Thales has unveiled SkyDefender, a new integrated air and missile defense “dome” aimed at a problem Europe can no longer treat as theoretical.
The French group says the system can deal with threats ranging from drones to ballistic missiles, combining sensors, interceptors, and command-and-control tools, with long-range detection reaching up to 5,000 kilometers (about 3,100 miles).
So what is Thales actually selling here? Not one futuristic weapon, for the most part, but a bundled architecture built from existing Thales systems. SkyDefender pulls together ForceShield for short-range threats, SAMP/T NG for the middle layer, and SMART-L MM and UHF radars for long-range warning.
Thales also says the design is open and modular, which fits a NATO reality where air defense relies on interconnected national and allied sensors, command systems, and weapons.
Golden Dome comparison and Thales’ pitch for a faster alternative
That is where the timing gets interesting. In the United States, Golden Dome is still a vast and expensive national project. Reuters reported this week that its estimated cost has climbed to $185 billion for the planned full architecture over the next decade, with space-based elements still posing major affordability and scaling questions.
Thales, by contrast, is pitching something more immediate, or at least more practical: a shield designed to integrate with allied networks and marketed as available for global deployment.
And Europe has a reason to pay attention. NATO says integrated air and missile defense is especially important in the current security environment because missiles and drones are spreading and being used heavily in real conflicts, including Russia’s war against Ukraine. Money is moving in the same direction.
EU member states’ defense spending rose to 343 billion euros (about $374 billion) in 2024 and likely reached 381 billion euros ($415 billion) in 2025. In practical terms, that means more demand for systems that can protect bases, ports, power plants, and the neighborhoods around them.

A mobile air and missile defense system is displayed during a NATO event, illustrating the type of integrated technology behind Thales’ SkyDefender shield.
Europe’s missile defense gap is becoming a business opportunity
There is also a broader industrial point. A recent European Parliament study, citing the EU’s own defense readiness work, lists air and missile defense among Europe’s key capability gaps.
With defense budgets climbing across the region, SkyDefender is not just another product launch. It is Thales trying to turn a strategic gap into a procurement opportunity. That is the real pitch.
The press release was published on Thales Group.











