The Defense Ministry has successfully carried out
a series of interceptions to shoot down drones with a powerful airborne
laser system installed on a civilian light aircraft…. During the trials that were carried out over the sea, the
high-powered laser fired from a civilian Cessna plane destroyed the
unmanned targets at differing ranges and altitudes.
According to the Defense Ministry, Israel is perhaps the
first country in the world to have been able to use such laser
technology on an aircraft to intercept targets in an operational
simulation…. The fully automated energy system uses the laser to destroy a
target while flying above the clouds, he said, adding that the
“powerful and precise system” can intercept the target “regardless of
weather conditions.
Once a target passes through the area of interest, the system
can be directed at any part of it with very high accuracy. It locks on
and remains locked on until the target is downed…. The ground system will also be able to destroy targets at a
range of eight to 10 km. with a 100 kW laser, Rotem said. The ministry
is aiming for an operational system by 2024 to be deployed at the Gaza
border area for shooting down rockets, he said.
Defense Minister Benny Gantz congratulated MAFAT, Elbit and the IAF on the technological breakthrough.
“Today, you have brought us closer to yet another important
milestone in the development of the multitiered defense array of the
State of Israel, and it is significant both in terms of cost
effectiveness and defense capabilities,” he said.
“The laser system will add a new layer of protection at
greater ranges and in facing a variety of threats: securing the State of
Israel while saving costs of interception,” Gantz said. “I am confident
that Israel’s defense industry will succeed in this important
development program, and I will work personally together with the entire defense establishment to ensure its success.”
The Defense Ministry hopes that the airborne system will
further increase the effectiveness of Israel’s air defenses against
existing and future threats. It is expected to complement Israel’s
multitiered air-defense array, which includes the Iron Dome, David’s
Sling and Arrow missile interceptors….
The lasers can cover a much wider area and lock onto, and then destroy, unmanned vehicles passing through that area. The
cost of firing a laser beam for an interception will cost around $2000.
Meanwhile, the price of launching an Iron Dome interception missile is
between $40,000 and $60,000. Consider how may tens of millions
of dollars the IDF spent on Iron Dome missiles in the recent war against
Hamas; Hamas aimed 4300 not-very-expensive rockets at Israel; about 600
fell short, leaving 3700 that entered Israeli airspace; Iron Dome
missiles managed to intercept 90%. The cost of such a defense is
becoming an increasingly urgent issue as large-scale attacks become more
frequent and the expense of interception skyrockets.
The laser system will potentially save the IDF hundreds of
millions of dollars; it is also more precise in its targeting, and can
lock onto a target much closer to its launch, as compared to the Iron
Dome.
Israel keeps providing evidence of how creatively it responds to
every military challenge its enemies present. In three years, it will
have ready an anti-missile and anti-drone system that will cost 1/20th
of what such a defense does at present. And Israel will share this laser
beam technology – as it always has done with its every military advance
in the past – with the U.S.
Be afraid, Ismail Haniyeh and Yahyah Sinwar. Be afraid, Hassan
Nasrallah, Ebrahim Raisi and Ayatollah Khamenei, be very afraid. Once
those Israeli weapons scientists focus their attention on building new
weapons systems, there seems to be no obstacle they cannot in time
overcome. Now they’ve reached the “breakthrough” of laser-beam weapons,
capable of being fired both from the ground and from civilian light
planes flying above the clouds.
What’s next to come, from the creative
geniuses at Israel Aerospace Industries, Elbit Systems, and Rafael
Advanced Defense Systems? We’re on the edge of our seats.