SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant                         [X]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant      [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

 [X]  Preliminary Proxy Statement            [ ] Confidential, for Use of the
                                                 Commission Only (as
                                                 permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
 [ ]  Definitive Proxy Statement

 [ ]  Definitive Additional Materials

 [ ]  Soliciting Material under Rule 14a-12

                            ELECTRIC FUEL CORPORATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]   No fee required.

[ ]   Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

(1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

(2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

(3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed pursuant
      to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
      calculated and state how it was determined):

(4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

(5)   Total fee paid:

[ ]   Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]   Check box if any part of the fee is offset as  provided  by  Exchange  Act
      Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
      paid  previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement
      number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

(1) Amount Previously Paid:

(2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.

(3) Filing Party:

(4) Date Filed:





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[AROTECH]


                                                             Arotech Corporation

                                                        632 Broadway, Suite 1200
                                                        New York, New York 10012
                                     Tel:  (646) 654-2107   Fax:  (646) 654-2187
                                                          http://www.arotech.com
                                                    Nasdaq National Market: ARTX
                                           Writer's direct dial: +972-2-990-6612
                                            Writer's direct fax: +972-2-990-6688
                                            Writer's e-mail: ehrlich@arotech.com

Robert S. Ehrlich
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer


                                 August 6, 2003


Dear Stockholder:

         It is our  pleasure  to  invite  you  to the  2003  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders   of  Electric  Fuel   Corporation   (doing   business  as  Arotech
Corporation),  a Delaware corporation,  to be held on Monday, September 15, 2003
at 10:00 a.m. local time in the Ballroom of the Shelburne Murray Hill Hotel, 303
Lexington Avenue, New York, New York.

         Whether  or not you plan to  attend  and  regardless  of the  number of
shares you own, it is important  that your shares be represented at the meeting.
You are accordingly urged to carefully review the enclosed proxy materials,  and
to mark,  date,  sign and return the enclosed proxy card as promptly as possible
in the postage-prepaid  envelope provided,  or vote  electronically  through the
Internet (at  http://www.voteproxy.com)  or by telephone if you hold your shares
in your own name, to ensure your  representation and the presence of a quorum at
the  annual  meeting.  If you submit  your  proxy and then  decide to attend the
annual meeting to vote your shares in person, you may still do so. Your proxy is
revocable in accordance with the procedures set forth in the Proxy Statement.



                                             Sincerely,

                                             /s/ Robert S. Ehrlich

                                             Robert S. Ehrlich
                                             Chairman of the Board of Directors





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                                    AROTECH

                            632 Broadway, Suite 1200
                            New York, New York 10012



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                        TO BE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 15, 2003
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To our Stockholders:

         Our Annual Meeting of Stockholders  will be held in the Ballroom of the
Shelburne  Murray Hill Hotel,  303  Lexington  Avenue,  New York,  New York,  on
Monday, September 15, 2003 at 10:00 a.m. local time, and thereafter as it may be
postponed or adjourned from time to time, for the following purposes:

         1.   To fix the  number  of Class I  directors  at two and to elect two
              Class I  directors  for a  three-year  term  ending  in  2006  and
              continuing  until their  successors are duly elected and qualified
              (beginning on page 3).

         2.   To  consider  and act upon a  proposal  to amend our  Amended  and
              Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  to change  our name from
              "Electric Fuel Corporation" to "Arotech Corporation" (beginning on
              page 8).

         3.   To act upon all other  business  that may properly come before the
              meeting or any postponements or adjournments thereof.

         Our Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on July 22, 2003
as the record date for determining which  stockholders are entitled to notice of
the meeting and to vote at the meeting  and any  postponements  or  adjournments
thereof. If you are unable to be present at the meeting personally, please mark,
date,  sign and return the  enclosed  proxy card as  promptly as possible in the
postage-prepaid  envelope provided, or vote electronically  through the Internet
(at  http://www.voteproxy.com)  or by  telephone if you hold your shares in your
own name. Any  stockholder who grants a proxy may revoke it at any time prior to
its exercise.  Also, whether or not you grant a proxy, you may vote in person if
you attend the meeting.

                                 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,

                                 /s/ Yaakov Har-Oz

                                 Yaakov Har-Oz
New York, New York               Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
August 6, 2003



================================================================================
              YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT! PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN
                 YOUR PROXY FORM IN THE ENCLOSED STAMPED, SELF-
                     ADDRESSED ENVELOPE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.
================================================================================





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                                   [AROTECH]
                            632 Broadway, Suite 1200
                            New York, New York 10012



                       ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCKHOLDERS
                          OF ELECTRIC FUEL CORPORATION
                        TO BE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 15, 2003


  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------


         The  accompanying  proxy is  solicited by and on behalf of the Board of
Directors of Electric Fuel Corporation (doing business as Arotech  Corporation),
for  use at our  Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders  and  any  postponements  and
adjournments  thereof.  The  meeting  is  currently  planned  to be  held in the
Ballroom of the Shelburne Murray Hill Hotel, 303 Lexington Avenue, New York, New
York, on Monday,  September 15, 2003 at 10:00 a.m. local time, and thereafter as
it may be postponed or adjourned from time to time,  for the purposes  described
in the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

         Stockholders  of record at the close of  business on July 22, 2003 will
be  entitled  to vote at the annual  meeting.  As of July 22,  2003,  there were
40,078,032  shares  of our  common  stock  outstanding  held  of  record  by 307
stockholders.  Each holder of common  stock is entitled to one vote per share on
each matter that comes before the annual meeting.

         This proxy  statement  and the enclosed  form of proxy to  stockholders
will be mailed  commencing  on or about August 6, 2003.  We are also mailing our
annual  report for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002 to our  stockholders
along with this proxy statement.

Voting Procedures and Vote Required

         Proxies  that are  properly  marked,  dated,  and signed,  or submitted
electronically via the Internet or by telephone by following the instructions on
the  proxy  card,  and not  revoked  will be  voted  at the  annual  meeting  in
accordance with any indicated directions. If no direction is indicated,  proxies
will be voted FOR the fixing of the number of Class I  directors  at two and the
election of the nominees for director set forth below,  FOR changing our name to
Arotech  Corporation,  and in the  discretion of the holders of the proxies with
respect to any other  business that properly comes before the annual meeting and
all matters relating to the conduct of the annual meeting. If a broker indicates
on the  enclosed  proxy or its  substitute  that it does not have  discretionary
authority  as  to  certain  shares  to  vote  on a  particular  matter  ("broker
non-votes"),  those shares will not be considered as voting with respect to that
matter.  We  believe  that  the  tabulation  procedures  to be  followed  by the
Inspector of Elections are consistent with the general  requirements of Delaware
law concerning voting of shares and determination of a quorum.

         You may revoke your proxy at any time before it is voted by  delivering
to the Secretary of our company a written  revocation  or a duly executed  proxy
bearing a later date than the date of the proxy being revoked (including a proxy
voted over the Internet or by telephone).




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Any record stockholder  attending the annual meeting in person may revoke his or
her proxy and vote his or her shares at the annual meeting.

         Votes  cast  by  proxy  or in  person  at the  annual  meeting  will be
tabulated by the  Inspector of  Elections,  with the  assistance of our transfer
agent. The Inspector of Elections will also determine whether or not a quorum is
present at the annual meeting.  The presence of a quorum is required to transact
the business  proposed to be transacted at the annual  meeting.  The presence in
person or by proxy of  holders of a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of our
common stock  entitled to vote will  constitute a quorum for the  transaction of
business at the annual  meeting.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes (as defined
above) will be counted for purposes of determining  the presence or absence of a
quorum.

         Directors  will be  elected  by a  plurality  of the votes  cast by the
holders of our common stock voting in person or by proxy at the annual  meeting.
Abstentions and broker non-votes will have no effect on the vote for election of
directors.

         In order to be adopted,  the proposal to amend our Amended and Restated
Certificate  of  Incorporation  to change our name to Arotech  Corporation  will
require  the  affirmative  vote of a majority of all  outstanding  shares of our
common stock entitled to vote on this  proposal.  As a result,  abstentions  and
broker  non-votes will have the same practical effect as a negative vote on this
proposal.

         The  solicitation of proxies will be conducted by mail and we will bear
all  attendant  costs.  These costs will  include the expense of  preparing  and
mailing proxy  solicitation  materials for the annual meeting and reimbursements
paid to brokerage  firms and others for their  expenses  incurred in  forwarding
solicitation  materials regarding the annual meeting to beneficial owners of our
common stock. We may conduct further solicitation personally,  telephonically or
by facsimile  through our officers,  directors and employees,  none of whom will
receive additional compensation for assisting with the solicitation.

         We are not aware of any  matters  other  than those  described  in this
proxy statement that will be acted upon at the annual meeting. In the event that
any other matters do come before the annual meeting for a stockholder  vote, the
persons named as proxies in the form of proxy being  delivered to you along with
this proxy  statement will vote in accordance  with their best judgment on those
matters.

         At least ten days  before the annual  meeting,  we will make a complete
list of the stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting open to the examination
of any stockholder for any purpose germane to the annual meeting.  The list will
be open for  inspection  during  ordinary  business  hours at our offices at 632
Broadway,  Suite 1200, New York, New York 10012, and will also be made available
to stockholders present at the annual meeting.




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                                PROPOSAL NUMBER 1

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         The annual  meeting will consider the election of two Class I directors
for three-year  terms that expire in 2006.  Our four other  directors have terms
that end in either 2004 or 2005, as indicated  below.  Unless  instructions  are
given to the contrary, each of the persons named as proxies will vote the shares
to which each proxy  relates  FOR the  election of each of the  nominees  listed
below for a term of three years expiring at the annual  meeting of  stockholders
to be held in 2006,  and until  the  nominee's  successor  is duly  elected  and
qualified or until the nominee's earlier death, removal or resignation.  The two
nominees  named below are  presently  serving as directors  and both of them are
anticipated to be available for election and able to a serve.  However,  if they
should become  unavailable,  the proxy will be voted for  substitute  nominee(s)
designated  by the Board.  The two nominees  who receive the greatest  number of
votes properly cast for the election of directors will be elected.

         Our  by-laws  provide  for a Board  of one or more  directors,  and the
number of  directors  currently  is fixed at six. Our Board is composed of three
classes of similar  size.  The  members of each class are  elected in  different
years, so that only one-third of the Board is elected in any single year.

         Dr.  Eastman and Mr. Esses (who was  appointed to fill a vacancy in the
Board) are designated as Class I directors.  Their term expires in 2003. Messrs.
Rosenfeld and Miller are  designated as Class II directors.  Their terms expires
in 2004. Mr.  Ehrlich and Mr.  Wasserman (who was appointed to fill a vacancy in
the Board) are designated as Class III directors. Their terms expire in 2005.

         The following  table contains  information  concerning the nominees for
Class I directors and the other incumbent directors:



         Name                Age                 Position with Arotech                    Class   Director Since
         ----                ---                 ---------------------                    -----   --------------
                                                                                 
Dr. Jay M. Eastman(2)(4)...  58                         Director                            I      October 1993
Steven Esses(3)............  39   Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer and     I      July 2002
                                                         Director
Jack E. Rosenfeld(1)(2)(4).  64                         Director                           II      October 1993
Lawrence M. Miller(1)(3)(4)  58                         Director                           II      November 1996
Robert S. Ehrlich (3)......  65    Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive    III     May 1991
                                                          Officer
Bert W. Wasserman(1) (2)...  70                           Director                         III     February 2003



-------------------------------------

(1) Member of the Audit Committee.
(2) Member of the Compensation Committee.
(3) Member of the Executive Committee.
(4) Member of the Nominating Committee.

Nominees for Election as Class I Directors

         Dr. Jay M. Eastman has been one of our  directors  since  October 1993.
Since November  1991,  Dr.  Eastman has served as President and Chief  Executive
Officer of Lucid, Inc., a developer of laser technology applications for medical
diagnosis  and  treatment.  Dr.



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Eastman  has served as a  director  of PSC Inc.  ("PSCX"),  a  manufacturer  and
marketer of laser diode bar code scanners, since April 1996 and served as Senior
Vice  President of Strategic  Planning from December 1995 through  October 1997.
PSCX filed a voluntary  petition for relief under  Chapter 11 of the  Bankruptcy
Code in  November  2002;  its  pre-negotiated  plan of  reorganization  has been
confirmed by the Bankruptcy  Court.  Dr. Eastman is also a director of Dimension
Technologies, Inc., a developer and manufacturer of 3D displays for computer and
video  displays,  and Centennial  Technologies  Inc., a  manufacturer  of PCMCIA
cards.  From 1981 until January 1983, Dr. Eastman was Director of the University
of  Rochester's  Laboratory for Laser  Energetics,  where he was a member of the
staff from  September  1975 to 1981.  Dr.  Eastman  holds a B.S. and a Ph.D.  in
Optics from the University of Rochester in New York.

         Steven  Esses was added to the Board in July 2002 and has served as our
Executive Vice President  since January 2003 and Chief  Operating  Officer since
February 2003.  From 2000 until 2002, Mr. Esses was a principal with  Stillwater
Capital  Partners,  Inc.,  a New  York-based  investment  research  and advisory
company (hedge fund) specializing in alternative investment  strategies.  During
this time, Mr. Esses also acted as an independent consultant to new and existing
businesses in the areas of finance and business development.  From 1995 to 2000,
Mr.  Esses  founded  Dunkin'  Donuts in Israel and held the position of Managing
Director and CEO.  Prior thereto,  he was Director of Retail Jewelry  Franchises
with  Hamilton  Jewelry,  and before  that he served as  Executive  Director  of
Operations  for the Conway  Organization,  a major  off-price  retailer  with 17
locations.


Class II Directors

         Jack E. Rosenfeld has been one of our directors since October 1993. Mr.
Rosenfeld is also a director of PSCX. PSCX filed a voluntary petition for relief
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy  Code in November  2002;  its  pre-negotiated
plan of reorganization  has been confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court.  Since April
1998, Mr. Rosenfeld has been President and Chief Executive  Officer of Potpourri
Group,  Inc., a specialty  catalog direct marketer.  Mr. Rosenfeld was President
and Chief  Executive  Officer of Hanover Direct,  Inc.,  formerly Horn & Hardart
Co., which operates a direct mail marketing business,  from September 1990 until
December 1995, and had been President and Chief Executive  Officer of its direct
marketing  subsidiary,  since May 1988. Mr.  Rosenfeld holds a B.A. from Cornell
University  in  Ithaca,  New  York  and an  LL.B.  from  Harvard  University  in
Cambridge, Massachusetts.

         Lawrence M. Miller has been one of our directors  since  November 1996.
Mr.  Miller  has  been a  senior  partner  in the  Washington  D.C.  law firm of
Schwartz,  Woods and Miller  since 1990.  He served from August 1993 through May
1996 as a member of the board of  directors of The Phoenix  Resource  Companies,
Inc., a publicly  traded energy  exploration  and production  company,  and as a
member of the audit and compensation  committee of that board.  That company was
merged  into  Apache  Corporation  in May 1996.  Mr.  Miller  holds a B.A.  from
Dickinson  College in Carlisle,  Pennsylvania and a J.D. with honors from George
Washington  University  in  Washington,  D.C. He is a member of the  District of
Columbia bar.




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Class III Directors

         Robert S. Ehrlich has been our Chairman of the Board since January 1993
and our President and Chief Executive  Officer since October 2002. From May 1991
until January 1993, Mr. Ehrlich was our Vice Chairman of the Board, and from May
1991 until October 2002 he was our Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Ehrlich has been
a director of Eldat,  Ltd., an Israeli  manufacturer of electronic shelf labels,
since June 1999.  Since 1987, Mr. Ehrlich has served as a director of PSCX, and,
since April 1997, Mr.  Ehrlich has been the chairman of the board of PSCX.  PSCX
filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in
November 2002; its  pre-negotiated  plan of reorganization has been confirmed by
the  Bankruptcy  Court.  Mr.  Ehrlich  received a B.S.  and J.D.  from  Columbia
University in New York, New York.

         Bert W.  Wasserman  was  added  to the  board  in  February  2003.  Mr.
Wasserman served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Time
Warner,  Inc. from 1990 until his  retirement in 1995 and served on the Board of
Directors  of  Time   Warner,   Inc.  and  its   predecessor   company,   Warner
Communications, Inc. from 1981 to 1995. He joined Warner Communications, Inc. in
1966 and had been an  officer of that  company  since  1970.  Mr.  Wasserman  is
director off several investment  companies in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. He is
also a director of Malibu Entertainment,  Inc., Lillian Vernon Corporation,  and
PSCX.  PSCX  filed a  voluntary  petition  for  relief  under  Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code in November 2002; its pre-negotiated  plan of reorganization has
been confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court.


Information Concerning the Board and its Committees

         In the fiscal  year  ending  December  31,  2002,  the Board held eight
meetings and acted by unanimous  written consent on one occasion.  All directors
attended  at least  75% of the  aggregate  number of  meetings  of the Board and
meetings of the  committees  of the Board on which he serves except for Mr. Leon
Gross. Mr. Gross, who had been elected as a Class I director,  resigned from the
Board of Directors in view of his age (96) on March 17, 2003. Mr. Yehuda Harats,
who had also been  elected  as a Class I  director,  resigned  from the Board of
Directors in November 2002.

         Our  board  of  directors  has  an  Audit  Committee,   a  Compensation
Committee, a Nominating Committee and an Executive Committee. The composition of
the various  committees of the board of directors is as follows (the name of the
chairman of each committee appears in italics):



       Audit Committee           Compensation Committee       Nominating Committee          Executive Committee
       ---------------           ----------------------       --------------------          -------------------
                                                                                   
      Bert W. Wasserman             Jay M. Eastman              Jack E. Rosenfeld            Robert S. Ehrlich
     Lawrence M. Miller            Jack E. Rosenfeld           Lawrence M. Miller              Steven Esses
      Jack E. Rosenfeld            Bert W. Wasserman             Jay M. Eastman              Lawrence M. Miller



     Audit Committee

         Created in December 1993, the Audit Committee is empowered by the Board
of Directors to, among other things: serve as an independent and objective party
to monitor the



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Company's  financial  reporting process,  internal control system and disclosure
control  system;  review  and  appraise  the  audit  efforts  of  the  Company's
independent  accountants;  assume  direct  responsibility  for the  appointment,
compensation,  retention and  oversight of the work of the outside  auditors and
for the  resolution of disputes  between the outside  auditors and the Company's
management  regarding  financial reporting issues; and provide an open avenue of
communication   among  the   independent   accountants,   financial  and  senior
management, and the Board.

         The Audit Committee consists of Messrs.  Wasserman  (Chairman),  Miller
and Rosenfeld.  We have  determined  that Mr.  Wasserman  qualifies as an "audit
committee  financial  expert" under applicable SEC and Nasdaq  regulations.  Mr.
Wasserman,  as  well  as all  the  other  members  of the  Audit  Committee,  is
"independent,"  as independence  is defined in Rule  4200(a)(15) of the National
Association of Securities  Dealers' listing standards and under Item 7(d)(3)(iv)
of Schedule 14A of the proxy rules under the Exchange Act.

         The Audit Committee has selected Kost Forer & Gabbay, a member of Ernst
& Young Global,  to serve as the Company's  independent  accountants  during the
current  fiscal year.  Kost Forer & Gabbay served as the  Company's  independent
accountants  during  the fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  2002.  Kost Forer &
Gabbay's  report on the financial  statements  for the years ended  December 31,
2002 and 2001 did not contain an adverse  opinion or disclaimer of opinion,  and
were not qualified or modified as to  uncertainty,  auditing scope or accounting
principles.

         A  representative  of Kost Forer & Gabbay is  expected to be present at
the Annual Meeting to make such statements as Kost Forer & Gabbay may desire and
will be available to answer appropriate questions from shareholders.

         The Audit  Committee  performed  its duties  during fiscal 2002 under a
written  charter  approved by the Board of  Directors.  The Audit  Committee has
reviewed  the  relevant  requirements  of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002,  the
proposed  rules of the SEC and the proposed new listing  standards of the Nasdaq
Stock Market  regarding audit committee  policies.  Although some of these rules
and  standards  have not been  finalized,  the Board of Directors has adopted an
amended  charter to  voluntarily  implement  certain of the  proposed  rules and
standards.  A copy of the Audit  Committee  Charter  is  attached  as  Exhibit A
hereto.  The Board of Directors and the Audit Committee  intend to further amend
this charter, if necessary,  as rules and standards are finalized by the SEC and
the Nasdaq  Stock  Market to  reflect  changes in the  proposals  or  additional
requirements.

         The Audit  Committee held three meetings  during the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2002.

     Compensation Committee

         The Compensation Committee was established in December 1993. The duties
of the Compensation Committee are to recommend compensation arrangements for our
executive  officers and review annual  compensation  arrangements  for all other
officers and significant employees.



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         The  Compensation  Committee  consists of Dr.  Eastman  (Chairman)  and
Messrs. Rosenfeld and Wasserman, all of whom are "disinterested persons" as that
term is used in Rule 16b-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the "Exchange Act").

         The  Compensation  Committee held five meetings  during the fiscal year
ending December 31, 2002.

     Nominating Committee

         The  Nominating  Committee,  created in February  2003,  identifies and
proposes  candidates  to serve as  members of the Board of  Directors.  Proposed
nominees  for  membership  on the Board of  Directors  submitted  in  writing by
stockholders to the Secretary of the Company will be brought to the attention of
the Nominating Committee.

         The Nominating Committee consists of Mr. Rosenfeld (Chair), Mr. Miller
and Dr. Eastman, all of whom are "disinterested persons" as that term is used in
Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act.

         The  Nominating  Committee  did not exist during the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2002.

     Executive Committee

         The Executive Committee,  created in July 2001, exercises the powers of
the Board during the intervals  between meetings of the Board, in the management
of the  property,  business  and affairs of the Company  (except with respect to
certain extraordinary transactions).

         The Executive Committee consists of Messrs. Ehrlich (Chair), Miller and
Esses.

         The  Executive  Committee  held two  meetings  and  acted by  unanimous
written consent once during the fiscal year ending December 31, 2002.

Director Compensation

         Non-employee  members of our board of  directors  are paid $1,000 (plus
expenses) for each board of directors  meeting attended and $500 (plus expenses)
for each meeting of a committee of the board of directors attended. In addition,
we have adopted a  Non-Employee  Director  Stock  Option Plan  pursuant to which
non-employee  directors  receive an initial grant of options to purchase  25,000
shares of our common stock upon the effective date of such plan or upon the date
of his or her election as a director.  Thereafter,  non-employee  directors will
receive  options to purchase  10,000 shares of our common stock for each year of
service on the board.  Generally,  such options are granted at fair market value
and vest ratably over three years from the date of the grant.

             THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR FIXING THE
               NUMBER OF CLASS I DIRECTORS AT TWO AND FOR ELECTION
                     OF THE CLASS I NOMINEES DESCRIBED ABOVE




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                                PROPOSAL NUMBER 2

              APPROVAL OF AN AMENDMENT TO OUR Amended and Restated
                 CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO CHANGE OUR NAME
                        FROM "ELECTRIC FUEL CORPORATION"
                            TO "AROTECH CORPORATION"

General

         During  2002,  we made a  strategic  corporate  shift  to the  field of
defense and homeland  security,  including the manufacturing and distribution of
zinc-air batteries for military applications,  by acquiring two new subsidiaries
(IES Interactive Training,  Inc. and MDT Protective Industries Ltd.), by closing
our  money-losing  consumer  battery  operations,  and by reorganizing  into two
divisions: Defense and Security Products and Electric Fuel Batteries.

         We believed that  continuing  to use the  "Electric  Fuel" name for our
entire business would  de-emphasize what had become an important part of our new
and reorganized business, namely, defense and homeland security. Accordingly, in
February 2003, the Board of Directors  unanimously approved a proposed amendment
to Article One of our Amended  and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  to
change our name from "Electric Fuel  Corporation" to "Arotech  Corporation," and
we filed the  appropriate  documents  in the states of Delaware  and New York to
begin doing  business  immediately  under the new name.  The Board also directed
that the proposed  amendment be submitted to a vote of our  stockholders at this
annual meeting.

Text of the Amendment

         If this  proposal is adopted,  Article One of our Amended and  Restated
Certificate of Incorporation will read as follows:

                  "ONE:  The name of this corporation is Arotech Corporation."
                   ---

Vote Required

     The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares
of our common  stock  entitled to vote on this  proposal  will be  required  for
approval of this proposal.  As a result,  abstentions and broker  non-votes will
have the effect of votes against the proposal.

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE AMENDMENT
            TO OUR AMENDED AND RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
               TO CHANGE OUR NAME FROM "ELECTRIC FUEL CORPORATION"
                            TO "AROTECH CORPORATION"



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                EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION AND OTHER MATTERS

Cash and Other Compensation

   General

         Our Chief  Executive  Officer  and the  other  highest  paid  executive
officer  (of which  there was one) who were  compensated  at a rate of more than
$100,000  in  salary  and  bonuses  during  the year  ended  December  31,  2002
(collectively,  the "Named Executive Officers") are Israeli residents,  and thus
certain  elements  of the  compensation  that we pay  them is  structured  as is
customary in Israel.

         During  2002,  2001  and  2000,  compensation  to our  Named  Executive
Officers took several forms:

         >>       cash salary;

         >>       bonus, some of which was paid in cash in the year in which it
                  was earned and some of which was accrued in the year in which
                  it was earned but paid in cash in a subsequent year;

         >>       cash reimbursement for taxes paid by the Named Executive
                  Officer and reimbursed by us in accordance with Israeli tax
                  regulations;

         >>       accruals (but not cash payments) in respect of contractual
                  termination compensation in excess of the Israeli statutory
                  minimum;

         >>       accruals (but not cash payments) in respect of pension plans,
                  which consist of a savings plan, life insurance and statutory
                  severance pay benefits, and a continuing education fund (as is
                  customary in Israel);

         >>       stock options, including options issued in exchange for a
                  waiver of salary under the "options-for-salary" program
                  discussed in more detail below; and

         >>       other benefits, primarily consisting of annual statutory
                  holiday pay.

         The specific  amounts of each form of  compensation  paid to each Named
Executive Officer appear in the summary compensation table and the notes thereto
appearing under "Summary Compensation Table," below.

Termination Compensation of and Settlement with Yehuda Harats

         In October 2002, we announced that Yehuda Harats, our president and CEO
and a member of our Board,  had decided to resign from his positions with us and
our subsidiaries in order to pursue other  interests.  In December 2002, we came
to an agreement  with Mr. Harats  whereby we agreed to pay him $551,499  through
the end of 2005 in  satisfaction  of all our contractual and legal severance and
other obligations to him. See "Certain  Relationships and Related Transactions -
Termination Compensation of and Settlement with Yehuda Harats," below.



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         Prior to Mr. Harats's  resignation,  we had accrued a sum of $1,212,939
in  respect  of  these  obligations  on our  books,  consisting  of  contractual
severance,  statutory  severance,  contractually  guaranteed  bonus, and various
benefits,  including unused vacation,  unused sick days, and continuing benefits
over the three years after  termination.  Since we settled with Mr. Harats for a
sum of  $551,499  rather than the  $1,212,939  that we had accrued on our books,
this settlement  effectively  resulted in a gain for us in the fourth quarter of
2002 of $661,440, which is the difference between the amount that we had accrued
on our books in respect of these  obligations  and the amount that we ultimately
agreed to pay.

         We continue to carry on our books a total of  $1,076,740  in loans from
us to Mr.  Harats on which he remains  liable;  however,  we do not carry  these
loans at full value because  recourse  under the loans is only to certain shares
that we hold,  the fair  market  value of which is now less  than the  principal
amount of the loans.  See  "Certain  Relationships  and Related  Transactions  -
Officer Loans," below.

   Summary Compensation Table

         The  following  table,  which  should be read in  conjunction  with the
explanations  provided above,  shows the compensation that we paid (or accrued),
in  connection  with  services  rendered for 2002,  2001 and 2000,  to our Named
Executive Officers.


                          SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE(1)



                                                                           Long Term                      All Other
                                         Annual Compensation              Compensation                  Compensation
                                ----------------------------------------- --------------  ---------------------------------------
                                                                                           Changes in
                                                                                          Accruals for
                                                                                            Sick Days,    Payment to
                                                                            Securities    Vacation Days, Pension and
                                                                     Tax    Underlying  and Termination   Education
Name and Principal Position     Year     Salary       Bonus    Reimbursement  Options     Compensation      Funds        Others
---------------------------     ----     ------       -----    -------------  -------     ------------      -----        ------
                                                                                           
Yehuda Harats*                  2002   $ 256,462   $  32,380(2)  $  14,687   112,500(3)   $(661,440)(4)  $  22,735    $     654
President, Chief                2001   $ 248,681   $  99,750     $  19,145   616,000(5)   $ 375,375(6)   $  62,617    $ 142,919(7)
  Executive Officer and         2000   $ 245,560   $  82,380     $   8,083   400,000      $ 128,138(8)   $  41,807    $     859
  director

Robert S. Ehrlich               2002   $ 202,962   $  99,750(2)  $  15,232   262,500(9)   $ 170,691(10)  $  22,256    $     654
Chairman of the Board,          2001   $ 211,644   $  84,000     $  17,201   521,000(11)  $ 229,800(12)  $  52,841    $  87,113(13)
  President, Chief              2000   $ 245,574   $  82,380     $   7,146   400,000      $ 177,658(14)  $  41,806    $     859
  Executive Officer and
  director**


-------------------------------------

*    Mr. Harats's employment with us terminated on October 23, 2002.
**   Until October 23, 2002, Mr. Ehrlich served as our Chairman of the Board and
     Chief Financial Officer.
(1)  We paid the amounts reported for each named executive officer in U.S.
     dollars and/or New Israeli Shekels (NIS). We have translated amounts paid
     in NIS into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate of NIS into U.S. dollars at
     the time of payment or accrual.
 (2) We paid each of Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats  $32,380 during 2002 on account
     of the  2002  bonuses  to  which  they  were  entitled  according  to their
     contracts. Additionally, we accrued $67,370 for Mr. Ehrlich in satisfaction
     of the  remainder  of the bonus to which he was  entitled  according to his
     contract.  The  remainder of the  additional  bonus to which Mr. Harats was
     entitled  according  to the terms of his  contract was included in the sums
     that we are  obligated to pay Mr.  Harats under the terms of our  severance
     agreement with him, which sums are detailed in "Termination Compensation of
     and  Settlement  with Yehuda  Harats,"  above.  During  2002,  we also paid
     $99,750 to Mr.  Harats in full payment of his 2001 bonus and $84,000 to Mr.
     Ehrlich in full payment of his 2001 bonus.


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 (3) Of this amount,  112,500 options were in exchange for a total of $45,000 in
     salary  waived by Mr.  Harats  pursuant to the  options-for-salary  program
     instituted by us beginning in May 2001. See  "Options-for-Salary  Program,"
     below.
 (4) This  represents  the savings to us at year end of the amounts  that we had
     accrued on our  financials in connection  with these  obligations  over the
     amount that we  ultimately  agree to pay in the  context of our  settlement
     with Mr. Harats.  See  "Termination  Compensation  of and  Settlement  with
     Yehuda Harats," above.
 (5) Of this amount,  100,000 options were in exchange for a total of $40,000 in
     salary waived by Mr. Harats during 2001 pursuant to the  options-for-salary
     program  instituted  by us beginning in May 2001.  See  "Options-for-Salary
     Program," below.
 (6) Of this amount,  $263,994  represents  our accrual for  severance  pay that
     would be  payable to Mr.  Harats  upon a "change  of  control"  or upon the
     occurrence of certain other events; $67,074 represents our accrual for sick
     leave and vacation  redeemable by Mr.  Harats;  and $44,307  represents the
     increase  of the  accrual  for  severance  pay that would be payable to Mr.
     Harats  under the laws of the State of Israel if we were to  terminate  his
     employment.
 (7) Of this amount,  $142,240 represents benefit imputed to Mr. Harats upon the
     purchase by us of certain of his shares for treasury,  and $679  represents
     other   benefits  that  we  paid  to  Mr.  Harats  in  2001.  See  "Certain
     Relationships and Related Transactions - Officer Loans," below.
 (8) Of this amount,  $2,911 represents our accrual for severance pay that would
     be payable to Mr. Harats upon a "change of control" or upon the  occurrence
     of certain other events;  $70,500 represents our accrual for sick leave and
     vacation  redeemable by Mr. Harats;  and $54,727 represents the increase of
     the accrual for severance pay that would be payable to Mr. Harats under the
     laws of the State of Israel if we were to terminate his employment.
 (9) Of this amount, 262,500 options were in exchange for a total of $105,000 in
     salary waived by Mr. Ehrlich during 2002 pursuant to the options-for-salary
     program  instituted  by us beginning in May 2001.  See  "Options-for-Salary
     Program," below.
 (10)Of this amount,  $109,935  represents  our accrual for  severance  pay that
     would be payable to Mr.  Ehrlich  upon a "change  of  control"  or upon the
     occurrence of certain other events;  $17,571 represents the increase of the
     accrual for sick leave and vacation redeemable by Mr. Ehrlich;  and $43,725
     represents  the  increase of our accrual  for  severance  pay that would be
     payable to Mr.  Ehrlich under the laws of the State of Israel if we were to
     terminate his employment.
 (11)Of this amount,  80,000  options were in exchange for a total of $32,000 in
     salary waived by Mr. Ehrlich during 2001 pursuant to the options-for-salary
     program  instituted  by us beginning in May 2001.  See  "Options-for-Salary
     Program," below.
 (12)Of this amount,  $172,360  represents  our accrual for  severance  pay that
     would be payable to Mr.  Ehrlich  upon a "change  of  control"  or upon the
     occurrence of certain other events;  $50,548 represents the increase of the
     accrual for sick leave and vacation  redeemable by Mr. Ehrlich;  and $6,892
     represents  the  increase of our accrual  for  severance  pay that would be
     payable to Mr.  Ehrlich under the laws of the State of Israel if we were to
     terminate his employment.
 (13)Of this amount,  $86,434 represents benefit imputed to Mr. Ehrlich upon the
     purchase by us of certain of his shares for treasury,  and $679  represents
     other  benefits  that  we  paid  to  Mr.  Ehrlich  in  2001.  See  "Certain
     Relationships and Related Transactions - Officer Loans," below.
 (14)Of this amount, $59,363 represents our accrual for severance pay that would
     be payable to Mr. Ehrlich upon a "change of control" or upon the occurrence
     of certain other events; $58,353 represents the increase of the accrual for
     sick leave and vacation  redeemable by Mr. Ehrlich;  and $59,942 represents
     the increase of our accrual for  severance pay that would be payable to Mr.
     Ehrlich  under the laws of the State of Israel if we were to terminate  his
     employment.

Executive Loans

         During 1999 and 2000, we extended  certain loans to our Named Executive
Officers.  These loans are  summarized in the following  table,  and are further
described  under  "Certain  Relationships  and  Related  Transactions  - Officer
Loans," below.



                                       11


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                                           Original
                           Principal     Outstanding       Amount
    Name of Borrower      Date of Loan  Amount of Loan as of 12/31/02                Terms of Loan
    ----------------      ------------  -------------- --------------                -------------
                                               
Yehuda Harats...........   12/28/99     $    167,975    $    201,570    Ten-year non-recourse loan to purchase our
                                                                        stock, secured by the shares of stock
                                                                        purchased.

Yehuda Harats...........   02/09/00     $    789,991    $    875,170    Twenty-five-year non-recourse loan to
                                                                        purchase our stock, secured by the
                                                                        shares of stock purchased.

Robert S. Ehrlich.......   12/28/99     $    167,975    $    201,570    Ten-year non-recourse loan to purchase our
                                                                        stock, secured by the shares of stock
                                                                        purchased.

Robert S. Ehrlich.......   02/09/00     $    789,991    $    623,579    Twenty-five-year non-recourse loan to
                                                                        purchase our stock, secured by the
                                                                        shares of stock purchased.


Options-for-Salary Program

         Between May 2001 and December 2002, we conducted an  options-for-salary
program  designed to conserve our cash and to offer  incentives  to employees to
remain with us despite lower cash compensation.  Under this program, most of our
salaried  employees  permanently  waived a portion of their salaries in exchange
for options to  purchase  shares of our common  stock,  at a ratio of options to
purchase  2.5  shares  of our stock for each  dollar  in salary  waived.  Social
benefits (such as pension) and contractual  bonuses for such employees continued
to  be   calculated   based  on  their   salaries   prior  to   reduction.   The
options-for-salary program was ended on December 31, 2002.

         During 2001,  options were accrued  quarterly in advance,  but since no
employees  requested the grant of their options  during the third  quarter,  all
grants were deferred to the beginning of the fourth quarter, during the month of
October.  During 2002,  options were accrued  quarterly in advance for the Named
Executive Officers, and annually in advance for other employees.

         During 2001, in exchange for waiver of $79,739 in salary, our employees
other than the Named  Executive  Officers  received a total of 199,347  options,
which options were granted based on the lowest closing price of our common stock
during the month of October 2001 ($1.30).  Named Executive Officers, in exchange
for  waiver of $72,000 in  salary,  received a total of 180,000  options  during
2001,  which  options were  granted  based on the lowest  closing  prices of our
common stock during the month of October 2001 ($1.30), as set forth in the table
below.

         During  2002,  in  exchange  for  waiver of  $339,200  in  salary,  our
employees  other than the Named Executive  Officers  received a total of 848,000
options,  which  options were granted  based on the lowest  closing price of our
common  stock  during  the  month of  December  2002  ($0.61).  Named  Executive
Officers,  in exchange  for waiver of  $150,000  in salary,  received a total of
375,000  options  during 2002,  which  options were granted  based on the lowest
closing  prices of our common stock during each quarter of 2002, as set forth in
the table below.



                                       12



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         Options for  employees  who were ceased to be employed by us during the
course of the year were priced at the lowest  closing  price of our common stock
through the date of termination.

         Following is a table setting forth the number of options that we issued
to each of our Named  Executive  Officers under the  options-for-salary  program
during each fiscal quarter in which the program was in effect,  and the range of
trading prices for our common stock during each such fiscal quarter:



                                                                                             Low Trading                   Closing
                            Fiscal      Amount of      Number of    Number of      Average      Price     High Trading      Price
                           Quarter        Salary        Options      Options      Exercise      During    Price During   on Last Day
Named Executive Officer     Ended         Waived        Accrued       Issued        Price      Quarter       Quarter     of Quarter
-----------------------  ---------------------------- -------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                       
Yehuda Harats..........    06/30/01     $   10,000        25,000            0           -       $2.18         $4.20         $2.54
                           09/30/01     $   15,000        37,500            0           -       $1.10         $3.05         $1.48
                           12/31/01     $   15,000        37,500      100,000       $1.30       $1.30         $2.48         $1.66
                           03/31/02     $   15,000        37,500       37,500       $1.42       $1.35         $2.41         $1.55
                           06/30/02     $   15,000        37,500       37,500       $0.73       $0.73         $1.79         $0.91
                           09/30/02     $   15,000        37,500       37,500       $0.85       $0.79         $1.70         $1.05

Robert S. Ehrlich......    06/30/01     $    8,000        20,000            0           -       $2.18         $4.20         $2.54
                           09/30/01     $   12,000        30,000            0           -       $1.10         $3.05         $1.48
                           12/31/01     $   12,000        30,000       80,000       $1.30       $1.30         $2.48         $1.66
                           03/31/02     $   26,250        65,625       65,625       $1.42       $1.35         $2.41         $1.55
                           06/30/02     $   26,250        65,625       65,625       $0.73       $0.73         $1.79         $0.91
                           09/30/02     $   26,250        65,625       65,625       $0.85       $0.79         $1.70         $1.05
                           12/31/02     $   26,250        65,625       65,625       $0.61       $0.61         $1.17         $0.64



Stock Options

         The table below sets forth  information  with respect to stock  options
granted to the Named  Executive  Officers for the fiscal year 2002, all of which
were granted under the options-for-salary program described above.



                                       13


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                        Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year



                              Individual Grants
                         ----------------------------
                                          % of Total                                   Potential Realizable Value
                           Number of       Options                                       of Assumed Annual Rates
                          Securities      granted to                                   of Stock Price Appreciation
                          Underlying      Employees      Exercise or                       for Option Term(1)
                           Options       in Fiscal       Based Price    Expiration    -------------    -------------
            Name           Granted          Year           ($/Sh)          Date           5% ($)          10% ($)
      ---------------    -----------    -------------    -----------    ----------    -------------    -------------
                                                                                     
Yehuda Harats..........       37,500(2)       2.3%         $1.42         4/1/12         $ 33,489          $84,887
                              37,500(2)       2.3%         $0.73         7/1/12         $ 17,216          $43,629
                              37,500(2)       2.3%         $0.85         10/1/12        $ 20,046          $50,801
Robert S. Ehrlich......       65,625(2)       4.0%         $1.42         4/1/12         $ 58,605         $148,552
                              65,625(2)       4.0%         $0.73         7/1/12         $ 30,128          $76,350
                              65,625(2)       4.0%         $0.85         10/1/12        $ 35,081          $88,901
                              65,625(2)       4.0%         $0.61         1/1/13         $ 25,175          $63,799



----------------------
(1)  The potential  realizable  value  illustrates  value that might be realized
     upon exercise of the options  immediately  prior to the expiration of their
     terms,  assuming the  specified  compounded  rates of  appreciation  of the
     market  price  per  share  from the date of grant to the end of the  option
     term.  Actual gains,  if any, on stock option exercise are dependent upon a
     number of factors, including the future performance of the common stock and
     the  timing  of  option  exercises,  as  well  as the  executive  officer's
     continued employment through the vesting period. The gains shown are net of
     the option  exercise  price,  but do not include  deductions  for taxes and
     other  expenses  payable  upon the  exercise  of the  option or for sale of
     underlying shares of common stock. The 5% and 10% rates of appreciation are
     mandated by the rules of the Securities and Exchange  Commission and do not
     represent our estimate or  projection  of future  increases in the price of
     our stock.  There can be no  assurance  that the amounts  reflected in this
     table will be  achieved,  and unless the market  price of our common  stock
     appreciates over the option term, no value will be realized from the option
     grants made to the executive officers.

(2)  Granted in exchange for a waiver of salary under our options-for-salary
     program.

         The table below sets forth information for the Named Executive Officers
with respect to aggregated  option  exercises during fiscal 2002 and fiscal 2002
year-end option values.

          Aggregated Option Exercises and Fiscal Year-End Option Values




                                                          Number of Securities             Value of Unexercised
                                                         Underlying Unexercised            In-the-Money Options
                        Shares                         Options at Fiscal Year End          at Fiscal-Year-End(1)
                      Acquired on        Value        ------------------------------ ----------------------------------
        Name           Exercise        Realized        Exercisable   Unexercisable     Exercisable     Unexercisable
 --------------------------------- ------------------ -------------- --------------- ---------------- -----------------
                                                                                     
Yehuda Harats........    50,000     $     10,500.00      1,076,501       116,666      $          0     $          0
Robert S. Ehrlich....    50,000     $     10,500.00        868,401        91,666      $      1,969     $          0



-----------------------
(1)  Options that are "in-the-money" are options for which the fair market value
     of the  underlying  securities on December 31, 2002 exceeds the exercise or
     base price of the option.

Employment Contracts

         In October 2002, we announced that Yehuda Harats, the president and CEO
and a member of our Board,  had decided to resign from his positions with us and
our  subsidiaries  in order to pursue  other  interests.  The Board of Directors
selected  Robert S. Ehrlich,  Chairman of the Board, to be the new President and
CEO. In connection  with the  resignation of Mr. Harats,  we are required to pay
him  certain  amounts  due to him by law and under  the



                                       14


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

terms of his  employment  agreement.  In December  2002, we came to an agreement
with Mr. Harats whereby we agreed to pay him $551,499 through the end of 2005 in
satisfaction of all our contractual and legal severance and other obligations to
him,  which sum was  approximately  one-half of the amount we had accrued on our
financial statements in connection with such obligations. Our debt to Mr. Harats
is secured by certain of our assets in Israel.  See  "Executive  Compensation  -
Cash and Other  Compensation - Termination  Compensation  of and Settlement with
Yehuda Harats," above.

         Mr. Ehrlich is party to an employment agreement with us effective as of
January 1, 2000. The term of this employment  agreement  expires on December 31,
2002,  but is  extended  automatically  for  additional  terms of two years each
unless either Mr. Ehrlich or we terminate the agreement sooner. Additionally, we
have the right,  on at least 90 days'  notice to Mr.  Ehrlich,  unilaterally  to
extend the initial term of his agreement  for a period of one year (i.e.,  until
December 31, 2003). We have exercised this right,  and accordingly the automatic
two-year  extensions  will begin from  December 31, 2003 instead of December 31,
2002.

         The  employment  agreement  provides  for a base  salary of $20,000 per
month, as adjusted annually for Israeli inflation and devaluation of the Israeli
shekel  against  the U.S.  dollar,  if any.  Additionally,  the board may at its
discretion  raise Mr.  Ehrlich's base salary.  In January 2002, the board raised
Mr.  Ehrlich's base salary to $23,750 per month  effective  January 1, 2002; Mr.
Ehrlich has elected to waive this increase in his salary and to receive  options
instead, under our salary for options program.

         The  employment  agreement  provides  that if the  results we  actually
attain  in a given  year are at  least  80% of the  amount  we  budgeted  at the
beginning of the year,  we will pay a bonus,  on a sliding  scale,  in an amount
equal to a minimum of 35% of Mr. Ehrlich's annual base salary then in effect, up
to a maximum of 90% of his annual  base  salary then in effect if the results we
actually  attain  for the year in  question  are 120% or more of the  amount  we
budgeted at the beginning of the year.

         The employment  agreement also contains various  benefits  customary in
Israel  for  senior  executives,  tax and  financial  planning  expenses  and an
automobile, and contain confidentiality and non-competition covenants.  Pursuant
to the employment  agreements,  we granted Mr.  Ehrlich  demand and  "piggyback"
registration rights covering shares of our common stock held by him.

         We can terminate  Mr.  Ehrlich's  employment  agreement in the event of
death or  disability or for "Cause"  (defined as  conviction of certain  crimes,
willful  failure  to carry out  directives  of our board of  directors  or gross
negligence or willful  misconduct).  Mr.  Ehrlich has the right to terminate his
employment  upon a change in our control or for "Good  Reason," which is defined
to include adverse changes in employment status or compensation, our insolvency,
material breaches and certain other events. Additionally, Mr. Ehrlich may retire
(after age 68) or terminate  his agreement for any reason upon 150 days' notice.
Upon termination of employment, the employment agreement provides for payment of
all  accrued  and  unpaid  compensation,  and  (unless  we have  terminated  the
agreement for Cause or Mr.  Ehrlich has  terminated  the agreement  without Good
Reason and without  giving us 150 days' notice of  termination)  bonuses due for


                                       15


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the year in which  employment is  terminated  and severance pay in the amount of
three years' base salary (or, in the case of  termination  by Mr. Ehrlich on 150
days' notice,  a lump sum payment of $520,000).  Furthermore,  certain  benefits
will continue and all outstanding options will be fully vested.

         Other employees have entered into individual employment agreements with
us. These agreements govern the basic terms of the individual's employment, such
as salary,  vacation,  overtime pay,  severance  arrangements and pension plans.
Subject to Israeli  law,  which  restricts  a  company's  right to  relocate  an
employee to a work site  farther than sixty  kilometers  from his or her regular
work site,  we have  retained the right to transfer  certain  employees to other
locations  and/or  positions  provided  that such  transfers  do not result in a
decrease in salary or benefits.  All of these agreements also contain provisions
governing the  confidentiality  of  information  and  ownership of  intellectual
property learned or created during the course of the employee's  tenure with us.
Under the  terms of these  provisions,  employees  must  keep  confidential  all
information  regarding our operations  (other than information  which is already
publicly  available)  received or learned by the  employee  during the course of
employment.  This  provision  remains in force for five years after the employee
has left our service.  Further,  intellectual property created during the course
of the employment relationship belongs to us.

         A number of the individual employment agreements,  but not all, contain
non-competition  provisions  which  restrict  the  employee's  rights to compete
against us or work for an enterprise  which competes against us. Such provisions
remain  in force  for a period of two  years  after  the  employee  has left our
service.

         Under the laws of Israel,  an employee  of ours who has been  dismissed
from service,  died in service,  retired from service upon attaining  retirement
age, or left due to poor health, maternity or certain other reasons, is entitled
to severance pay at the rate of one month's salary for each year of service.  We
currently fund this  obligation by making monthly  payments to approved  private
provident  funds  and by  its  accrual  for  severance  pay in the  consolidated
financial statements.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

         The  Compensation  Committee  of our  board of  directors  for the 2002
fiscal year  consisted of Dr. Jay M. Eastman,  Jack E. Rosenfeld and Lawrence M.
Miller. None of the members has served as our officers or employees.

         Robert S. Ehrlich, our Chairman and Chief Financial Officer,  serves as
Chairman and a director of PSCX,  for which Dr.  Eastman  serves as director and
member of the Executive  and Strategic  Planning  Committees  and Mr.  Rosenfeld
serves as director and member of the Executive Compensation Committees.


                      REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

Notwithstanding  anything  to the  contrary  set  forth  in any of our  previous
filings under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities  Act"), or
the Exchange Act which might  incorporate  future filings,  including this Proxy
Statement,  in whole or in part, the following



                                       16


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

report  and the  Performance  Graph  on page 28  shall  not be  incorporated  by
reference into any such filings.

     Objectives and Philosophy
         We maintain  compensation and incentive  programs designed to motivate,
     retain and attract  management  and utilize  various  combinations  of base
     salary,   bonuses  payable  upon  the   achievement  of  specified   goals,
     discretionary  bonuses  and  stock  options.  It is our  current  policy to
     establish,  structure and administer compensation plans and arrangements so
     that the  deductibility  of such  compensation  will not be  limited  under
     Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code. Our Chief Executive  Officer,
     Robert S. Ehrlich, is party to an employment  agreement with us. Our former
     Chief  Executive  Officer,  Yehuda  Harats,  who left our employ in October
     2002, was also party to an employment agreement.

     Executive Officer Compensation
         The employment  agreement with Mr. Harats  provide,  and the employment
     agreement with Mr. Ehrlich provides, that if the results we actually attain
     in a given year are at least 80% of the amount we budgeted at the beginning
     of the year, we will pay a bonus to each of Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats, on
     a sliding  scale,  in an amount  equal to a minimum of 35% of their  annual
     base salaries  then in effect,  up to a maximum of 90% of their annual base
     salaries  then in effect if the results we actually  attain for the year in
     question are 120% or more of the amount we budgeted at the beginning of the
     year.  We paid each of Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats  $32,380  during 2002 on
     account of the 2002 bonuses to which they were entitled  according to their
     contracts. Additionally, we accrued $67,370 for Mr. Ehrlich in satisfaction
     of the  remainder  of the bonus to which he was  entitled  according to his
     contract.  The  remainder of the  additional  bonus to which Mr. Harats was
     entitled  according  to the terms of his  contract was included in the sums
     that we are  obligated to pay Mr.  Harats under the terms of our  severance
     agreement with him, which sums are detailed in "Termination Compensation of
     and  Settlement  with Yehuda  Harats,"  above.  During  2002,  we also paid
     $99,750 to Mr.  Harats in full payment of his 2001 bonus and $84,000 to Mr.
     Ehrlich in full payment of his 2001 bonus.

         Beginning in May 2001,  we  instituted  an  options-for-salary  program
     designed to  conserve  our cash and to offer  incentives  to  employees  to
     remain  with us despite  lowered  cash  compensation.  Under this  program,
     certain of our more senior employees agreed to permanently  waive a portion
     of their salaries in exchange for options to purchase  shares of our common
     stock.  During  2002,  in exchange  for waiver of  $105,000 in salary,  Mr.
     Ehrlich received a total of 262,500 options during 2002, which options were
     granted based on the lowest  closing prices of our common stock during each
     quarter of 2002.  During 2002, in exchange for waiver of $45,000 in salary,
     Mr. Harats received a total of 112,500  options during 2002,  which options
     were granted based on the lowest  closing prices of our common stock during
     each of the first three quarters of 2002. All of these options were granted
     at a ratio of options to  purchase  2.5 shares of our stock for each dollar
     in salary waived. Social benefits (such as pension) and contractual bonuses
     continued  to be  calculated  based  on  salary  prior  to  reduction.  The
     options-for-salary program was ended on December 31, 2002.

         As of December 31, 2002, Mr.  Ehrlich's  total  options,  including the
     options  referred to in the immediately  preceding  paragraph,  represented
     approximately  2.7%  of  our  outstanding  stock,  which  the  Compensation
     Committee  believes is an  appropriate  level of options for him in view of
     his equity position  (including options  exercisable within 60 days) in our
     company which, as of December 31, 2002,  represented  approximately 4.3% of
     our  outstanding  stock.  As  of  when  Mr.  Harats's  employment  with  us
     terminated in October  2002,  Mr.  Harats's  total  options,  including the
     options  referred to in the immediately  preceding  paragraph,  represented


                                       17


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

     approximately  3.4%  of our  fully-diluted  outstanding  stock,  which  the
     Compensation Committee believes was an appropriate level of options for him
     in view of his equity position  (including  options  exercisable  within 60
     days) in our company which, as of October 2002,  represented  approximately
     7.1% of our outstanding stock.

         For  information  with respect to Mr. Harats's  severance  arrangements
     with us,  see  "Termination  Compensation  of and  Settlement  with  Yehuda
     Harats," above.

     Compensation of Other Employees
         With  respect to  employees  other than the Named  Executive  Officers,
     compensation is determined not by formula,  but based on the achievement of
     qualitative and/or quantitative  objectives  established in advance of each
     year by the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer,  who then,
     pursuant to authority  delegated by the Compensation  Committee,  determine
     remuneration of our employees based on such objectives.

         We seek to  promote,  including  through  our  compensation  plans,  an
     environment that encourages  employees to focus on our continuing long-term
     growth.  Employee  compensation is generally  comprised of a combination of
     cash compensation and grants of options under our stock option plans. Stock
     options  are awarded  annually  in  connection  with  annual  bonuses  and,
     occasionally,  during the year on a discretionary  basis. Stock options are
     intended  to offer an  incentive  for  superior  performance  while  basing
     employee  compensation  on the  achievement  of higher share value,  and to
     foster the  retention of key personnel  through the use of schedules  which
     vest  options over time if the person  remains  employed by us. There is no
     set  formula  for the award of options  to  individual  employees.  Factors
     considered in making  option  awards to the employees  other than the Named
     Executive  Officers in 2002  included  prior grants to the  employees,  the
     importance of retaining the employees services,  the amount of cash bonuses
     received by the  employees,  the  employees  potential to contribute to our
     success and the employees' past contributions to us.  Additionally,  almost
     all of our more senior  employees  participated  in our  options-for-salary
     program  (described  above) of agreeing to  permanently  waive a portion of
     their  salaries  in exchange  for options to purchase  shares of our common
     stock.  Most of these employees  participated in this program to the extent
     of 15% of their monthly salaries.

                     Submitted by the Compensation Committee
                     ---------------------------------------

                               Dr. Jay M. Eastman
                                Jack E. Rosenfeld
                                Bert W. Wasserman

Performance Graph

         The  following  graph  compares  the  yearly  percentage  change in our
cumulative  total  shareholder  return on our common  stock with the  cumulative
total return on the Nasdaq Market Index (Broad Market Index) a  self-constructed
peer group index (the "Old Index"),  and a self-constructed new peer group index
(the "New  Index")  over the past five years,  from  December  31, 1997  through
December  31,  2002.  We have chosen to replace the Old Index with the New Index
due to the strategic steps that we took during 2002, including the manufacturing
and  distribution  of  zinc-air   batteries  for  military   applications,   the
acquisition of two new  subsidiaries  (IES  Interactive  Training,  Inc. and MDT
Protective  Industries  Ltd.)  and  the  termination  of  our  consumer  battery
operations.  We believe  that the New Index is more  reflective



                                       18


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

of our  current  business  segments  and our shift in  emphasis  to defense  and
homeland security.

         The cumulative  total  shareholder  return is based on $100 invested in
our common stock and in the  respective  indices on December 31, 1997. The stock
prices on the performance  graph are not necessarily  indicative of future price
performance.

             CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2002 AMONG
                    AROTECH CORPORATION, NASDAQ MARKET INDEX,
                  OLD PEER GROUP INDEX AND NEW PEER GROUP INDEX

                                  [LINE GRAPH]




                            12/31/97       12/31/98        12/31/99       12/31/00       12/31/01        12/31/02
                            --------       --------        --------       --------       --------        --------
                                                                                         
AROTECH                       100.00          75.86          96.55          129.31          45.79          17.66
OLD PEER GROUP(1)             100.00          77.77         170.81           94.10          43.43          21.36
NEW PEER GROUP(2)             100.00          36.55          16.91           12.64          20.24          27.21
BROAD MARKET                  100.00         139.63         259.13          157.32         124.20          85.05



-------------------------------------

(1)  The Old Peer Group  Index is  comprised  of the  following  companies:  AER
     Energy Resources,  Inc., Battery  Technologies Inc.,  Electrosource,  Inc.,
     Ultralife Batteries, Inc. and Valence Technology,  Inc. The returns of each
     company  have been  weighted  according  to their  respective  stock market
     capitalization for purposes of arriving at a peer group average.

(2)  The New Peer Group Index is comprised of the following  companies:  Bio-Key
     International,   Inc.,  Command  Security  Corporation,  Firearms  Training
     Systems, Inc., Guardian International, Inc. and ICTS International N.V. The
     returns of each company have been  weighted  according to their  respective
     stock  market  capitalization  for  purposes  of  arriving  at a peer group
     average.



                                       19


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                          REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

              The audit  committee  of the board of  directors  during 2002 (the
     "Audit  Committee")  consisted  of three  non-employee  directors,  Dr. Jay
     Eastman,  Lawrence M. Miller, and Jack E. Rosenfeld,  each of whom has been
     determined to be  independent as defined by the Nasdaq  Marketplace  Rules.
     The Audit  Committee  operates under a written charter adopted by the board
     of directors.

              Management is responsible for the Company's  internal controls and
     the  financial   reporting   process.   The  independent   accountants  are
     responsible   for  performing  an   independent   audit  of  the  Company's
     consolidated  financial  statements in accordance  with generally  accepted
     accounting  principles and to issue a report thereon. The Audit Committee's
     responsibility is to monitor and oversee these processes.

              In this context the Audit  Committee has met and held  discussions
     with management and the independent accountants.  Management represented to
     the Audit Committee that the Company's  consolidated  financial  statements
     were prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles,
     and the  Audit  Committee  has  reviewed  and  discussed  the  consolidated
     financial statements with management and the independent  accountants.  The
     Audit Committee discussed with the independent accountants matters required
     to be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61.

              The Company's  independent  accountants also provided to the Audit
     Committee the written disclosure  required by Independence  Standards Board
     Standard  No. 1,  "Independence  Discussions  with Audit  Committees."  The
     Committee   discussed  with  the   independent   accountants   that  firm's
     independence and considered  whether the non-audit services provided by the
     independent accountants are compatible with maintaining its independence.

              Based on the Audit Committee's  discussion with management and the
     independent   accountants,   and  the  Audit  Committee's   review  of  the
     representation of management and the report of the independent  accountants
     to the Audit Committee,  the Audit Committee  recommended that the board of
     directors  include the audited  consolidated  financial  statements  in the
     Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December 31, 2002
     filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

                        Submitted by the Audit Committee

                                Bert W. Wasserman
                               Lawrence M. Miller
                                Jack E. Rosenfeld


            FEES BILLED FOR SERVICES RENDERED BY PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT

         For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002,  Kost Forer & Gabbay,  our
independent  auditor and principal  accountant,  billed the approximate fees set
forth below:

Audit Fees....................................................... $    93,693
Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fees..... $         0
All Other Fees................................................... $     6,308

         The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors has  considered  whether
the provision of information technology services and other non-audit services is
compatible with maintaining the independence of our principal accountant.



                                       20


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

         Of the time expended by our principal accountant to audit our financial
statements for the year ended December 31, 2002,  none of the work was performed
by persons other than the principal accountant's full-time, permanent employees.



           INFORMATION REGARDING BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF COMMON STOCK

         The  following  table sets forth  information  regarding  the  security
ownership, as of July 22, 2003, of those persons owning of record or known by us
to own  beneficially  more than 5% of our common  stock and of each of our Named
Executive Officers and directors,  and the shares of common stock held by all of
our directors and executive officers as a group.



                                                                                           Percentage of Total
        Name and Address of Beneficial Owner(1)           Shares Beneficially Owned(2)(3) Shares Outstanding(3)
        ---------------------------------------           ------------------------------- ---------------------
                                                                                           
Leon S. Gross...........................................          4,036,036(4)(10)               10.1%
Austin W. Marxe and David M. Greenhouse(5)..............          2,843,597(5)                    7.0%
Robert S. Ehrlich.......................................          1,556,567(6)(11)                3.8%
Steven Esses............................................                  0                         *
Avihai Shen.............................................             92,381(7)                      *
Dr. Jay M. Eastman......................................             65,001(8)                      *
Jack E. Rosenfeld.......................................             67,001(9)                      *
Lawrence M. Miller......................................            525,080(10)                   1.3%
All of our directors and executive officers as a group
  (7 persons**).........................................          6,490,736(12)                  15.7%



------------------------------
   * Less than one percent.
  ** Including  Mr.  Gross,  who resigned as a director on March 17, 2003.  Also
     includes  601,835 shares held of record by or on behalf of Yehuda Harats as
     of July 22, 2003 that are subject to the Voting Rights Agreement  described
     in footnote 12, below.

  (1)Unless  otherwise noted, the address of each beneficial owner is in care of
     Arotech Corporation, 632 Broadway, New York, New York 10012.

  (2)Unless  otherwise  indicated  in these  footnotes,  each of the  persons or
     entities named in the table has sole voting and sole investment  power with
     respect to all shares shown as beneficially  owned by that person,  subject
     to applicable community property laws.

  (3)Based on 40,078,032 shares of common stock outstanding as of July 22, 2003.
     For  purposes of  determining  beneficial  ownership  of our common  stock,
     owners of options  exercisable  within sixty days are  considered to be the
     beneficial  owners of the shares of common stock for which such  securities
     are exercisable.  The percentage  ownership of the outstanding common stock
     reported  herein  is based on the  assumption  (expressly  required  by the
     applicable  rules of the Securities and Exchange  Commission) that only the
     person whose  ownership is being  reported has  converted  his options into
     shares of common stock.

  (4)Includes  453,165  shares  held by Leon S. Gross and  Lawrence M. Miller as
     co-trustees  of the Rose Gross  Charitable  Foundation,  and 35,001  shares
     issuable upon exercise of options exercisable within 60 days.

  (5)Consists  of  2,055,718  shares and  787,879  warrants.  Of these  amounts,
     916,027 shares and 315,151  warrants are owned by Special  Situations  Fund
     III, L.P., a Delaware  limited  partnership  ("Special Fund III"),  437,273
     shares and 218,182 warrants are owned by Special  Situations Private Equity
     Fund, L.P., a Delaware  limited  partnership  ("SSPE"),  331,336 shares and
     109,091  warrants  are owned by Special  Situations  Cayman  Fund,  L.P., a
     Cayman Islands limited  partnership  ("Special  Cayman Fund"),  and 371,082
     shares and  145,455  warrants  are owned by Special  Situations  Technology
     Fund, L.P., a Delaware  limited  partnership  ("SST").  Austin W. Marxe and
     David M.  Greenhouse  are the  principal  owners  of MGP  Advisers  Limited


                                       21


     Partnership, a Delaware limited partnership ("MGP"), MG Advisers, L.L.C., a
     New York limited liability company ("MG"), AWM Investment Company,  Inc., a
     Delaware corporation ("AWM"), and SST Advisers,  L.L.C., a Delaware limited
     liability company ("SSTA"). MGP is the general partner of Special Fund III.
     AWM is the general partner of MGP and the general partner of and investment
     adviser to the Cayman  Fund.  MG is the general  partner of and  investment
     adviser to SSPE. SSTA is the general  partner of and investment  adviser to
     SST.  Messrs.  Marxe and Greenhouse  share voting and investment power over
     the shares held by all of Special Fund III,  SSPE,  Special Cayman Fund and
     SST and are  principally  responsible  for the selection,  acquisition  and
     disposition  of the  portfolio  securities  by the  investment  advisers on
     behalf of their funds.  The address of Messrs.  Marxe and Greenhouse is 153
     East 53rd  Street,  New  York,  New York  10022.  All  information  in this
     footnote  and in the  text to which  this  footnote  relates  is based on a
     Schedule 13G filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission on February
     11, 2002, as amended on February 13, 2003.

(6)  Includes  52,568 shares held by an affiliated  corporation,  242,313 shares
     held in Mr. Ehrlich's  pension plan, 22,000 shares held by children sharing
     the same  household,  and 868,401 shares  issuable upon exercise of options
     exercisable within 60 days.

(7)  Includes 81,881 shares issuable upon exercise of options exercisable within
     60 days.

(8)  Consists of 65,001 shares  issuable  upon  exercise of options  exercisable
     within 60 days.

(9)  Includes 65,001 shares issuable upon exercise of options exercisable within
     60 days.

(10) Includes  453,165  shares  held by Leon S. Gross and  Lawrence M. Miller as
     co-trustees  of the Rose Gross  Charitable  Foundation,  and 60,001  shares
     issuable upon exercise of options exercisable within 60 days.

(11) Messrs.  Gross, Ehrlich and Harats are parties to a Voting Rights Agreement
     pursuant  to which  each of the  parties  agrees to vote the  shares of our
     common  stock  held by that  person  in favor of the  election  of  Messrs.
     Ehrlich,  Harats and Miller  until the earlier of December  28, 2004 or our
     fifth annual  meeting of  stockholders  after December 28, 1999. Mr. Harats
     resigned as a director in 2002;  however,  we believe that Mr.  Harats must
     continue to comply with the terms of this  agreement.  As of July 22, 2003,
     5,291,036  shares of our common  stock were  subject to this Voting  Rights
     Agreement  (including  601,835  shares  held of  record  by or on behalf of
     Yehuda Harats as of July 22, 2003).

(12) Includes  1,163,286  shares  issuable upon exercise of options  exercisable
     within 60 days.


             Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

         Under the securities laws of the United States, our directors,  certain
of our  officers  and any  persons  holding  more than ten percent of our common
stock are required to report their ownership of our common stock and any changes
in that ownership to the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Specific due dates
for these  reports  have been  established  and we are  required  to report  any
failure to file by these dates  during 2002.  We are not aware of any  instances
during 2002 where such "reporting  persons" failed to file the required  reports
on or before the specified  dates,  except that a Form 5 that Mr. Yehuda Harats,
who resigned as a director in November  2002,  was required to file on or before
February 14, 2003 was to the best of our knowledge never filed by him.


                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

   Voting and Registration Rights Agreements

         Pursuant to a securities  purchase  agreement  dated  December 28, 1999
between a group of  purchasers,  including Mr.  Gross,  and us, Mr. Gross agreed
that for a period of five



                                       22


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

years,  neither  he nor  his  "affiliates"  (as  such  term  is  defined  in the
Securities  Act) directly or indirectly  or in  conjunction  with or through any
"associate"  (as such term is defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange  Act),  will
(i) solicit proxies with respect to any capital stock or other voting securities
of ours under any  circumstances,  or become a  "participant"  in any  "election
contest"  relating to the election of our  directors  (as such terms are used in
Rule 14a-11 of Regulation 14A of the Exchange  Act);  (ii) make an offer for the
acquisition  of  substantially  all of our assets or capital  stock or induce or
assist any other person to make such an offer; or (iii) form or join any "group"
within the meaning of Section  13(d)(3) of the  Exchange Act with respect to any
of our capital stock or other voting securities for the purpose of accomplishing
the actions  referred to in clauses (i) and (ii) above,  other than  pursuant to
the voting rights agreement described below.

         In connection with a stock purchase  agreement dated September 30, 1996
between  Leon S.  Gross  and us,  we also  entered  into a  registration  rights
agreement with Mr. Gross dated  September 30, 1996,  setting forth  registration
rights  with  respect  to the  shares of  common  stock  issued to Mr.  Gross in
connection with the offering. These rights include the right to make two demands
for a shelf registration  statement on Form S-3 for the sale of the common stock
that  may,  subject  to  certain  customary  limitations  and  requirements,  be
underwritten.  In addition,  Mr. Gross was granted the right to  "piggyback"  on
registrations  of  common  stock in an  unlimited  number of  registrations.  In
addition,  under the  registration  rights  agreement,  Mr.  Gross is subject to
customary  underwriting lock-up requirements with respect to public offerings of
our securities.

         Pursuant to a voting rights  agreement  dated September 30, 1996 and as
amended  December 10, 1997 and December 28, 1999,  between Mr. Gross,  Robert S.
Ehrlich,  Yehuda Harats and us,  Lawrence M. Miller,  Mr.  Gross's  advisor,  is
entitled  to be  nominated  to serve on our  board of  directors  so long as Mr.
Gross, his heirs or assigns retain at least 1,375,000 shares of common stock. In
addition,  under the voting rights agreement,  Mr. Gross and Messrs. Ehrlich and
Harats  agreed to vote and take all  necessary  action so that Messrs.  Ehrlich,
Harats and Miller  shall  serve as members of the board of  directors  until the
earlier of December 28, 2004 or our fifth annual meeting of  stockholders  after
December  28,  1999.  Mr.  Harats  resigned as a director in 2002;  however,  we
believe  that  Mr.  Harats  must  continue  to  comply  with  the  terms of this
agreement.  As of July 22,  2003,  5,291,036  shares of our  common  stock  were
subject to this Voting Rights Agreement (including 601,835 shares held of record
by or on behalf of Yehuda Harats as of July 22, 2003).

Officer Loans

         On December 3, 1999, Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats each purchased 125,000
shares of our  common  stock out of our  treasury  at the  closing  price of the
common stock on December 2, 1999.  Payment was  rendered by Messrs.  Ehrlich and
Harats in the form of non-recourse promissory notes due in 2009 in the amount of
$167,975 each,  secured by the shares of common stock purchased and other shares
of common stock  previously held by them. As of December 31, 2002, the aggregate
amount  outstanding  pursuant  to these  promissory  notes  for each of  Messrs.
Ehrlich and Harats was $201,570 and $201,570, respectively.



                                       23


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

         On February 9, 2000, Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats each exercised 131,665
stock options.  Messrs.  Ehrlich and Harats paid the exercise price of the stock
options and certain taxes that we paid on their behalf by giving us non-recourse
promissory  notes due in 2025 in the  amount of  $789,991  each,  secured by the
shares of our common stock acquired  through the exercise of the options and, in
the case of Mr. Ehrlich, certain compensation due to him upon termination. As of
December 31, 2002, the aggregate amount outstanding pursuant to these promissory
notes  for each of  Messrs.  Ehrlich  and  Harats  was  $623,579  and  $875,170,
respectively.

Termination Compensation of and Settlement with Yehuda Harats

         In October 2002, we announced that Yehuda Harats, our president and CEO
and a member of our Board,  had decided to resign from his positions with us and
our subsidiaries in order to pursue other  interests.  In December 2002, we came
to an agreement  with Mr. Harats  whereby we agreed to pay him $551,499  through
the end of 2005 in  satisfaction  of all our contractual and legal severance and
other obligations to him. See "Certain  Relationships and Related Transactions -
Termination Compensation of and Settlement with Yehuda Harats," below.

         Prior to Mr. Harats's  resignation,  we had accrued a sum of $1,212,939
in  respect  of  these  obligations  on our  books,  consisting  of  contractual
severance,  statutory  severance,  contractually  guaranteed  bonus, and various
benefits,  including unused vacation,  unused sick days, and continuing benefits
over the three years after  termination.  Since we settled with Mr. Harats for a
sum of  $551,499  rather than the  $1,212,939  that we had accrued on our books,
this settlement  effectively  resulted in a gain for us in the fourth quarter of
2002 of $661,440, which is the difference between the amount that we had accrued
on our books in respect of these  obligations  and the amount that we ultimately
agreed to pay.

         We continue to carry on our books a total of  $1,076,740  in loans from
us to Mr. Harats on which he remains liable (described  above);  however,  we do
not carry these loans at full value because  recourse under the loans is only to
certain shares that we hold, the fair market value of which is now less than the
principal amount of the loans.


                              STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

         Pursuant  to the  rules  of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,
stockholder  proposals made in accordance with Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act
intended to be included in our proxy  material for the next annual  meeting must
be received by us on or before April 6, 2004.  If you desire to bring a proposal
before the next annual  meeting and such  proposal is not timely  submitted  for
inclusion  in our proxy  statement,  you can still  submit the proposal if it is
received by us no later than June 1, 2004. Any proposals must be received at our
principal executive offices, 632 Broadway, Suite 1200, New York, New York 10012,
Attention: Corporate Secretary by the applicable date.



                                       24



                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

                                  ANNUAL REPORT

         Copies of our Annual Report on Form 10-K (including  audited  financial
statements)  filed with the Securities  and Exchange  Commission may be obtained
without charge by writing to Stockholder  Relations,  Arotech  Corporation,  632
Broadway,  Suite 1200,  New York,  New York  10012.  A request for a copy of our
Annual Report on Form 10-K must set forth a good-faith  representation  that the
requesting  party was  either a holder of  record or a  beneficial  owner of our
common  stock on July 22,  2003.  Exhibits  to the Form 10-K will be mailed upon
similar  request and payment of specified fees to cover the costs of copying and
mailing such materials.

         Our audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2002 and certain other related financial and business  information are contained
in our 2002  Annual  Report to  Stockholders,  which is being  furnished  to our
stockholders along with this proxy statement,  but which is not deemed a part of
the proxy soliciting material.



                                  OTHER MATTERS

         We are not aware of any other  matter  that may come  before the annual
meeting of stockholders and we do not currently intend to present any such other
matter.  However,  if any such other matters properly come before the meeting or
any adjournment  thereof,  the persons named as proxies will have  discretionary
authority to vote the shares represented by the accompanying proxy in accordance
with their own judgment.

                                  BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,

                                  /s/ Yaakov Har-Oz

                                  Yaakov Har-Oz
                                  Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary

New York, New York
August 6, 2003



                                       25





                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

                                                                       Exhibit A
                               AROTECH CORPORATION
                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

I.       STATEMENT OF POLICY

         The Audit  Committee  shall assist the Board of Directors (the "Board")
of Arotech Corporation ("Arotech") in fulfilling its oversight responsibility by
reviewing the  accounting and financial  reporting  processes of Arotech and its
subsidiaries  (collectively,  the "Company"),  the Company's  system of internal
controls  regarding  finance,  accounting,  legal compliance and ethics, and the
audits  of  the  Company's  financial  statements.   In  so  doing,  it  is  the
responsibility  of the  Audit  Committee  to  maintain  free and  open  means of
communications  among the  Company's  Board of Directors,  outside  auditors and
senior management.  The Audit Committee's  primary  responsibilities  and duties
are:

          o    Serve  as an  independent  and  objective  party to  monitor  the
               Company's  financial  reporting process,  internal control system
               and disclosure control system.

          o    Review  and   appraise  the  audit   efforts  of  the   Company's
               independent accountants.

          o    Assume direct  responsibility for the appointment,  compensation,
               retention and  oversight of the work of the outside  auditors and
               for the resolution of disputes  between the outside  auditors and
               the Company's management regarding financial reporting issues.

          o    Provide an open  avenue of  communication  among the  independent
               accountants, financial and senior management and the Board.

         The Audit Committee will primarily  fulfill these  responsibilities  by
carrying out the activities identified in Section IV of this Charter.

         The Company shall be responsible  for the providing the Audit Committee
with  appropriate  funding,  as determined by the Audit  Committee,  in order to
compensate the outside auditors and advisors engaged by or employed by the Audit
Committee.

II.      COMPOSITION OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

         The Audit  Committee  shall  consist  of at least  three  "independent"
Directors  of  Arotech  and  shall  serve  at  the  pleasure  of the  Board.  An
"independent"  Director is defined as an individual who (a) is not an officer or
salaried  employee  or an  affiliate  of the  Company,  (b)  does  not  have any
relationship  that, in the opinion of the Board, would interfere with his or her
exercise of independent  judgment as an Audit  Committee  member,  (c) meets the
independence  requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")
and the Nasdaq Stock Market or such



                                       A-1


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

other securities exchange or market on which Arotech's securities are traded and
(d) except as  permitted  by the SEC and the Nasdaq  Stock  Market or such other
securities exchange or market on which Arotech's securities are traded, does not
accept any consulting, advisory or other compensatory fee from the Company.

         At least  one  member  of the  Audit  Committee  shall be a  "financial
expert"  as  defined  by the SEC and  the  Nasdaq  Stock  Market  or such  other
securities  exchange or market on which  Arotech's  securities are traded.  Each
Audit Committee member must be able to read and understand financial statements,
including a balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement.

         The  members of the Audit  Committee  shall be  designated  by the full
Board  from time to time.  The Board  shall  designate  one  member of the Audit
Committee to serve as chairperson of the committee.

III.     MEETINGS AND MINUTES

         The Audit  Committee  shall meet at least  quarterly,  with  additional
meetings  if   circumstances   require,   for  the  purpose  of  satisfying  its
responsibilities.  The Audit Committee shall maintain minutes of each meeting of
the Audit  Committee and shall report the actions of the Audit  Committee to the
Board, with such recommendations as the Audit Committee deems appropriate.

IV.      RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

         The Audit Committee shall oversee and monitor the Company's  accounting
and financial reporting process,  internal control system and disclosure control
system,  review the audits of the Company's financial  statements and review and
evaluate the performance of the Company's outside auditors.  In fulfilling these
duties  and  responsibilities,  the Audit  Committee  shall  take the  following
actions, in addition to performing such functions as may be assigned by law, the
Company's certificate of incorporation, the Company's bylaws or the Board.

1.       The  Audit  Committee  shall  assume  direct   responsibility  for  the
         appointment,  retention  and  oversight  of the  work  of  the  outside
         auditors  and,  when  appropriate,   the  replacement  of  the  outside
         auditors.  As part of the audit process, the Audit Committee shall meet
         with the outside  auditors to discuss and decide the audit's scope. The
         Audit  Committee shall determine that the outside audit team engaged to
         perform the external audit consists of competent, experienced, auditing
         professionals.  The Audit  Committee  shall also review and approve the
         compensation to be paid to the outside auditors and shall be authorized
         to compensate the outside auditors.

2.       The Audit  Committee shall take, or recommend that the full Board take,
         appropriate  action to ensure the independence of the outside auditors.
         The Audit  Committee  shall require the outside  auditors to advise the
         Company of any fact or  circumstances  that might adversely  affect the
         outside auditors'  independence or judgment with respect to the Company
         under applicable auditing standards.  The Audit Committee shall require
         the outside  auditors to submit,  on an annual basis,  a formal written
         statement setting forth all relationships  between the outside auditors
         and the Company that may affect the objectivity and independence of the
         outside  auditors.  Such  statement  shall  confirm



                                       A-2


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

         that the  outside  auditors  are not aware of any  conflict of interest
         prohibited  by Section  10A(l) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934
         (the "Exchange  Act").  The Audit  Committee shall actively engage in a
         dialogue  with the  outside  auditors  with  respect  to any  disclosed
         relationships   or  services  that  may  impact  the   objectivity  and
         independence of the outside auditors.

3.       The Audit  Committee  shall require the outside  auditors to advise the
         Audit  Committee  in  advance in the event  that the  outside  auditors
         intend to provide any  professional  services to the Company other than
         services  provided  in  connection  with an audit  or a  review  of the
         Company's financial statements  ("non-audit  services");  provided that
         such  non-audit  services  are not  listed  in  Section  10A(g)  of the
         Exchange  Act  ("prohibited  services").   The  Audit  Committee  shall
         approve,  in  advance,  any  non-audit  services  to be provided to the
         Company by the Company's outside auditing firm.

4.       The Audit Committee shall obtain  confirmations  from time to time from
         the Company's  outside auditing firm that such firm is not providing to
         the Company (i) any prohibited  services,  or (ii) any other  non-audit
         service or any auditing  service that has not been  approved in advance
         by the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee shall have the authority to
         approve  the  provision  of  non-audit  services  that  have  not  been
         pre-approved by the Audit  Committee,  but only to the extent that such
         non-audit  services qualify under the de minimus exception set forth in
         Section  10A(i)(1)(B)  of the Exchange Act. The Audit  Committee  shall
         record  in its  minutes  and  report  to the  Board  all  approvals  of
         non-audit services granted by the Audit Committee.

5.       The Audit  Committee  shall  meet with the  outside  auditors,  with no
         management  in  attendance,  to  openly  discuss  the  quality  of  the
         Company's accounting  principles as applied in its financial reporting,
         including  issues  such  as  (a)  the  appropriateness,  not  just  the
         acceptability,  of the accounting  principles and financial  disclosure
         practices  used or proposed to be used by the Company,  (b) the clarity
         of  the  Company's   financial   disclosures  and  (c)  the  degree  of
         aggressiveness or conservatism that exists in the Company's  accounting
         principles and  underlying  estimates and other  significant  decisions
         made by the Company's  management in preparing the Company's  financial
         disclosures.  The Audit  Committee shall then meet,  without  operating
         management  or the  outside  auditors  being  present,  to discuss  the
         information presented to it.

6.       The Audit Committee shall meet with the outside auditors and management
         to review  the  Company's  quarterly  reports  on Form 10-Q and  annual
         report on Form 10-K and discuss any significant adjustments, management
         judgments and accounting  estimates and any  significant new accounting
         policies  before such forms are filed with the SEC. The Audit Committee
         shall require the outside auditors to report to the Audit Committee all
         critical  accounting policies and practices to be used, all alternative
         treatments  of  financial   information   within   generally   accepted
         accounting  principles  that have  been  discussed  with the  Company's
         management,  ramifications of the use of such  alternative  disclosures
         and treatments,  the treatments  preferred by the outside  auditors and
         other material written  communications between the outside auditors and
         the Company's management,  including management's letters and schedules
         of unadjusted differences.



                                       A-3


                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

7.       Upon the  completion of the annual  audit,  the Audit  Committee  shall
         review  the audit  findings  reported  to it by the  outside  auditors,
         including any comments or recommendations of the outside auditors, with
         the entire Board.

8.       The Audit Committee shall review all reports  received from the federal
         and state regulatory  authorities and assure that the Board is aware of
         the  findings  and  results.  In  addition,   it  will  meet  with  the
         appropriate  members  of  senior  management  designated  by the  Audit
         Committee to review the responses to the respective regulatory reports.

9.       The Audit  Committee  shall  consider and review with  management:  (a)
         significant  findings  during  the  year  and  management's   responses
         thereto, including the status of previous audit recommendations and (b)
         any difficulties  encountered in the course of their audits,  including
         any  restrictions  on the scope of  activities  or  access to  required
         information.

10.      The Audit Committee shall consider and approve, if appropriate, changes
         to the Company's auditing and accounting  principles and practices,  as
         suggested  by  the  outside  auditors  or  management,  and  the  Audit
         Committee  shall review with the outside  auditors and  management  the
         extent to which such  changes have been  implemented  (to be done at an
         appropriate  amount of time prior to the implementation of such changes
         as decided by the Audit Committee).

11.      The  Audit  Committee  shall  prepare  a letter  for  inclusion  in the
         Company's  proxy  statement  describing  the  discharge  of  the  Audit
         Committee's responsibilities.

12.      The Audit  Committee will review and update this Charter  periodically,
         at least annually,  and as conditions may dictate.  The Audit Committee
         Charter  shall be  presented  to the full Board for its approval of any
         changes.

13.      Commencing on such date as Section 102(a) of the  Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
         2002 (the "Act") becomes  effective,  the Audit  Committee shall obtain
         confirmation  from the  outside  auditors at the  commencement  of each
         audit that such firm is a "registered  public  accounting firm" as such
         term is defined under the Act.

14.      The Audit  Committee  shall have the  authority  to engage  independent
         counsel and other  advisers as it  determines  necessary to perform its
         duties.

15.      The Audit  Committee  shall  establish  procedures for (i) the receipt,
         retention and treatment of complaints received by the Company regarding
         accounting,  internal  accounting controls or auditing matters and (ii)
         the confidential,  anonymous  submission by employees of the Company of
         concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters.

16.      The Audit  Committee  shall  investigate or consider such other matters
         within  the  scope of its  responsibilities  and  duties  as the  Audit
         Committee may, in its discretion, determine to be advisable.

                                      A-4





                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***

                      ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SHAREHOLDERS OF
                   ELECTRIC FUEL CORPORATION DOING BUSINESS AS
                               AROTECH CORPORATION
                               September 15, 2003

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TO VOTE BY MAIL
---------------
Please date,  sign and mail your proxy card in the envelope  provided as soon as
possible.

TO VOTE BY TELEPHONE (TOUCH-TONE PHONE ONLY)
--------------------------------------------
Please  call  toll-free  1-800-PROXIES  and follow the  instructions.  Have your
control number and the proxy card available when you call.

TO VOTE BY INTERNET
-------------------
Please  access the web page at  "www.voteproxy.com"  and  follow  the  on-screen
instructions. Have your control number available when you access the web page.



YOUR CONTROL NUMBER IS



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                               AROTECH CORPORATION

             Proxy Solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of
             Arotech Corporation for Annual Meeting of Stockholders
                          to be held September 15, 2003

         The  undersigned,  having  received the Notice of the Annual Meeting of
Stockholders  and the Proxy  Statement  on behalf of the Board of  Directors  of
Electric  Fuel   Corporation,   doing  business  as  Arotech   Corporation  (the
"Company"),  hereby appoint(s) Robert S. Ehrlich and Yaakov Har-Oz,  and each of
them, proxies of the undersigned (with full power of substitution) to attend the
Annual Meeting of the Company to be held on Monday,  September 15, 2003 at 10:00
a.m.  local  time in the  Ballroom  of the  Shelburne  Murray  Hill  Hotel,  303
Lexington  Avenue,  New York, New York, and all  postponements  and adjournments
thereof  (the  "Meeting"),  and there to vote all shares of common  stock of the
Company that the undersigned  would be entitled to vote, if personally  present,
in regard to all matters that may come before the Meeting,  and without limiting
the general  authorization hereby given, the undersigned directs that his or her
vote be cast as specified in this Proxy.

         This  Proxy,  when  properly  executed,  will be  voted  in the  manner
specified  herein.  If no  specification is made, the proxies intend to vote FOR
the nominees and FOR the other  proposals  set forth herein and described in the
Board of Directors' Proxy Statement.  If any of the nominees is not available to
serve,  this  Proxy  may  be  voted  for  a  substitute.  This  Proxy  delegates
discretionary  authority  with respect to matters not known or determined at the
time of  solicitation of this Proxy.  The  undersigned  hereby revokes any other
proxy previously granted to vote the same shares of stock for said Meeting.

         SEE  REVERSE  SIDE.  If  you  wish  to  vote  in  accordance  with  the
recommendations  of the Board of Directors,  just sign on the reverse side.  You
need not mark any boxes.

                 CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON THE REVERSE SIDE.




                             ***PRELIMINARY COPY***


                         Please date, sign and mail your
                      proxy card back as soon as possible!

                         Annual Meeting of Stockholders

                               AROTECH CORPORATION

                               September 15, 2003




                 Please Detach and Mail in the Envelope Provided



.................................................................................
[X] Please mark                 DO NOT PRINT IN
    your votes as                  THIS AREA
    in this example
.................................................................................


          FOR             WITHHOLD         NOMINEES:       Dr. Jay M. Eastman
     both nominees        AUTHORITY                        Steven Esses
    listed at right      to vote for
       (except as       both nominees
       indicated          listed at
        below).             right.
        -------            ------

        -------            ------

INSTRUCTION:  To withhold  authority to vote for any individual  nominee,  write
that nominee's name in the space provided: _____________________________________



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                  DO NOT PRINT
                                  IN THIS AREA


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



___________________________________________________ Date:_______________, 2003



                                    SIGNATURE

2.       To amend our Amended  and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  to
         change  our  name  from   "Electric  Fuel   Corporation"   to  "Arotech
         Corporation"


                                       FOR             AGAINST         ABSTRAIN
                                    ---------          -------        ----------

                                    ---------          -------        ----------

         PLEASE  SIGN,  date and  return  this  proxy  form  promptly  using the
         enclosed envelope.



         The undersigned acknowledges receipt of the Notice of Annual Meeting of
         Stockholders and Proxy Statement of Arotech Corporation dated August 6,
         2003 and of Arotech  Corporation's  Annual  Report for the fiscal  year
         ended December 31, 2002.


                             [ ]                               [ ]

                     I do plan to attend            I do not plan to attend
                          the meeting.                     the meeting.


___________________________________________________ Date:_______________, 2003
                 Signature


Note:    Please sign exactly as name appears on this Proxy. When shares are held
         by joint tenants,  both should sign. If signing as attorney,  executor,
         administrator,  trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If
         you are signing for a  corporation,  please sign in the full  corporate
         name by President or other authorized officer. If you are signing for a
         partnership, please sign in the partnership name by authorized person.