Wednesday, 15 April 2009

The Jerusalem Post Internet Edition

US will provide the Lebanese military with unmanned aircraft

Apr. 14, 2009
Associated Press , THE JERUSALEM POST
Lebanese army on APCs near...
Lebanese army on APCs near Tripoli

The United States said Tuesday it is providing Lebanon with 12 unmanned military aircraft in the coming months, the latest effort to bolster the fragile Middle East nation.
Washington hopes a strengthened Lebanese military would extend state authority across the country, where Hizbullah is gaining power with its arsenal of rockets that threaten another US ally, Israel.
 
[Freeman Note: The Lebanese Army is controlled by Syria and the Hizbullah. I hate spin and misinformation!!!!!]
 
A strong national army could be a counter to Hizbullah's weapons and could deprive the terrorists of the excuse to keep their arms.
US officials said their support is intended to help Lebanon maintain internal security, fight terrorism and secure its borders.
Since 2006, the US has provided Lebanon with more than a billion dollars in assistance, including $410 million to support security. But the aid has largely been equipment, vehicle and supplies, drawing ridicule from critics who contrast that with the high-tech weapons provided to Israel.
The army was divided during the 1975-90 civil war along sectarian lines and rebuilt after the conflict largely as an internal security force.
The all-volunteer, 70,000-strong force has managed to maintain a certain level of stability in the country, particularly in the last four years after Syrian forces were forced to withdraw in the political upheaval after the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
It has been criticized in Lebanon for staying on the sidelines, first when Israel pounded Hizbullah forces in 2006 and then again when Hizbullah gunmen swept into Beirut neighborhoods in 2008 in sectarian fighting that killed 81 people.
But that criticism has since dwindled since the army has managed to reassert control of the country.
Washington has in recent months stepped up its program to aid the Lebanese military, with a decision to supply battle tanks - the first since the early 1980s - after Russia promised in December to give Lebanon 10 MiG-29 fighter jets, its first fixed-wing combat aircraft.
The statement Tuesday said the "Raven" aircraft the US is providing performs remote reconnaissance and surveillance, identifies targets, provides protection and security and reports on military operations in urban areas and the results of battles.
The "Raven" has an advanced day and night electronic sensor providing immediate intelligence information, it said, adding that Lebanese air force members are in the United States training on operating the aircraft.
An embassy statement issued Monday said US officials discussed with Lebanon's defense minister during a visit to Washington earlier this month continued US support to the army to help it maintain internal security, fight terrorism, secure Lebanon's borders, and implement UN Security Council Resolution 1701 which ended the Second Lebanon War.
The Jerusalem Post Internet Edition

Israel, US to hold missile defense drill

Apr. 14, 2009
Yaakov Katz , THE JERUSALEM POST
[Freeman Note: The means an attempt by America to prevent and Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear weapons.]
 
An IAI missile [illustrative...
An IAI missile [illustrative photo].

In the face of Iran's continued pursuit of nuclear capability, Israel and the United States will hold an unprecedented and massive exercise later this year to jointly test three different ballistic missile defense systems, The Jerusalem Post has learned.
The exercise, called Juniper Cobra, will be held in Israel and will include the newly developed Arrow 2, as well as America's THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) and the ship-based Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System.
The test will likely include the launching of interceptors from these systems.
The Israel Air Force's Air Defense Division, the US Missile Defense Agency and the US Military's European Command (EUCOM) have held the Juniper Cobra exercise for the past five years. The upcoming exercise, though, is planned to be the most complex and extensive yet.
News of the scheduled exercise was revealed in testimony Missile Defense Agency director Lt.-Gen. Patrick J. O'Reilly gave to the House Appropriations Committee's subcommittee on defense earlier this month.
Israeli defense officials said Monday that the purpose of the exercise was to create the necessary infrastructure that would enable interoperability between Israeli and American BMD systems in case the US government decided to deploy these systems here in the event of a conflict with Iran, like it did ahead of the Gulf War in Iraq in 1991.
"The Juniper Cobra exercise between EUCOM and the IDF will be the fifth and most complex exercise yet designed," O'Reilly told the subcommittee.
"US ballistic missile defense elements such as the AN/TPY-2 [the American X-Band radar deployed in the Negev - Y.K.], THAAD and Aegis BMD will participate in these flight tests and exercises to demonstrate the interoperability and develop operational tactics, techniques and procedures associated with this coalition architecture," he said.
Last Monday, the IAF held its 17th test of the Arrow 2 interceptor, shooting down a missile mimicking an Iranian Shihab ballistic missile.
In his extensive testimony, O'Reilly also revealed that in February the David's Sling missile defense system underwent a successful "booster fly-out" test. The exercise involved the successful launching of a missile by the system that Israel and the US are developing jointly to intercept medium-range missiles between 70 km. and 250 km.
The first intercept test of the system, he said, is scheduled to take place in 2010.
O'Reilly also told the subcommittee that the Missile Defense Agency supported the development and US funding of Israel's Arrow 3, the future of which is currently undecided since US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced extensive cuts to the US defense budget last week.
While the Arrow 3 had a reduced 30-year life-cycle cost and was potentially more suitable for Israeli requirements, the development of the system was deemed to have a "high schedule risk," including "technical risks to meet the Israeli proposed need date."
As a result, the US general said, the Missile Defense Agency was looking into the development of a land-based variant of the Aegis system, which currently fires SM-3 interceptors from naval ships.
"To mitigate the Arrow 3 high schedule risk, we are pursuing concept development of a land-based variant of the proven Aegis SM-3 missile to meet Israel's more immediate upper tier requirements," O'Reilly said.
Amid mounting fears that the funding for the Arrow will be cut, Defense Minister Ehud Barak will meet on Thursday with New York Congresswoman Nita Lowey, who serves as the chair of the Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee, responsible for approving the funding for the continued development of the Arrow 3.
Lowey will be in Israel as part of a congressional delegation, but officials said her meeting with Barak was of extreme importance in light of the indecision regarding the continued funding of the Arrow 3.
Israel is hoping to secure some $150 million to continue development of the system by Israel Aerospace Industries and Boeing.