Gulf News

Israel’s pioneering drones use free-falling bombs

Details of secret capability emerge, aimed at more distant targets

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Israeli armed drones use gravity bombs that produce no noise or smoke as they fall, making them hard for enemies to anticipate or evade, and the largest model of the aircraft can carry up to a tonne of munitions, its military says. After more than two decades of secrecy, Israel in July went public about its pioneering armed drones developed as part of an array of stand-off surveillan­ce and striking options since it was blindsided by tank incursions during a 1973 war.

In November, an Israeli general detailed the two corps — air force and artillery — that operate the drones, both against Palestinia­n foes close to home and possibly targets as far away as Iran or Sudan.

Such drones are remotepilo­ted, relaying video or dropping bombs before returning to base. They are distinct from the kamikaze drones that Iran said were used in a weekend attack on a defence plant in Isfahan, an incident on which Israel has declined to comment. A senior Israeli military officer said the armed drone fleet includes the passenger planesized Heron TP, made by state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd, and Elbit Systems Ltd’s smaller Hermes.

Heaviest drone

The former, the officer said, “is the heaviest drone that the IDF (Israel Defence Forces) has, which can carry munitions, with an effective payload of around a tonne”.

But, in an apparent allusion to the need to balance out payloads carried under the drones’ wings, the officer added: “This does not necessaril­y mean they can carry a one-tonne bomb.

It very much depends on the positionin­g of the munitions.” Israeli manufactur­ers do not publicise the armed capabiliti­es of the drones, under what industry sources have described as a Defence Ministry secrecy policy.

With its capabiliti­es closely tracked by the global defence industry, Israel has become one of the largest drone operators in the Middle East and a net exporter, according to the Royal United Services Institute, a London think tank.

The Israeli officer, not identified in line with military requiremen­ts given the sensitivit­y of the subject, said any sales of bomb-capable drones would be government-to-government, negating the need for publicity.

All the drone munitions are Israeli-made, the officer said, and “come down in free-fall, and can reach the speed of sound”. An example of a drone target could be fast-moving guerrillas, spotted and attacked before they can launch a rocket, other Israeli officials have said.

With its capabiliti­es closely tracked by the global defence industry, Israel has become one of the largest drone operators in the Middle East and a net exporter.

 ?? Reuters ?? ■ An Elbit Systems Ltd Hermes 900 UAV at a drone factory in Rehovot, Israel.
Reuters ■ An Elbit Systems Ltd Hermes 900 UAV at a drone factory in Rehovot, Israel.

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