state-building objectives.4
Superdrug is not an independent actor; it is a tributary. The profits generated by selling lipstick and paracetamol in the UK (£136.8m pre-tax in 2024) are consolidated into CKHH’s central treasury. Because capital is fungible, these profits effectively underwrite the group’s credit rating and investment capacity. Therefore, the financial health of Superdrug is structurally linked to the financial capacity of Hutchison Water to operate Israel’s desalination infrastructure. The structure is designed to extract value from Western retail markets and redeploy it into high-yield, state-backed infrastructure projects, of which Israel is a primary beneficiary.2
| Date | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Partner Communications (Orange Israel) Founding | Hutchison Whampoa finances and builds the cellular network that services the IDF and West Bank settlements. Establishes the group as a key player in Israeli infrastructure.3 |
| 2009 | Sale of Partner Communications | Hutchison sells controlling stake to Scailex for $1.38bn. Capital is repatriated but residual bond holdings remain. Marks pivot from telecom to water/tech.2 |
| 2011 | Acquisition of Northumbrian Water | CKI (consortium including Li Ka Shing Foundation) acquires UK water utility, creating a global water portfolio that would later include Israeli assets.7 |
| 2013 | Sorek Desalination Plant Commissioned | Hutchison Water (CKHH subsidiary) begins operating the world’s largest SWRO plant, providing 20% of Israel’s potable water.8 |
| 2013 | Technion Endowment | Li Ka Shing Foundation donates $130 million to the Technion, funding the R&D engine of the Israeli military-industrial complex.4 |
| 2015 | Investment in Aquarius Spectrum | Hutchison Water invests in Israeli acoustic leak detection tech, signalling a shift to “CleanTech” and dual-use innovation.5 |
| 2016 | Ahava Factory Relocation Announcement | Ahava announces move from Mitzpe Shalem to Ein Gedi to evade EU labelling; Superdrug continues to stock the brand throughout the transition.2 |
| 2019 | Investment in Sight Diagnostics | Longliv Ventures (CKHH) leads $10m investment in “OLO” blood analyzer, a device with high tactical military utility.3 |
| 2020 | Sorek B Tender Loss | Hutchison Water loses bid for Sorek B due to direct US pressure regarding security risks of Chinese involvement near Palmachim Airbase.9 |
| 2021 | Criteo Acquires Mabaya | Criteo buys Israeli ad-tech firm Mabaya. Superdrug adopts this engine for its “Optimo” retail media network, embedding Israeli code in its revenue stack.5 |
| 2022 | Ukraine Response vs. Gaza Silence | Superdrug removes Russian products post-invasion but maintains Israeli settlement goods, failing the “Safe Harbor” consistency test.4 |
| 2023 | Teva Price-Fixing Settlement | Superdrug supplier Teva pays $225m to DOJ for price-fixing. Superdrug continues deep pharmaceutical procurement relationship.2 |
| 2024 | Superdrug Profits Reported | Superdrug reports £136.8m profit, consolidating funds to parent CKHH which continues to operate Sorek A.6 |
| 2025 | Check Point & AS Watson Award | AS Watson and Check Point honored together at GS1 Summit, publicly validating the strategic partnership with the Unit 8200-linked firm.5 |
| 2026 | Superdrug Expansion | Superdrug announces 30 new UK stores, deepening its physical footprint while maintaining the “Unit 8200” surveillance and security stack.10 |
| Feb 2026 | Panama Ports Arbitration | CKHH initiates arbitration against Panama, demonstrating the group’s aggressive defense of its global port/infrastructure interests, relevant to its failed Israeli port bids.11 |
Goal: The primary goal of this domain analysis is to establish the extent to which Superdrug’s parent company and supply chain provide material support, logistical sustainment, or dual-use technology to the Israeli military apparatus. The investigation seeks to determine if the commercial activities of the group cross the threshold into military enablement.
Evidence & Analysis (Comprehensive and Deep):
Logistical Sustainment: Sorek Desalination Plant (O&M) The investigation confirms that Hutchison Water, a subsidiary of Superdrug’s ultimate parent, retains the Operation and Maintenance (O&M) contract for the Sorek Desalination Plant (Sorek A).3 This is not a passive financial holding. Water is a strategic military asset in the arid Middle East. Sorek A produces 150 million cubic meters of potable water annually, accounting for approximately 20% of Israel’s municipal water demand.8 The plant feeds the national water carrier system, which supplies IDF bases, military industries, and civilian populations indiscriminately. By retaining the O&M contract, CK Hutchison provides the specialized engineering, management protocols, and technical staffing necessary to “drought-proof” the state. This effectively secures the hydrological resilience required for sustained military operations and settlement expansion. The facility’s geographic location near Palmachim Airbase and the Soreq Nuclear Research Center further integrates it into the state’s critical defense architecture, making CKHH a custodian of a key node in Israel’s national security grid.9
Dual-Use Technology: Longliv Ventures & Sight Diagnostics Longliv Ventures, CKHH’s corporate venture arm based in Herzliya, led a strategic investment in Sight Diagnostics.3 Sight Diagnostics produces the “OLO” blood analyzer. While ostensibly marketed for civilian clinics, the device possesses specific characteristics—”toaster-sized” portability, use of dry cartridges rather than liquid reagents, and ruggedization—that meet military requirements for Role 1 (Unit level) and Role 2 (Brigade level) medical support. The forensic audit confirms that during the COVID-19 pandemic, this exact technology was deployed by an IDF task force commanded by Brig. Gen. Nissan Davidi.3 This demonstrates the direct transition of Longliv-funded technology into the state’s emergency and military logistics command structure. The investment validates and commercializes a “dual-use” capability that enhances the survivability of personnel in conflict zones.
Sustaining the “Silicon Wadi” Strategic Reserve The parent company’s integration of Israeli retail tech (e.g., SuperUp) and investment in incubators (Hutchison Kinrot) serves to capitalize the Israeli high-tech sector. This sector functions as a strategic reserve for the IDF, sharing talent, R&D, and funding with elite units like Unit 8200. By scaling these companies globally through the A.S. Watson network, the group helps maintain the economic viability of Israel’s defense-innovation ecosystem, ensuring that the talent pool required for state cyber-warfare remains funded and active in the civilian sector between conflicts.3
Counter-Arguments & Assessment:
A potential counter-argument is that CKHH sold the “Sorek A” concession in 2019. However, the forensic rebuttal is that while the financial concession was sold to Dan Capital, the operational control (O&M) was explicitly retained. In a complicity assessment, the operator is arguably more significant than the financier, as they provide the active human and technical resources that keep the infrastructure functioning. Similarly, regarding Sight Diagnostics, one might argue it is a medical company, not a weapons manufacturer. However, modern warfare relies heavily on “Dual-Use” technology. Ruggedized diagnostics are critical for soldier survivability, and funding the development of such tech constitutes “Tactical Supply” complicity, distinct from but related to lethal aid.
Analytical Assessment:
The entity displays Moderate-High Military Complicity. While Superdrug itself does not sell weapons, its parent is a key operator of militarized infrastructure (water) and a financier of dual-use technology. The structural link is absolute, linking UK retail profits to the sustainment of strategic Israeli assets. Confidence: High.
Intelligence Gaps:
Named Entities / Evidence Map:
Goal: To determine the depth of Superdrug’s integration into the Israeli economy through direct sourcing, parent company infrastructure operations, and reliance on “National Champion” firms. This domain distinguishes between extracting profits from Israel and investing capital into the state’s strategic viability.
Evidence & Analysis (Comprehensive and Deep):
The State-Building Parent: CK Hutchison The most profound economic complicity lies in the “State-Builder” status of CK Hutchison. The group’s involvement in Sorek A (20% of municipal water) and the Kochav Hayarden hydroelectric project (344MW) constitutes “Tier 1” complicity.2 These are not standard commercial ventures; they are existential infrastructure projects that allow the Israeli state to expand its population and economy despite natural resource limitations. Superdrug’s role as a “cash cow” (£1.6bn revenue, £136.8m profit in 2024) is to generate the liquidity that CKHH’s treasury recycles into these capital-intensive projects. The fungibility of capital means that UK consumer spending effectively underwrites the credit rating CKHH uses to finance Israeli infrastructure.6
Settlement Laundering: Ahava Superdrug continues to stock Ahava products. Ahava extracts minerals from the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) at the Dead Sea. Although the factory label now reads “Ein Gedi” (inside the Green Line), the audit confirms that Ahava continues to lease the visitor center and conduct extraction activities near the illegal settlement of Mitzpe Shalem.2 This is a classic case of “Settlement Laundering”—altering the packaging to evade boycott pressure while maintaining the extractive mechanism that pillages occupied resources. By stocking these goods, Superdrug acts as a fence for stolen property, monetizing resources extracted in violation of the Hague Regulations.
The Pharmaceutical Pipeline: Teva Superdrug’s pharmacy division is structurally reliant on Teva Pharmaceutical Industries. Teva is Israel’s largest company and a “National Champion.” As a dominant supplier of generics to the NHS and Superdrug, Teva receives a massive, consistent flow of public and private UK funds via Superdrug’s dispensaries. This relationship represents the largest single volume of transactional flow between the retailer and the Israeli economy. Furthermore, Superdrug’s continued partnership ignores Teva’s admission of price-fixing (paying $225m in settlements to the US DOJ), signaling that commercial convenience overrides ethical supply chain governance regarding corporate malfeasance.2
Own-Brand Manufacturing: Albaad The forensic audit flags Superdrug’s “My Little Star” wipes for probable manufacturing by Albaad Massuot Yitzhak, an Israeli kibbutz-based firm. Private label (own-brand) manufacturing involves deeper complicity than stocking a third-party brand. It requires direct contracts, product specification, and long-term supply chain integration. If confirmed by the barcode prefix (729), this represents a direct manufacturing dependency on an Israeli entity, embedding the Israeli economy into the retailer’s own brand identity.2
Counter-Arguments & Assessment:
Superdrug might argue that Teva is the default NHS supplier and it has no choice but to stock them. While true for specific prescriptions, Superdrug has procurement power for Over-The-Counter (OTC) generics and could diversify its supply chain to reduce reliance on a company convicted of fraud and complicit in the state’s economy. Regarding Ahava, the company may point to the “Ein Gedi” relocation as evidence of compliance. However, the extraction site matters more than the factory site; the minerals are still taken from the occupied shoreline. The “Ein Gedi” move is legally performative, not reparative.
Analytical Assessment:
The economic ties are structural (parental infrastructure), commercial (Teva/Ahava), and operational (Albaad). Superdrug acts as an economic engine feeding a parent deeply embedded in the Israeli state-building project. The complicity is active and sustained. Confidence: High.
Intelligence Gaps:
Named Entities / Evidence Map:
Goal: To evaluate the ideological alignment of the leadership, the use of philanthropic capital for military-academic support, and the ethical consistency of the company’s geopolitical stances.
Evidence & Analysis (Comprehensive and Deep):
The Technion Endowment The Li Ka Shing Foundation donated $130 million to the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.4 This is not a donation to the arts; the Technion is widely regarded as the “MIT of the Israeli Military.” It is the primary developer of the D9 remote-controlled bulldozer (used in home demolitions) and advanced drone surveillance tech. The donation strengthened the Technion’s capacity to recruit talent and conduct R&D that directly serves the IDF. It represents a massive transfer of wealth from the owners of Superdrug to the institution most responsible for maintaining Israel’s Qualitative Military Edge (QME).4
The Governance Nexus: Dr. Dan Eldar The presence of Dr. Dan Eldar in dual executive roles—Chairman of HUTCHMED (UK) and Executive Director of Hutchison Water (Israel)—is the “smoking gun” of governance integration.4 It proves there is no firewall between the group’s UK retail/pharma operations and its Israeli state-building operations. Eldar’s background in Harvard Government and Hebrew University Public Administration suggests he functions as a sophisticated conduit for aligning private capital with Israeli state interests, ensuring that the group’s investment strategy serves the geopolitical needs of the state.
The “Safe Harbor” Asymmetry Superdrug fails the ethical consistency test known as “Safe Harbor.” In 2022, Superdrug explicitly named the “conflict in Ukraine” in risk assessments and removed Russian goods. In contrast, regarding Gaza and the West Bank, it uses the passive voice (“conflict in the Middle East”) and protects settlement supply chains (Ahava). This asymmetry proves that the company’s “neutrality” is selective and politically biased. By enforcing a uniform policy that bans staff from wearing Palestine solidarity badges while simultaneously selling settlement goods, Superdrug is not neutral; it is enforcing a silence that protects its complicity.4
Counter-Arguments & Assessment:
The company may argue that the Li family practices “Strategic Zionism,” not ideological Zionism. However, the effect is identical. Whether motivated by profit or ideology, the result is the strengthening of the Israeli state. “Strategic” support is often more dangerous than “Ideological” support because it is sustained, large-scale, and rationalized as business logic. Similarly, arguing the Technion donation was for education ignores the fungibility of money; a $130m endowment frees up the Technion’s other funds for military R&D and expands the infrastructure available to military researchers.
Analytical Assessment:
The ideological support is material (Technion) and the governance is integrated (Eldar). The failure of the Safe Harbor test reveals a corporate culture that actively protects its Israeli interests against ethical scrutiny. Confidence: High.
Intelligence Gaps:
Named Entities / Evidence Map:
Goal: To map the integration of Israeli state-linked technology into Superdrug’s operational stack and assess the risks of data sovereignty and financial support to the cyber-intelligence complex.
Evidence & Analysis (Comprehensive and Deep):
The “Unit 8200” Cyber-Stack Superdrug’s digital security is outsourced to Check Point (Network), CyberArk (Identity), and SentinelOne (Endpoint).5 All three vendors were founded by alumni of Unit 8200 (IDF Signals Intelligence). By integrating these tools—specifically SentinelOne which operates at the “kernel level”—Superdrug grants Israeli-designed software absolute visibility over its British operations. This creates a Data Sovereignty Risk: in a crisis, Israeli state actors could theoretically leverage these backdoors. Financially, Superdrug’s licensing fees provide recurring revenue to the commercial arms of the Israeli intelligence apparatus. The symbiotic relationship was highlighted in 2025 when AS Watson and Check Point were honored together at the GS1 Hong Kong Summit, validating the strategic partnership.5
Monetization via Tel Aviv: Optimo / Mabaya Superdrug’s “Optimo” retail media network uses the Mabaya engine.5 Mabaya is an Israeli ad-tech firm acquired by Criteo. The code that determines which sponsored products appear to UK customers is developed in Tel Aviv. A portion of every ad dollar spent by L’Oreal or Unilever on Superdrug.com flows to Israel to pay R&D salaries, directly linking Superdrug’s digital revenue growth to the Israeli tech sector.
Surveillance Normalization: Facewatch Superdrug uses Facewatch biometric surveillance. While the algorithm provider shifted from AnyVision (Oosto) to RealNetworks, the deployment normalizes military-grade surveillance in civilian retail. The operational logic—creating watchlists and preemptively flagging “subjects of interest”—mirrors the control matrices used in the occupation. The initial choice of AnyVision (a firm involved in West Bank checkpoint surveillance) reveals a corporate willingness to procure unethical tech until public pressure forces a switch.5
Counter-Arguments & Assessment:
A standard defense is that Check Point and CyberArk are “industry standards” and using them is best practice. However, “Industry standard” does not absolve complicity. It highlights the success of the Israeli state in embedding its cyber sector into global infrastructure. Superdrug has choices (e.g., Palo Alto Networks, CrowdStrike) but chooses to double down on the Unit 8200 stack, reinforcing the economic power of the Israeli cyber-complex.
Analytical Assessment:
The dependency is structural. Superdrug cannot secure its network or monetize its website without Israeli technology. The integration is deep, validated by leadership, and creates data sovereignty risks. Confidence: High.
Intelligence Gaps:
Named Entities / Evidence Map:
Results Summary:
Domain Scoring Summary
The BDS-1000 model requires a separate evaluation of the target’s complicity across four domains: Military (V-MIL), Digital (V-DIG), Economic (V-ECON), and Political (V-POL). Each domain’s score is a function of its measured Impact (I), Magnitude (M), and Proximity (P).
BDS-1000 Scoring Matrix – Superdrug Stores plc
| Domain | I | M | P | V-Domain Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Military (V-MIL) | 1.5 | 3.0 | 9.0 | 0.64 |
| Economic (V-ECON) | 9.2 | 9.5 | 4.5 | 5.91 |
| Political (V-POL) | 7.5 | 8.5 | 4.5 | 4.82 |
| Digital (V-DIG) | 3.9 | 5.5 | 9.0 | 3.06 |
V-{domain} Calculation
![]()
Final Composite
Using the OR-dominant formula with a side boost:
Let:
![]()
![]()
BRS Score Formula
![]()
Then:

Final Score: 476
Grade Classification:
Based on the score of 476, the company falls within:
Tier: Tier C