In my last
posting, I briefly mentioned Israel's "Iron Dome", their air-to-air
defense shield that is used to protect the country's populated areas from
incoming Palestinian missiles. Here is a more in depth look at the
system.
In 2005,
Israel completely withdrew its security forces from the Gaza with the hopes of
spurring the Middle East peace process. Unfortunately, the withdrawal has
not worked; according to the Harvard Law School National Security Journal,
since 2005, over 9000 rockets and mortar shells have been fired into
neighbouring Israel. According to Shin Bet, Israel's Security Agency, these crude
mortar shells have a range of roughly 6 miles with the technologically superior
Grad missiles having a range of between 30 and 40 miles. According to B-Tselem, the Israeli Information Center for
Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, between June 2004 and July 2012, 20
Israeli citizens, including four minors, and one foreign national were killed
in Israel by Palestinian rocket and mortar fire. In addition, three
Israeli soldiers were killed, one in Israel and two in the Gaza.
Interestingly, Palestinian rocket friendly fire also killed nine Palestinians
including six minors.
In the
period between January 1 and June 30, 2012, Palestinians have fired a total of
313 rockets and 56 mortar shells from the Gaza strip into southern Israel.
This compares to 418 rockets and 258 mortar shells in all of 2011, a
substantial year-over-year escalation.
Here is a
chart showing the number of rockets and mortars fired by year since 2005:
To combat
the increasing use of such attacks by air, in 2007, Israel's Defense Minister
Amir Peretz selected the Iron Dome as the country's answer to self-defense.
The system, developed by the Israeli RAFAEL Armament Development Authority Ltd. is a three part system that includes a radar system to detect
and track incoming rockets and mortars, a missile system that intercepts the
incoming rockets and a battlefield management system that determines whether
the threat is heading toward a populated area and whether or not it should be intercepted. The system is designed to
determine the threat level of the incoming rocket so that unnecessary
interceptions are avoided. This is key since the cost of the intercepting
Tamir missiles runs at between $50,000 and $90,000 each, depending on the
source. Each missile launching system runs at $50 million and, according
to Bloomberg, four truck-towed batteries
including launchers and interceptors have been fielded thus far.
Here is a
video from the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) showing the implementation of the
Iron Dome:
Here is a diagram from RAFAEL showing how the
system works:
Here is a
video showing the Iron Dome system in action:
The system
intercepted its first rocket on April 7, 2011, just days after implementation, destroying a Grad rocket over
the city of Askelon. The drawback of the system is that it is designed
for short-range rockets only. Mid-range missiles and rockets cannot yet
be intercepted.
How
effective is the system? In the recent conflict, Israel is claiming a 90 percent effectiveness rate. By
comparison, according to the Israel Defense Forces back in the period between
March 9 and 13, 2012, of over 300 rockets launched from Gaza only 165 reached
Israeli soil. The Iron Dome system attempted in intercept 69 of the rockets
and succeeded in destroying 56 of them, a 78.2 percent success ratio.
Just in case
you thought that this was irrelevant to American taxpayers, in July 2010, the
United States House of Representatives approved a $205 million fund to "spur the production
and development of the Iron Dome". In addition, in April 2012, the House Armed Services subcommittee authorized another $680 million to help fund the Iron Dome. As well, Israel is exploring
potential sales of the Iron Dome system to countries in Europe as a means of
self-defense for troops stationed in hostile areas including Afghanistan.
India and Singapore are both reportedly in negotiations to acquire the
system and the United States has shown interest in the system. With nearly a billion dollars invested in this technology thus far, one would hope so.
Decades ago at university, I had a conversation with some students from the Middle East who attempted to explain to me what's going on. It went something like this.
ReplyDeleteToday the Palestinians did that because yesterday the Israelis did this. Yesterday the Israelis did this because the Palestinians did that the day before. The Palestinians did that because last week the Israelis did this. The Israelis did this because the Palestinians did that two weeks ago. This went on and on as the explanations went farther and farther back in time. After arriving at a point around a hundred years ago, our conversation came to an end. I stood up to leave and said, "If I ever fully understand the justification of either party in all this, I would think I'd be as nuts as this situation is."
Everybody has to bury the hatchet and I don't mean in the other guy's head. While I am sympathetic to the plight of the Palestinians, I have always felt that their on-going bellicose approach to the Israelis leaves the Israelis scared to death and intransigent in their approach towards them. Nobody is going to win. The numbers you show for rockets and mortars is unbelievable. If the people in Canada or the United States had to live in such circumstances (getting rained on by rockets and mortars), they would be outraged. I would like to see the Palestinians with their own homeland but I also want to see Israel exist. Okay, maybe the British made a mistake when all this was set up but there is no going back in time now and everybody must learn to live together. However I'm afraid the Palestinians are their own worst enemy and believe me, if my neighbour was taking pot-shots at me, at some point I just might get pissed enough to go over and burn his house to ground. Nobody is going to negotiate with a gun to their head. And arguing about which came first, the chicken or the egg, ignores that everybody must put down their guns. Peace, love, and understanding. That's where it's at.
a talented israeli singer has got her insperation for the "iron dome" and the war , she recorded a jam session about it iron dome
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