Irish Independent

Air defences would be no match for an Israeli barrage

- ANDREW MACASKILL

Ageing air defences have left Iran vulnerable to an Israeli attack if prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu decides to ignore global pressure not to retaliate directly for the unpreceden­ted drone and missile salvoes of Saturday night.

Setting aside the wider diplomatic and strategic costs that are likely to be the strongest deterrent to any counterstr­ike, experts say Israel would have little trouble hitting targets inside Iran, which has an obsolete air force and indigenous air-defence systems based on ageing Russian models.

Iran’s weekend barrage demonstrat­ed both the strength of its airborne armoury and Israel’s formidable defence systems, which ensured that the hundreds of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones launched against it caused only minimal damage.

Iran is a “superpower in tactical ballistic missiles and UAVs,” Zvika Haimovich, a former Israeli air defence chief, said.

Its air defences are another matter, built largely around Russian S-200 and S-300 anti-aircraft missile systems or a range of locally produced equivalent­s such as the Bavar-373, Khordad, Raad, Sayyad and Talash, as well as old American and Russian warplanes, some of which date from the 1970s era of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

Similar systems have been deployed in Syria since 2015, giving Israeli pilots years of experience in dealing with them.

“Our air force and coalition air forces flew in this environmen­t. They know how to deal effectivel­y with this system,” Mr Haimovich said. “I will give them the respect, but that will not be the main challenge dealing with Iran.”

Sidharth Kaushal, a research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London, said the main challenge for Israel may not be evading Iran’s surfaceto-air missiles, but being able to successful­ly strike military bases in western and southern Iran, which require the use of penetratin­g bombs.

Dr Kaushal said Israeli aircraft, such as the stealth F-35 jets, which could evade Iran’s air-defence networks, typically carry smaller ordnance. But against deeply buried targets, larger munitions may be needed, which would mean they may have to be carried externally on aircraft such as the F-16 – making these more detectable to radars.

For safety, pilots might be more likely to launch them from farther away.

“The Iranian air-defence network is certainly not impenetrab­le to these aircraft, but this raises the risk of losses and the Iranian capacity to, at least in theory, intercept some incoming standoff munitions increases,” he said.

Whether Israel is willing to risk a direct strike would partly depend on how confident it is that it can thwart further attacks by Iran, which described the weekend salvoes as reprisals for a lethal Israeli strike on its generals in Syria.

Further escalation could see Iran opting for more powerful weapons from an arsenal which analysts say includes more than 3,500 missiles and drones numbering in the low thousands.

Israel’s air defence is built around the high-altitude Arrow systems successful­ly used over the weekend, the mid-range David’s Sling and the short-range Iron Dome, which has fended off thousands of rockets fired from Gaza and Lebanon.

But these do not come cheap. Although Israeli officials have given no details, according to calculatio­ns by a number of analysts, the price of Iran’s attack probably amounted to $80m (€75m) to $100m (€94m) – but cost Israel and its allies around $1bn to repel.

The problems currently being experience­d by Ukraine in securing replacemen­t ordnance has underlined the longterm impact on air defences subject to continuous attack from Iran or its proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon.

On Wednesday, US president Joe Biden urged Congress to pass an aid package that would replenish Israel’s air defences.

Brigadier-General Doron Gavish, head of Israel’s air-defence taskforce, said Israel has been working overtime to rebuild its stockpiles.

Were the Israelis to face Iran alone in a future flare-up, they could use Iron Dome and David’s Sling as more thrifty fallbacks. Any missiles that might be missed by Arrow could be tackled by the lower-altitude systems.

Amos Yadlin, a retired Israeli air force general and chief of military intelligen­ce, predicted Israel would not sit back and rely on its defences to repel attacks without responding to eliminate the threat.

“Iran is not the only side that knows how to attack,” he said. “Israel has very significan­t offensive options. There will not be a situation where Israel just defends itself while Iran strikes.”

“Iran is not the only side that knows how to attack. Israel has offensive options”

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