Israel’s advanced military technology on full display during Iran's attack

JERUSALEM — Some ofIsrael’s most advanced military technology was ondisplay over the weekend when its multi-level aerial defense array led the way in striking down an estimated 99% of the more than 350 drones, rockets and missiles that were fired byIran in an unprecedented attack on the Jewish state.

From the Iron Dome, which in its latest format usesartificial intelligence (AI)to improve accuracy when shootingshort-range surface-to-surface rockets, toDavid’s Sling, which interceptsshort- to medium-range and medium- to long-range surface-to-surface missiles, to theArrow 2 and 3 systems, which is used for longer-rangeballistic and cruise missiles, as well as AI-driven aircraft and other technology, Israel’s defensive operation proved it was far superior to the offensive capabilities of the Islamic Republic.

In a press briefing following the attack,Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari hailed Israel’s defensive operation, which was carried out together with partners from U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), as a “very significant strategic achievement.” He said itdemonstrated the “exceptional professionalism” of Israel’sAerial Defense Array and the “defensive abilities of the air forceas well as the army’s military and technological superiority.”

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Israel intercepts 2 drones with 'C-Dome' defense system within week: IDF Video

Tal Mimran, of the Cyber Security Research Center in the Faculty of Law at Hebrew University, told Fox News Digital that broader cyber methods and even AI technology were also likely used in the successful defense operation.

“AI-powered algorithms analyze radar and other sensor data to track incoming missiles and calculate the best time to intercept these more effectively and prioritize targets,” he said. “AI makes the system more effective against a wider range of threats, like drones and other small, low-flying objects.”

Mimran said the Iron Dome, which Israel has been using for more than a decade to thwart rocket attacks from Gaza and Lebanon, now uses a “significant application of AI to improve system accuracy.”

“Using AI increases the Iron Dome’s success rate to over 90% and reduces operating costs,” he said. “This is important because these threats are becoming increasingly common and pose a challenge to traditional air defense systems, as is evident in the Russia-Ukraine war.”

Rockets fired by Hamas terrorists from Gaza City are intercepted by the Israeli Iron Dome defense missile system in the early hours of Oct. 8, 2023. (Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images)

Mimran also noted that over the past few months “IDF officials haveacknowledged using AI-based tools for several purposes, including targeting support, intelligence analysis, proactive forecasting and streamlined command and control.”

According to Mimran, Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza has spotlighted the IDF’sHabsora, or “the Gospel,” an AI-based system that is used to generate possible military targets for attack. However, he said, accusations that the IDF has been using AI systems to commit mass assassinations give too much credit to the AI-powered tools currently in use.

Jonathan Conricus, a senior fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, played down the role of AI in the weekend operation, telling Fox News Digital that while the technology is incorporated in some air force systems, “a live event with 300 incoming projectiles cannot be left toAI; thereneeds to be responsiblehuman in the loop making real-time decisions.”

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Dozens of Israeli Air Force planes were deployed to intercept UAVs and cruise missiles launched from Iran over the weekend. (IDF Spokesman’s Unit)

“I know that senior air force personnel were involved in controlling every aspect ofthis,” said Conricus, a former IDF spokesperson for the international media. “I find it hard to believethat any significant part of the targeting done [over the weekend] was done with AI.”

He said that over the past six months – since Oct. 7 when the Palestinian terror group Hamas carried out a brutal attack in southern Israel, sparking a full-blown war in Gaza and daily rocket fire by the militant Shiite terror group Hezbollah across Israel’s northern border, too – Israel has been forced to utilize its innovative missile defense technology.

“All of the systems have been fullyoperational since Oct. 7 and all haveconfirmed real-world hits,” Conricus said, adding that Israel’s newest layer of aerial defense, theArrow 3 system,debuted just a few months ago by intercepting ballistic missiles fired by the Yemen-basedHouthis, an extremist Islamist group that is supported and funded by the fundamentalist Islamist regime in Tehran. Both Hamas and Hezbollah are also Iranian proxies.

Israeli defense systems intercept an Iranian missile over Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem, in the early hours of April 14, 2024. (Matanya Reichman/TPS)

“I think that today what we have is apretty solid and well-rounded air defense that deals with a very wide array and broad spectrum of incoming threats, from very small and fast projectiles like UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) to extremely large and lethal ballistic missiles, which are also very fast, tremendously big and carry a ton of explosives,” he said.

Iran’s attack on Sunday – the first ever directly from its soil – brought together all thedifferent tiers of Israel’s defensive system, Conricus said.

“They are allinterlinked andcommunicate with each other,” he said, describing how a central command office provided an overall picture of the attack as it unfolded, giving a threat assessment in real time and coordinating the entire operation with the U.S. and other CENTCOM partners.

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Iron Dome and other sophisticated military tech help to bring down 99% of Iran’s missiles and drones. (Getty Images.)

Conricus said that while many of the innovative defense systems were created by Israel, “a large part of the development was also carried out with theAmericans,” allowing “the radar systems and the digital intercepting systems” to communicate with U.S. defense systems.”

“They were developed together with congressional funding and support,” he said, explaining that there were “a lot of plug-and-play capabilities” and, if needed, the U.S. systems can easily connect with the Israeli system.

According to Israeli army estimates, Iran fired some 30 cruise missiles, 120 ballistic missiles and 170 suicide drones that carried about 60 tons of warheads and explosives combined. While most of the projectiles were shot down before reaching Israel’s borders, two air force bases were lightly hit and a 7-year-old Israeli girl was seriously injured. Forces from the U.S., British and French militaries, as well as from several countries in the region, including Saudi Arabia and Jordan, participated in the operation.

“To coordinate such an attack is not an easy task because all three weapon systemshave [different] velocities and performances,” said Tal Inbar, asenior research fellow at Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance.

He said that the UAVs, mostly Iranian-produced Shahed 136s, would have been fired first because they move at the slowest pace; followed by the cruise missiles and finally the ballistic missiles, which have a relatively short flight time from Iran to Israel, depending on thelaunch site.

U.S. CENTCOM Gen. Michael Kurilla, left, meets with Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant amid rising tensions with Iran. (Ariel Hermoni/IMoD/File)

Inbar noted that Iran’s decision to use drones gave Israel several hours to “prepare itself to the maximum.”

In addition to deploying advanced missile defense systems and scrambling fighter planes, he said Israel also put in place some levels of cyberprotection, including disrupting satellite navigation, which is effective in stopping some of the projectiles from reaching their targets.

“Ballistic missiles cannot bejammed because they use an internal navigation system, but this is not the case with drones,” Inbar said, noting that Israelis have become used to GPS disturbances over the past six months.

Recent media reports also suggest that Israel deployed its new $1 billion spy plane, theOron, which provided vital information that was used to track and destroy the drones and missiles in flight. The high-tech jet, whichIsrael unveiled at last year’s Paris Air Show,isequipped with thousands of advanced sensors. The Oron has the ability toscan vast terrain andgather an unprecedented amount of information at aconsiderable distance from the targets being tracked. When asked about the Oron spy plane, the IDF did not comment.

Ruth Marks Eglash is a veteran journalist based in Jerusalem, Israel. She reports and covers the Middle East and Europe. Originally from the U.K, she has also freelanced for numerous news outlets. Ruth can be followed on Twitter @reglash

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