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Nathan Jeffay

ByNathan Jeffay, Nathan Jeffay

Analysis

Iron Dome: a rocket shield or rust bucket?

March 31, 2011 10:59
1 min read

On paper, southern Israel has never been safer. On Sunday, for the first time, the Israel Defence Forces deployed its cutting edge missile defence system which is meant to be able to block rockets fired by militants in Gaza.

Israel started developing the system in 2007 and, from the beginning, expectations were enormous. Developers set the bar high with its name: Iron "kippah", conjuring up the image of a huge impenetrable skullcap that would allow the Gaza envelope communities to carry on life as normal even as rockets rained down.

But on Sunday, military and political leaders were at pains to lower expectations of the Iron Dome, as it is known outside Israel, which is now in place just outside Beersheba.

Doron Gavish, commander of the Israel Air Force Air Defence Division, said that it provides "good but not hermetic" protection. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told the cabinet that while the Iron Dome will help Israel to deal with the problem of rocket fire, he did not want to create the "illusion" that it will provide a "full or comprehensive answer".