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Siemens military Audit

FORENSIC AUDIT REPORT: SIEMENS AG — OPERATIONAL INTEGRATION WITHIN THE ISRAELI DEFENSE APPARATUS AND OCCUPATION INFRASTRUCTURE

CLASSIFICATION: RESTRICTED // DEFENSE LOGISTICS OVERSIGHT

DATE: January 19, 2026

AUTHOR: Senior Defense Logistics Analyst, Special Projects Division

SUBJECT: Comprehensive Assessment of Siemens AG and Subsidiaries Regarding Material Complicity in Israeli Military Operations and Occupation Logistics

.1. Executive Intelligence Summary

1.1 Strategic Overview

This forensic audit was commissioned to evaluate the depth, breadth, and criticality of Siemens AG’s involvement in the State of Israel’s defense, infrastructure, and internal security sectors. The objective is to determine whether the leadership, ownership, or operations of Siemens—encompassing its industrial core, Siemens Energy, and Siemens Healthineers—materially support the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD), the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the occupation of Palestinian territories, or the Israeli Prison Service (IPS).

The investigation distinguishes between incidental commercial presence (standard corporate activity) and structural complicity (provision of critical systems without which the defense or occupation apparatus would face significant degradation). The audit utilizes a “System of Systems” approach, analyzing how Siemens’ technologies serve as the digital, energetic, and logistical backbone of the Israeli state’s ability to project power and maintain control over occupied territories.

1.2 Key Findings

The forensic analysis indicates that Siemens’ involvement in the Israeli defense and occupation ecosystem is not merely transactional but foundational. While Siemens often operates through local intermediaries such as McKit Systems, Orad Group, and RD Energy, the proprietary nature of the technology provided (Product Lifecycle Management software, industrial gas turbines, and rolling stock) ensures that Siemens retains ultimate control over the sustainment of these capabilities.

The audit identifies four critical vectors of complicity:

1.The Digital Nervous System (CIR 1 & 2): Siemens’ software suite (Teamcenter, NX, Solid Edge) acts as the standard operating platform for Israel’s defense industrial base (Elbit, IAI, Rafael). It is the digital environment in which Israel’s weaponry—from the Iron Dome to the Merkava tank—is designed, simulated, and managed.1

2.Kinetic Sustainment (CIR 3): Siemens technology generates approximately 40% of Israel’s electricity.3 Through the construction and long-term maintenance of power plants like Alon Tavor and Ramat Gabriel, Siemens ensures the energy resilience required for Israel’s wartime economy.

3.Infrastructure of Annexation (CIR 4): The provision of Desiro HC trains for the A1 Fast Train, which transects the occupied West Bank, and the integration of settlement-based suppliers (Extal) into the supply chain, demonstrate direct material support for infrastructure that consolidates Israeli control over occupied land.1

4.Carceral Logistics (CIR 2): Through its partner Orad Group, Siemens’ fire safety and control systems are maintained within high-security prisons (Ktzi’ot, Gilboa) that incarcerate Palestinian political prisoners, directly facilitating the operational continuity of the detention regime.6

1.3 Complicity Ranking

Based on the Upper-Extreme scale defined in the audit parameters, Siemens is ranked as UPPER-EXTREME. This ranking is justified by the “replaceability factor”: replacing Siemens’ PLM software or power turbines would require a catastrophic, multi-year restructuring of Israel’s defense and energy sectors. Siemens is not just a vendor; it is a structural pillar.

.2. The Digital Thread: Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) and the Cognitive War

Modern warfare is increasingly software-defined. The lethality of a weapon system is determined in the design and simulation phase long before it reaches the battlefield. This section analyzes Core Intelligence Requirement 1 (Direct Defense Contracting) and CIR 2 (Dual-Use & Tactical Supply) by examining Siemens’ role as the architect of Israel’s defense engineering environment.

2.1 The “Single Source of Truth”: Teamcenter and the Defense Industrial Base

The core of Siemens’ complicity in the defense sector lies in its Siemens Xcelerator portfolio, specifically the Teamcenter Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) software. PLM software is the repository for every piece of data related to a weapon system—from the initial CAD drawing of a missile fin to the maintenance schedule of a tank engine.

2.1.1 The McKit Systems Proxy Mechanism

Siemens AG largely avoids direct prime contracts for sensitive military software in Israel. Instead, it utilizes a strategic channel partner: McKit Systems Ltd., a subsidiary of the Israeli IT giant Malam Team.2 This relationship is not a loose reseller arrangement; it is a deeply integrated partnership where McKit acts as the implementation arm for Siemens’ proprietary technology within the highest echelons of the Israeli security establishment.

The client list for Siemens software via McKit includes the absolute core of the Israeli military-industrial complex:

Israel Ministry of Defense (IMOD): The government entity responsible for all military procurement and strategy.

Israel Defense Forces (IDF): The operational military force.

Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI): Manufacturer of the Arrow missile defense system and Heron drones.

Elbit Systems: Manufacturer of Hermes drones and artillery systems.

RAFAEL Advanced Defense Systems: Manufacturer of Iron Dome and Trophy active protection systems.2

Forensic Insight: The use of McKit allows Siemens to claim it has “no direct involvement” in specific military projects. However, the software licenses (Teamcenter, NX, Solid Edge) remain the intellectual property of Siemens. Siemens engineers provide the backend support, updates, and patches that keep these systems secure. Without Siemens’ active participation in maintaining the software license validity, the digital archives of Israel’s defense industry would become stagnant and vulnerable.

2.1.2 Operational Continuity During Conflict (2023-2024)

A critical indicator of material complicity is the behavior of a corporation during active conflict. Evidence indicates that the relationship between Siemens (via McKit) and the IMOD intensified during the Gaza war (2023-2024).

Between November 2023 and June 2024—a period of intense aerial bombardment and ground operations in Gaza—the IMOD executed multiple contract renewals for Siemens software. These contracts, valued at over $1 million, were issued without public tender, citing “modifications and enhancements”.1

Implication: The IMOD deemed Siemens software so critical to the war effort that it bypassed standard procurement protocols to ensure uninterrupted access. The specific mention of “modifications and enhancements” suggests that the IDF required rapid adjustments to its engineering platforms to support wartime production surges or new tactical requirements.

2.2 The Technical Architecture of Lethality

To understand the gravity of Siemens’ role, one must analyze how its specific software tools are utilized by companies like Elbit and Rafael.

Software Module Functionality Application in Israeli Defense Systems Support Evidence
Siemens NX High-end CAD/CAM/CAE (Computer-Aided Design/Manufacturing/Engineering). Used for the aerodynamic design of missile airframes (Arrow 3, Iron Dome) and UAVs. It allows engineers to simulate airflow, drag, and thermal stress on missile components before physical prototyping. 2
Teamcenter Product Lifecycle Management (PLM). Manages the “Bill of Materials” (BOM) for complex systems like the Merkava tank. It tracks every bolt, sensor, and circuit board, ensuring that maintenance crews have the right data to repair vehicles in the field. It is the “brain” of the logistics supply chain. 1
Solid Edge Mainstream CAD. Utilized for rapid prototyping of tactical gear, vehicle modifications, and sub-systems. Essential for quick-turnaround engineering changes during combat. 2
FLOEFD Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). Embedded simulation tool used to analyze fluid flow and heat transfer. Critical for designing cooling systems for drone engines and missile propulsion systems. 1
Simatic IT / Opcenter Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES). Software that controls the factory floor. It dictates the actions of automated machinery producing munitions and electronic components. 13

Case Study: Elbit Systems & The “Digital Thread”

Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest private arms manufacturer, relies on the “Digital Thread”—a concept marketed heavily by Siemens.9 The Digital Thread connects the design team directly to the manufacturing floor. When the IDF identifies a need for a modification to a drone or an artillery piece based on battlefield feedback in Gaza, Elbit engineers use Siemens NX to redesign the part. This data is instantly transmitted via Teamcenter to the manufacturing floor, where Siemens Simatic controllers direct the machines to produce the new part.

Conclusion: Siemens software effectively reduces the “OODA Loop” (Observe-Orient-Decide-Act) of industrial production, allowing the Israeli military machine to adapt to combat conditions with high velocity.

2.3 The “Vendor Lock-In” Effect

The strategic complicity of Siemens is cemented by “vendor lock-in.” Once a defense organization like IAI or Rafael migrates its entire engineering history (terabytes of classified blueprints and data) into Teamcenter, the cost of switching to a competitor (like Dassault Systèmes) becomes prohibitive in terms of time, money, and operational risk.

Strategic implication: Siemens has effectively captured the Israeli defense engineering market. The IMOD is dependent on Siemens for the continued accessibility of its own military intellectual property. This dependency grants Siemens significant leverage—leverage it has chosen not to use to pressure for human rights compliance, but rather to deepen its revenue streams.15

.3. Logistical Sustainment: Energy Sovereignty and the Kinetic State

Core Intelligence Requirement 3 (Logistical Sustainment) focuses on the infrastructure that keeps the state functioning. In modern warfare, the electrical grid is a strategic asset. A reliable power supply is required to run the factories that build bombs, the servers that process intelligence, and the bases that house troops. Siemens Energy is the primary architect of Israel’s transition to energy independence.

3.1 The 40% Capacity Threshold

Forensic analysis confirms that Siemens technology is responsible for approximately 40% of Israel’s total power generation capacity.3 This statistic places Siemens in the category of a “Systemically Important Vendor.” The Israeli state cannot function at its current capacity without the continued operation of Siemens turbines.

3.2 Turnkey Construction and the “Sovereign” Grid

Siemens involvement goes beyond selling equipment; it executes “turnkey” projects, meaning it designs, builds, and commissions entire power plants before handing them over to Israeli operators.

A. Alon Tavor & Ramat Gabriel Power Plants

Strategic Location: These plants are located in northern Israel, near key industrial zones and military installations. They provide decentralized power resilience, ensuring that the north (often targeted by Hezbollah rocket fire) has independent generation capacity.

The Technology: Siemens supplied SGT-800 industrial gas turbines and SST-300 steam turbines.3 The SGT-800 is renowned for its high reliability and efficiency, making it ideal for critical industrial applications.

The Client: RD Energy, an Independent Power Producer (IPP).3 By empowering IPPs, Siemens helps decentralize the Israeli grid, making it more resilient to attack than a centralized grid dependent solely on the Israel Electric Corporation (IEC).

B. Gezer Power Plant

Legacy Integration: Siemens won the tender for the Gezer plant expansion in 2002.16 This demonstrates a multi-decade commitment to building the Israeli grid. The Gezer plant is central to the grid’s stability in the densely populated center of the country.

3.3 The Long-Term Service Agreement (LTP) Trap

The physical construction of a power plant is only the beginning of the relationship. Modern gas turbines are complex machines that require specialized maintenance, proprietary spare parts, and remote monitoring.

Mechanism of Control: Siemens typically signs 15-to-25-year Long-Term Programs (LTP) or Operation & Maintenance (O&M) contracts with its clients.17

Complicity: These contracts ensure that Siemens engineers are permanently embedded in the operational cycle of the Israeli grid. During times of crisis or war, when the grid is under strain, Siemens’ remote monitoring centers (often located in Germany or the US) optimize the performance of these turbines.20 This constitutes active, day-to-day support of the state’s energy security.

3.4 The Great Sea Interconnector: Geopolitical Legitimacy

The Great Sea Interconnector (formerly EuroAsia Interconnector) is a subsea HVDC cable project connecting the power grids of Israel, Cyprus, and Greece.21

Siemens’ Role: Siemens was selected as the “preferred contractor” for the construction of the Voltage Source Converter (VSC) stations.1 These stations are the technological heart of the project, converting DC power from the cable back to AC for the grid.

Geopolitical Impact:
1.Ending Energy Isolation: Israel is currently an “energy island.” The interconnector connects it to the European grid, providing a massive strategic safety net. If Israel’s domestic power plants are damaged in a war, it can import power from the EU via this cable. Siemens is building the plug for this safety net.

2.Settlement Laundering: The Israeli grid does not differentiate between the internationally recognized territory of Israel and the illegal settlements in the West Bank. Electricity flows seamlessly across the Green Line. By connecting the Israeli grid to Europe, the Interconnector allows electricity produced in Israel (potentially using gas from occupied waters) to be sold to Europe, and allows Europe to power settlements. This effectively integrates the settlement enterprise into the European energy market, normalizing the occupation.1

3.Status (2025): The project remains active, with the Cypriot government and EU providing funding and political cover despite Turkish objections.21 Siemens remains the designated technology partner for the converter stations.

.4. Transportation and the Architecture of Annexation

Core Intelligence Requirement 4 (Supply Chain Integration) is most visibly engaged in the transportation sector. Transportation infrastructure in occupied territories is a primary tool of annexation, creating permanent physical links between the occupying power and the occupied territory while fragmenting the indigenous population.

4.1 Israel Railways: The Desiro HC Contract

In 2018, Siemens secured a landmark contract worth approximately €900 million to supply 60 Desiro HC double-decker electric trains to Israel Railways (ISR), with options to expand the fleet significantly.1 This was a strategic win for Siemens, marking its first delivery of complete trains to Israel.

4.1.1 The A1 Fast Train Controversy

The primary deployment route for these high-capacity trains is the A1 Fast Train linking Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Route Geography: The A1 line crosses the Green Line into the occupied West Bank in the Latrun salient and potentially other areas near Modi’in.1

The “Facts on the Ground”: The construction of the railway involved the expropriation of privately owned Palestinian land. The train line is designed exclusively for Israeli citizens and settlers, bypassing Palestinian towns and offering no service to the occupied population whose land it traverses.

Siemens’ Material Support: While Siemens claims it did not lay the tracks, it provides the rolling stock without which the infrastructure is useless. Furthermore, Siemens is responsible for the maintenance of the trains for a period of 15 years and constructed a dedicated maintenance depot in Ashkelon.24

Forensic Conclusion: By supplying the vehicles and the maintenance for a transportation project that violates the Geneva Conventions (transfer of population into occupied territory, expropriation of land for non-military use), Siemens is directly complicit in the maintenance of the illegal infrastructure.

4.2 Supply Chain Contamination: The Extal Connection

A critical component of the ISR contract was the requirement for “reciprocal procurement”—Siemens had to spend 20% of the contract value with Israeli companies.

The Partner: Siemens contracted Extal, an aluminum extrusion company.1

The Location: Extal is located in the Mishor Adumim industrial zone. Mishor Adumim is an illegal Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank, east of Jerusalem.

The Violation: By purchasing $4 million worth of aluminum profiles from Extal, Siemens directly financed a settlement-based enterprise.1 This contradicts Siemens’ own claims of adhering to the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. The transaction provided legitimacy, revenue, and technological transfer (via Siemens’ quality standards) to a company operating on stolen land.

Siemens’ Defense: In 2024, Siemens responded to inquiries by stating that legal reviews found the transaction “in line with our human rights due diligence obligations”.5 This assertion relies on a narrow, legalistic interpretation that ignores the consensus of international humanitarian law regarding the illegality of settlements.

4.3 Legacy Infrastructure: Traffic Control and “Apartheid Roads”

Historically, Siemens supplied traffic control systems for Israeli roads in the West Bank, including Route 443, which has been described by human rights organizations as an “apartheid road” due to restrictions on Palestinian usage.1

Divestment as Defense: In 2022, Siemens divested its Intelligent Traffic Systems (ITS) division, which was acquired by Atlantia (now Mundys) and rebranded as Yunex Traffic.26

Forensic Assessment: While Siemens AG no longer owns the operational entity, the legacy of its involvement remains. The systems currently managing traffic for settlers in the West Bank were manufactured and installed by Siemens. The divestment shifts current operational responsibility but does not erase historical complicity in establishing the infrastructure of segregation.

.5. The Carceral State: Surveillance and Internal Security

Core Intelligence Requirement 2 (Dual-Use & Tactical Supply) extends to the internal security apparatus. The Israel Prison Service (IPS) manages the detention of thousands of Palestinian political prisoners. The security and safety of these facilities are critical to the state’s ability to suppress resistance.

5.1 The Orad Group Proxy

Siemens maintains its presence in the sensitive security sector through a strategic partnership with Orad Group, an Israeli integrator specializing in security and safety systems.6

Contractual Scope: Orad serves as the “sole supplier” for the maintenance, repair, and modification of Siemens fire detection and extinguishing systems within IPS facilities.6

Timeline of Support: Public records confirm contracts spanning from 2012 through at least the end of 2023.5 This indicates a continuous, decade-long relationship servicing the prison system.

5.2 Specific Facilities and Technologies

The audit identified specific facilities where Siemens technology is deployed via Orad:

1.Ktzi’ot Prison: Located in the Negev desert, Ktzi’ot is the largest detention center in Israel and is notorious for holding Palestinian administrative detainees (held without charge or trial). Orad lists a project at Ktzi’ot involving “Optical Radar Sensors, Command & Control Center, Night Vision System”.7 While the fire safety systems are Siemens-branded, the integration into a “Command & Control” center suggests a convergence of safety and surveillance data.

2.Gilboa Prison: A high-security facility. Siemens perimeter security systems were identified here as early as 2004, and maintenance of fire systems likely continues under the general framework agreement.5

Forensic Insight:

Fire safety systems in a prison context are not merely about preventing fires; they are integrated into the automated door control and lockdown mechanisms. A fire alarm triggers specific security protocols—doors locking or unlocking, ventilation changes, etc. By maintaining the “life safety” systems of a prison, Siemens ensures the facility remains operational. A prison that cannot pass fire safety inspection cannot legally (or practically) house inmates. Therefore, Siemens provides the regulatory license to operate for the Israeli carceral system.

.6. Medical Logistics and the Dual-Use Threshold

Core Intelligence Requirement 2 also covers the medical sector. While often shielded by “humanitarian” exemptions, the integration of the Israeli medical system with the military apparatus during wartime blurs the line between civilian care and military logistics.

6.1 Siemens Healthineers and the Military-Medical Complex

Siemens Healthineers (majority-owned by Siemens AG) is a dominant supplier of diagnostic imaging equipment to Israeli hospitals.

Soroka Medical Center: Located in Be’er Sheva, Soroka is the primary hospital for the IDF Southern Command. During the Gaza war (2023-2024), it treated thousands of wounded soldiers. In 2025, following missile damage, the hospital received substantial government and donor funding for repairs and upgrades.30 Siemens Healthineers is a key contractor for Soroka, providing the MRI and CT scanners used to treat combat casualties.31

Sheba Medical Center: The IDF’s main rehabilitation center. Siemens provides advanced imaging and diagnostic tools here as well.32

Tender Exemptions:

The Israeli Ministry of Health (MOH) frequently grants tender exemptions to Siemens Healthineers for maintenance and spare parts, citing “sole supplier” status.33 This confirms that Siemens equipment is deeply embedded in the national healthcare infrastructure—no third party can service it. This dependency ensures that Siemens remains a beneficiary of the increased healthcare spending driven by the war’s casualty rates.

6.2 Tactical Medical Capabilities

Siemens manufactures the Mobilett Impact, a ruggedized, portable digital X-ray system.34

Dual-Use Application: While marketed for civilian hospitals, these units are specifically designed for rapid deployment, ease of cleaning (decontamination), and battery operation. These characteristics make them ideal for field hospitals and forward-deployed medical units.

Military Usage: Portable X-ray systems are standard table of organization and equipment (TO&E) for modern military medical corps. The availability of Siemens Mobilett units in the Israeli market creates a ready stockpile for IDF Medical Corps mobilization.

.7. Strategic Assessment and Ranking

7.1 Compliance vs. Complicity

Siemens AG consistently cites its adherence to the “UN Guiding Principles” and its internal compliance reviews as a defense against complicity allegations.1 However, this audit finds a stark divergence between corporate policy and operational reality.

The “Legalistic Shield”: Siemens relies on the technical legality of its contracts (e.g., “we didn’t build the tracks”) to obfuscate the functional outcome of its work (the tracks are useless without the trains).

The “Boycott Hypocrisy”: Evidence suggests Siemens may have signed a “boycott Israel” clause to win a railway contract in Turkey 36 while simultaneously deepening its ties to the Israeli occupation. This behavior indicates a strategy driven purely by commercial opportunism rather than ethical consistency.

7.2 Grading Against Core Intelligence Requirements (CIRs)

CIR Category Assessment Justification
1. Direct Defense Contracting HIGH While often routed through McKit Systems, the end-user for Teamcenter/NX is explicitly the IMOD and arms manufacturers. Procurement during the 2023-24 war confirms operational necessity.
2. Dual-Use & Tactical Supply MEDIUM-HIGH Medical equipment supports the military-medical complex; Orad Group contracts support the prison system.
3. Logistical Sustainment EXTREME Siemens is a structural pillar of Israel’s electricity (40% capacity) and rail infrastructure. The Great Sea Interconnector is a strategic geopolitical asset.
4. Supply Chain Integration HIGH The contract with Extal (Mishor Adumim settlement) is irrefutable evidence of direct financial integration with the illegal settlement economy.

7.3 Final Complicity Ranking: UPPER-EXTREME

Justification:

The Upper-Extreme ranking is reserved for entities whose withdrawal would cause significant, immediate, and potentially catastrophic disruption to the target’s military or occupation capabilities.

1.Irreplaceability: Replacing Siemens Teamcenter at Elbit or IAI is not a simple software uninstall; it is a migration of millions of engineering records that would take years and cost millions, stalling weapon development.

2.Critical Infrastructure: Replacing the SGT-800 turbines at Alon Tavor or the Desiro HC trains on the A1 line is physically and financially impossible in the short term.

3.Capital Flow: Through the Extal deal and the integration of settlement power grids via the Interconnector, Siemens provides the economic and infrastructural liquidity that allows the settlement enterprise to expand.

Siemens is not merely a vendor selling “off-the-shelf” goods. It is a Sustainment Partner. Its technologies form the operating system of the Israeli defense industry and the metabolism of its critical infrastructure.

.End of Report

Prepared by: Senior Defense Logistics Analyst

Unit: Corporate Forensic Audit Division

Clearance: FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

Data Appendix: Key Contractual Evidence

Project / System Entity Involved Nature of Complicity Status Source
Teamcenter / NX IMOD, Elbit, IAI, Rafael Software backbone for weapon design & lifecycle management. Active (Renewed 2023/24) 1
Desiro HC Trains Israel Railways Rolling stock for A1 line crossing Green Line. Active (Delivered 2021+) 5
Alon Tavor Power Plant RD Energy Gas turbines (SGT-800) & Long-term maintenance. Active (Commissioned 2018) 3
Fire Detection Israel Prison Service Safety systems for prisons (Gilboa, Ktzi’ot). Active (via Orad Group) 6
Great Sea Interconnector EuroAsia / State of Israel Converter stations connecting Israel/Settlements to EU grid. Active/Planning 21
Aluminum Supply Extal (Mishor Adumim Settlement) Supply chain integration with illegal settlement industry. Confirmed (Past Transaction) 1

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