Israeli-American medium-to-long-range air and missile defense system acquired by Finland to provide strategic-level protection against aircraft, cruise missiles, and tactical ballistic missiles. David's Sling (Stunner in Israeli service) bridges the gap between short-range Iron Dome and exoatmospheric Arrow systems, optimized for medium-range threats at 40-300 km range and altitudes up to 15 km. Features the Stunner interceptor missile using two-stage solid-fuel rocket motor with thrust-vectoring control, dual-mode seeker combining active radar and electro-optical/infrared guidance for extreme accuracy, hit-to-kill interception destroying targets through kinetic energy, capability against aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, UAVs, tactical ballistic missiles, and large-calibre rockets, and networked architecture integrating multiple radar systems. Each battery includes ELM-2084 S-band multi-mission radar, battle management center, and multiple launchers. Finland's procurement represents the first export of David's Sling — a strategic decision following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and Finland's assessment that Russian long-range strike capabilities (Kalibr, Iskander) pose existential threats. Contract signed 2024 with deliveries beginning mid-2020s. Provides Finland with NATO-interoperable strategic air defense.

- Proven combat record against rockets, mortars, UAVs, aircraft, and cruise missiles
- Dual-layer kill vehicle (RF + IIR) very hard to defeat with countermeasures
- NATO interoperability — fits into allied IAMD architecture
- Radar can simultaneously track and engage multiple threats
- Fills critical gap between SHORAD and THAAD/Patriot
- Expensive per-round cost limits magazine depth
- Dependent on US/Israeli supply chain for munitions
- Long-range ballistic missile defense still limited vs Patriot
- Integration with Finnish C2 requires significant work



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