American Arms


Protecting the independence of American industries


Police Arrest VC Linked to CSG’s Defense Tech Investments, Raising New Questions Around Strnad’s Expanding Network

Source: https://www.seznamzpravy.cz/clanek/ekonomika-firmy-policie-zadrzela-sefa-startupove-firmy-s-niz-investuje-i-zbrojar-strnad-301214

Police arrest head of startup company in which arms manufacturer Strnad also invests

Presto Ventures, a company investing in startups, will temporarily operate without its founder Přemysl Rubeš. He has been detained by the police, but according to the company, the reason is not related to business. The arms manufacturer CSG also invests with Presto Ventures.

On Monday, police arrested Přemysl Rubeš, founder and managing partner of startup company Presto Ventures. According to statements by Rubeš’s colleagues, the police action was not related to Presto Ventures. Billionaire Michal Strnad’s CSG group also invests in this company through Presto Tech Horizons.

According to Rubeš’s partner at Presto Ventures, Vojtěch Roček, Rubeš had been suffering from health and mental problems recently.

“This culminated on Monday when people close to him (Přemysl Rubeš, ed.) called the police for his own safety. Presto Tech Horizons is not affected by this in any way, and at Presto Ventures we will look for ways to operate without him for a while,” Vojtěch Roček said in a statement to SZ Byznys. The editorial staff also tried to contact Rubeš by phone. However, his phone is turned off.

Over the past two years, Presto Ventures has been in the news mainly in connection with the venture capital firm Presto Tech Horizons, which focuses on investing in startups focused on military technologies such as drones. The aforementioned CSG group is also a co-founder of Presto Tech Horizons.

Presto Tech Horizons, which focuses on the arms industry, has invested, for example, in the American company Firehawk Aerospace, which is involved in 3D printing of fuel and engines for rockets, in the development of artificial intelligence for drone navigation, and in acoustic weapon locators.

Presto Ventures has invested in dozens of startups through its funds. These include, for example, the software company CloudTalk and the startup Inventoro, which provides services to online stores. Some of Presto Ventures’ investments have not been successful. This applies, for example, to the heating company Woltair. Despite its original great ambitions, it went bankrupt last year.

Read more

Interview: CSG’s Shadow Deals and Broken Promises March 19, 2026

A founding insider exposes troubling practices inside Europe’s rising defense giant CSG—from concealed minority stakes during its IPO to alleged last-minute reversals and undervalued buyout offers. The revelations raise serious questions about transparency, investor trust, and whether global capital markets are being asked to bankroll a system built on backroom maneuvering rather than fair play.

Hidden Stakeholder: Why Europe’s CSG Raises Red Flags for America’s Defense Industry March 19, 2026

A newly uncovered dispute inside Europe’s Czechoslovak Group (CSG) is exposing serious transparency failures at the heart of one of the continent’s fastest-growing arms manufacturers. A previously undisclosed minority co-owner—armed with extraordinary control rights—has surfaced with a demand worth billions, raising questions about what investors were never told ahead of the company’s high-profile IPO.
At issue is more than just internal conflict. The failure to disclose a powerful stakeholder and a looming multi-billion-dollar buyout obligation points to a pattern of opacity, conflicting valuations, and potential investor misrepresentation. These are not minor oversights—they are systemic warning signs about how CSG operates behind the scenes.
For the United States, the implications are clear. At a time when Washington is actively prioritizing domestic production, supply chain resilience, and strategic independence under an “America First” defense framework , the rise of opaque foreign defense conglomerates presents a direct challenge. Allowing companies with questionable governance and hidden liabilities into the U.S. defense ecosystem risks undermining the integrity and security of America’s industrial base.

CSG Accused of Hiding NATO Corruption Probe Ahead of IPO March 10, 2026

A new investigation by Follow the Money raises serious questions about the conduct of European defense conglomerate Czechoslovak Group (CSG) following its high-profile stock market debut in Amsterdam. According to the report, the company allegedly failed to disclose a critical fact before its IPO: one of its subsidiaries had been suspended by NATO amid a corruption investigation. Investors may have purchased shares without knowing the full scope of the risks tied to the company’s operations. Critics say the case highlights troubling transparency issues in parts of the European defense sector and raises concerns about how foreign defense firms handle accountability to shareholders and partners. The controversy is likely to fuel debate over whether defense contracts and strategic investments should prioritize trusted American companies and allies who operate under stricter standards and transparency.