This article is included in these additional categories: Israel | Issues - International | Middle East - Other | Missiles - Anti-Ship | Rockets | Surface Ships - Combat | UAVs
Conflict Tech: Israel vs. Hezbollah-Iran

For more on this and other stories, please consider purchasing a membership.
If you are already a subscriber, login to your account.
If you are already a subscriber, login to your account.
Saar 5 Eilat Class(click to view full) With the situation of war-by-proxy heating up in Lebanon and Gaza, DID thought our readers might be interested in some of the military technologies being featured. Back in April 2005, DID published “Hezbollah Mirsad-1 UAV Penetrates Israeli Air Defenses.” The attack on the INS Ahi-Hanit, a Saar-5 Eilat Class Corvette, was originally alleged to have been a kamikaze UAV strike. As Situational Awareness notes, subsequent reports indicate that a C-802 anti-ship missile may have been responsible. DebkaFile offers some speculations re: why the missile successfully struck the corvette, which is equipped with defensive systems. Note that they are speculations/ rumors. Defense Update is based in Israel, and their attached blog adds rumors of a two-missile “high-low” attack pattern from IDF sources. THEL/Skyguard concept DefenseTech also discusses select items in Hezbollah’s rocket arsenal, while Defense Update offers a more in-depth roundup, plus a summary of Israeli air strikes during July 12-16. As these locally-made and Iranian-supplied rockets rain down on Israel courtesy of Hezbollah and their allies, DefenseTech also looks at the joint THEL/Skyguard laser defense project, which was recently unveiled by Northrop-Grumman. For immediate use, however, another option suggests itself – modified Mk […]
One Source: Hundreds of programs; Thousands of links, photos, and analyses
DII brings a complete collection of articles with original reporting and research, and expert analyses of events to your desktop – no need for multiple modules, or complex subscriptions. All supporting documents, links, & appendices accompany each article.
Benefits
- Save time
- Eliminate your blind spots
- Get the big picture, quickly
- Keep up with the important facts
- Stay on top of your projects or your competitors
Features
- Coverage of procurement and doctrine issues
- Timeline of past and future program events
- Comprehensive links to other useful resources
Monthly
$59.95/Per Month
- Charged Monthly
- 1 User
Quarterly
$50/Per Month
- $150 Charged Each Quarter
- 1 User
Yearly
$45/Per Month
- $540 charged each year
- 1 User
2 years
$35/Per Month
- $840 Charged every other year
- 1 User
