Serbia to co-produce drones with Israeli firm involved in war on Gaza
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic speaks during a press conference, Belgrade, Serbia, Oct. 22, 2025. (Reuters Photo)


Serbia plans to jointly produce combat drones with Israel, in a bid to strengthen ​its defenses and bolster exports of weapons and military equipment, the country's populist ⁠President Aleksandar Vucic said ⁠on Monday.

Last week, the Belgrade-based BIRN news website reported Serbia's SDPR weapons manufacturer wanted to open ​a drone manufacturing plant with Israel's ​Elbit ⁠Systems, which would have a 51% stake with Serbia holding the remainder.

Elbit Systems is known for its high-profile involvement in Israeli genocidal military operations in Gaza, BIRN reported.

United Nations Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories Francesca Albanese, in a June 2025 report, named Elbit Systems among a number of companies profiting from "the ongoing genocide" in Gaza.

Israeli attacks have killed more than 70,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, since October 2023.

Vucic said Serbia, which is seeking to bolster its drone manufacturing, "cannot make drones like Israel."

"We will be doing it together, it will be half-and-half, 50-50, and ... we will have the best drones in this part of the world," he told reporters during a visit to a military ⁠unit ⁠in Belgrade.

He did not name the Israeli manufacturer, specify the value of investment or say how soon the plant would be operational.

Serbia wants to modernize its army, loosely based on the ex-Soviet technology, with purchases from Europe, Israel and China.

In ⁠early 2025, Serbia bought Elbit's PULS artillery systems and Hermes drones for $335 million, and in August 2025, it also purchased long-range ​missiles, drones and electronic warfare equipment for around $1.6 billion.

Belgrade also ​exports ammunition and other military equipment to Israel, Vucic said on Monday.

Belgrade also purchased France's ⁠Rafale ‌jet ‌fighters manufactured by Dassault, aiming to replace ⁠its ageing Soviet-made MIG-29 planes. ‌It has bought cargo aircraft and helicopters from Airbus and Chinese ​missiles and drones.

Serbia is ⁠striving to balance a partnership with ⁠NATO and aspirations to join the European Union with ⁠its centuries-old religious, ​ethnic and political alliance with Russia and strategic ties with China.