
France Closes Israeli Stands at Eurosatory Defence Fair, Sparking Diplomatic Row
Despite Israeli firms complying with a French directive to exhibit only defensive systems, 12 booths were boarded up overnight, drawing accusations of cynicism from the defence ministry in Tel Aviv.
The opening day of Eurosatory, one of the world’s largest defence exhibitions held biennially near Paris, was marked by the sudden closure of a dozen Israeli company stands overnight. Exhibitors arrived on Monday morning to find their booths concealed behind wooden panels, a move that organisers said was enforced at the behest of the French authorities. The affected firms—including drone-maker Aeronautics, communications specialist Orbit, and small-arms technology company Smart Shooter—had received approval hours earlier and believed they had met strict conditions set by Paris to show only defensive systems.
The incident is the latest flashpoint in increasingly strained French-Israeli relations. Paris recognised Palestinian statehood in 2025 and recently barred two far-right Israeli ministers from entering the country. Weeks before the fair, French officials informed Israel that its exhibitors would be limited to defensive weaponry, a restriction linked by some in the region to Israel’s military operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, a long-standing French ally in the Middle East. Coges Events, the organiser, said the 12 booths were closed “due to non-compliance with participation conditions,” though Israeli officials insisted they had fully adhered to the letter of the rules. The defence ministry in Tel Aviv denounced the move as a “cynical, unequal step designed to exclude Israeli technology” and released footage of the wood-covered stands, a scene reminiscent of a similar exclusion at the previous year’s gathering.
Viewed from the broader exhibition floor, the row over Israeli participation stood in stark contrast to the assertive displays of other nations. China’s state-owned Norinco, for instance, presented a detailed model drone assembly line, signalling ambitions to manufacture unmanned aircraft such as the BZK-005E reconnaissance drone overseas, notably for Middle Eastern buyers. India mounted one of its largest-ever presences at Eurosatory, with 31 entities including the Ministry of Defence and leading private firms showcasing everything from armoured vehicles to disaster-response solutions. The fair, which drew more than 2,000 exhibitors from 61 countries, remained a bustling marketplace, underscoring the uneven political lens applied to conflicts.
Analysts in Europe see the French decision as part of a delicate balancing act. Maintaining arms ties with Israel while deepening economic and diplomatic engagement with the Arab world forces Paris into uncomfortable trade-offs. The episode exposes the vulnerability of defence exhibitions to geopolitical turbulence; what was once a purely commercial event now routinely becomes a theatre for signalling. For Israeli defence firms, the setback is unlikely to disrupt their global footprint, but it does raise questions about access to future European venues. Meanwhile, the assertive marketing by Chinese and Indian competitors hints at a reordering of the arms trade’s centre of gravity—one where political considerations increasingly shape who is allowed to showcase what.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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France shut down a dozen Israeli stands at the Eurosatory defence fair, deepening a diplomatic rift. The move follows Paris's recognition of Palestinian statehood and its ban on two far-right Israeli ministers. Organisers said the firms failed to meet the conditions set by French authorities.
Israeli firms found their booths walled off overnight with wooden panels, despite having secured approval just hours earlier. The defence ministry called it a cynical ploy to sideline Israeli technology, driven by Macron's hostility over Israel's strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, a close French ally. Israel insists it met every condition, but Paris's animus overrode any agreement.
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