Israel accelerates missile shield

A new Israeli air shield against rockets more powerful than those intercepted by Iron Dome in the Gaza conflict passed its first field test last week after being rushed through development, officials said yesterday. They said that David’s Sling, billed...

A new Israeli air shield against rockets more powerful than those intercepted by Iron Dome in the Gaza conflict passed its first field test last week after being rushed through development, officials said yesterday.

They said that David’s Sling, billed as Israel’s answer to the longer-range missiles of Lebanese Hizbollah guerrillas and Syria, shot down a target rocket in a secret November 20 desert trial that coincided with fierce shelling exchanges between Israel and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Worried about deteriorating security on the fronts with Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, and the international showdown over the disputed nuclear programme of arch-foe Iran, Israel has been accelerating work on its multi-tier missile shield, with extensive help from the United States.

A source in Israel’s defence industries said David’s Sling was originally scheduled for live trials in 2013, and that this was brought forward “given the general sense of urgency”.

David’s Sling uses technology similar to that of the Iron Dome system, which Israel says had a 90 per cent success rate, intercepting 421 of the rockets fired from Gaza in eight days of fighting that ended in a ceasefire on Wednesday.

Also known as Magic Wand, David’s Sling is being made by Israel’s state-owned Rafael Advanced Defence Systems Ltd and US firm Raytheon Co.

“The completion of the programme will be a significant layer for Israel’s multi-tiered anti-missile defence system,” Defence Minister Ehud Barak said in a statement

Iron Dome is the lowest of the tiers, tackling the guerrilla rockets of Gaza and Hizbollah. It was originally meant to handle ranges of up to 70 kilometres, but designers say this is being expanded to some 250 kilometres.

The top-most tier is Israel’s Arrow ballistic interceptor, designed to shoot down long-range Iranian and Syrian missiles at atmospheric altitudes.

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