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: A ‘Star Wars’ sequel in Ukraine? Iron Dome project seeks to protect country from missiles

A San Francisco tech company is developing what executives call the Ukraine Iron Dome, a mobile, all-weather air-defense structure designed to intercept and destroy rockets and artillery shells coming from Russia. Read More...

Former President Ronald Reagan dreamed of a “Star Wars” air-defense system that would shield the U.S. from incoming Soviet nuclear missiles, but the sci-fi-inspired Strategic Defensive Initiative technology proved too costly and difficult in the mid-1980s.

Four decades later, JustAnswer Chief Executive Andy Kurtzig and the Lviv IT Cluster are developing what they call the Ukraine Iron Dome, a mobile, all-weather air-defense structure designed to intercept and destroy rockets and artillery shells coming from Russia.

Code named Sky Project, the joint initiative is funded and supplied by JustAnswer, a San Francisco-based company with more than 250 employees in war-ravaged Ukraine. The project’s other participants are the Lviv Military Administration, Ukraine Air Command West, Software Association of Japan, itSMF Japan and others, though the partnership would welcome funding from Ukraine’s military.

JustAnswer is developing with the Lviv IT Cluster what it calls the Ukraine Iron Dome, a mobile, all-weather air-defense system designed to intercept and destroy rockets and artillery shells.

JustAnswer

Iron Dome is modeled after an anti-missile and -rocket system in Israel that has proved exceptionally effective. The plan in Ukraine, which did not receive assistance from Israel in developing the project, is to radically upgrade air defense in two stages — by revamping a command center, and 45 mobile monitoring centers that collect information about incoming missiles — to dramatically improve an air defense that currently only swats down 20% of Russian rockets and missiles.

Ukraine has “an old, bad system that we are replacing in a startup-ey way with upgraded computer systems of sophisticated new hardware and software,” Kurtzig, perhaps the tech industry’s most vocal supporter of Ukraine, told MarketWatch. “The U.S. has not helped to close the skies from Day One of this conflict,” he said. His company has maintained operations in Ukraine since the war began, and he recently visited employees there.

“My trip [in April] was wonderful and emotional, but there was also genuine fear,” Kurtzig said. “Air-raid sirens hit home to me. They deal with it nearly every day.”

The air-defense modernization effort comes amid President Joe Biden’s announcement on Wednesday of another $1 billion in weapons and aid for Ukraine, which has been a hotbed of tech innovation for expansion for U.S. companies for at least a decade.

Startups, midsize companies and major brands such as Google parent Alphabet Inc.   GOOGL, -3.40% GOOG, -3.40%, Oracle Corp.  ORCL, -1.42%,  Cisco Systems Inc.  CSCO, -1.10%  and Snap Inc.  SNAP, -7.42%  have made significant investments in Ukraine, a country that has been a vital resource for engineering talent, 3-D modeling and customer service.

Read more: Tech firms with employees in Ukraine spring emergency plans into place

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