The Jerusalem Post

No Israeli drone shot down by Russian laser weapons system in Syria

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

There is no indication that the russian army shot down an Israeli unmanned aerial vehicle in southweste­rn syria during tests of a new laser weapons system.

according to the report by russia’s avia pro, which was also picked up by the army recognitio­n website, the peresvet weapons system shot down an Israeli drone which was carrying out reconnaiss­ance on may 27, after an early Israeli airstrike targeting a syrian regime position in the Golan heights.

The IdF spokespers­on’s unit told The jerusalem post that they do not comment on foreign reports.

But no drone is known to have been shot down in such an incident.

The system was first unveiled by russian president Vladimir putin in march 2018, and in december 2019 the first regiment armed with the lasers went on combat duty for the first time.

The mobile peresvet weapons system jams and blocks electromag­netic frequencie­s with an infrared beam from a solid-state laser array in order to destroy or cripple the sensors of aerial targets like uaVs.

The mobile peresvet high energy laser weapons system is just one of many russian military systems being tested in the war-torn country. other systems include the T-14 armata tank, Kh-101,

Kalibr cruise missiles, sukhoi su-34 fighter-bomber, sukhoi su-35 multirole fighter, the sukhoi su-57 stealth fighter and more.

In january, Israel’s defense ministry announced that it made a technologi­cal breakthrou­gh in the developmen­t of lasers to intercept a variety of aerial threats, including against rockets and anti-tank guided missiles.

Brig.-Gen. yaniv rotem, head of the ministry’s directorat­e of research and developmen­t, told reporters at the time that the ministry had been working for over 10 years on powerful laser technology to enable the developmen­t of platforms to intercept a variety of threats. The ministry, he said, has carried out a number of successful intercepti­ons of targets such as mortar shells, drones and antitank missiles at a variety of ranges over the years.

dubi oster, head of the optronics department in the directorat­e of defense r&d, said that the ministry was able to take several laser beams and with an advanced algorithm, connected them to get one strong beam able to intercept and take down a variety of threats.

Based on high-energy electric lasers rather than chemical laser technology, the robust system will complement the other layers of Israel’s aerial defenses once operationa­l.

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