Commcrete公司正利用其技术挑战数十年的军事学说。该技术确保在对抗环境中实现持续、安全的通信,从而改变战斗搜救并重新定义现代军队在复杂战场上的作战方式。
多年来,即使是世界上最先进的军队也接受了一个关键限制:通信作为任何行动的支柱,在环境最恶劣时可能会失灵。一家以色列初创公司现在认为这种假设已不再被接受。Commcrete是一家由以色列精锐情报部门退役人员创立的快速崛起的国防科技公司,因其简单但具有颠覆性的理念而受到全球关注:通信不应该是你建立的东西,而应该是你永远不会失去的东西。
在全球国防支出超过2万亿美元、军队迅速适应更复杂的多域战场的背景下,Commcrete正将自己置于新作战学说的核心——无论发生什么,即使在最敌对和不可预测的环境中,也要确保安全且持续的连接。
该公司的技术挑战了数十年的传统思维。传统的卫星通信系统是为不同的现实构建的:晴朗的天空、固定的位置和建立链路的时间。但今天的战场完全不是这样。士兵们在不断移动,环境密集且有遮挡,即使暴露几秒钟也可能危及生命。
在战斗搜索与救援(CSAR)任务中,这种差距变得更加关键。行业观察员表示:“一名被击落的飞行员不会坐在开阔地等待连接。他们可能在躲藏、移动、受伤,通常甚至无法操作他们的设备。”这就是Commcrete介入的地方。其掌上大小的卫星通信设备设计用于在运动中、掩护下以及无需用户干预的情况下工作,无论是在密集的城市区域还是茂密的森林中。
Commcrete is challenging decades of military doctrine with technology that ensures continuous, secure communication in contested environments, transforming combat rescue and redefining how modern forces operate across complex battlefieldsFor years, even the most advanced militaries in the world have accepted a critical limitation: communication, the backbone of any operation, can simply fail when conditions are at their worst. An Israeli startup now believes that assumption is no longer acceptable.3 View gallery Commcrete (Photo: Commcrete)Commcrete, a fast-rising defensetech company founded by veterans of elite Israeli intelligence units, is gaining global attention for a simple but disruptive idea: communication should not be something you establish, it should be something you never lose.At a time when global defense spending has crossed $2 trillion and militaries are rapidly adapting to more complex, multi-domain battlefields, Commcrete is positioning itself at the heart of a new operational doctrine - secure and continuous connectivity no matter what, even in the most hostile and unpredictable environments.The company’s technology challenges decades of conventional thinking. Traditional satellite communication systems were built for a different reality: clear skies, static positions, and time to set up a link. But today’s battlefield looks nothing like that. Soldiers move constantly, environments are dense and obstructed, and exposure, even for a few seconds, can be life-threatening.In combat search and rescue (CSAR) missions, this gap becomes even more critical. “A downed pilot is not sitting in an open field waiting to connect,” says industry observers familiar with the space. “They are hiding, moving, injured, often unable to even operate their equipment.”This is where Commcrete steps in. Its palm-sized satellite communication devices are designed to work in motion, under cover, and without user intervention. Whether in dense urban areas, thick forests, at sea, or even during parachute descent, the system maintains a continuous link - without the need for alignment, setup, or active operation.3 View gallery Commcrete (Photo: Commcrete)Even more significantly, communication is no longer dependent on the user. Command centers can remotely activate devices, retrieve real-time data, and track personnel without requiring any action from the field. In operational terms, this transforms rescue missions from a race against uncertainty into a data-driven, coordinated response.The challenge is not just physics - it’s adversaries. Modern battlefields are increasingly shaped by electronic warfare, signal jamming, and interception attempts. In this environment, connectivity is not just difficult, it is actively contested.Commcrete’s approach reflects that reality. Instead of optimizing for ideal performance, the company focuses on maintaining a usable, resilient connection under degraded conditions. Its proprietary communication technology is designed