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German Air Force banks on Israel’s Arrow-3 for national missile shield

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German Air Force banks on Israel’s Arrow-3 for national missile shield​

By Sebastian Sprenger and Seth J. Frantzman
Apr 6, 09:02 PM

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A model of an Arrow 3 ballistic missile is on display at Hatzor Airbase in Israel on March 3, 2018. (Ben Hartman/Contributor)
WASHINGTON and JERUSALEM — The German Air Force is looking to the Israeli Arrow-3 system to quickly field a defensive weapon against Russian Iskander and other missiles, according to a service spokesman.
The push follows the “informal” approval by political leaders in Germany to initiate more concrete acquisition plans, the spokesman told Defense News. Internally, plans to erect a defense system for Germany and, potentially, neighboring countries, goes by the working title of “German Iron Shield.”

The spokesman stressed the state of play in favor of Arrow-3 was based on agreement by “all political decision makers” in Berlin, though no contracts had been signed. In that spirit, the backing of the Ministry of Defense is assumed, according to the Luftwaffe, Germany’s air force.
An MoD spokeswoman said territorial missile defense is considered a permanent requirement by the department since the armed forces, the Bundeswehr, rolled out its latest strategic concept in 2018.
She described the Arrow system as “one option” of several. “There has been no decision about when and how this capability gap will be filled.”

The Luftwaffe’s assumptions about Arrow-3 as the choice for Germany’s future system would settle a race to quickly equip the country with a missile shield that German Chief of Staff Gen. Eberhard Zorn told newspaper Welt am Sonntag had come down to an Israeli or U.S. vendor.
Reuters reported last month the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, made by Lockheed Martin, also was in the running. Asked about this during a visit to Washington last week, Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht punted on specifics, saying instead the requirements for a German missile shield were still being finalized.
The Jerusalem Post was first to report Tuesday that Luftwaffe Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Ingo Gerhartz during a visit to Israel had signaled Germany’s backing of the Arrow-3 weapon.
Israel’s Arrow family of missile systems was first developed in the late 1980s, leading to the the Arrow-1 and Arrow-2 systems in the 1990s and early 2000s, and culminating in the Arrow-3, which became operational in 2017.

The system uses the Green Pine radar and Citron Tree battle management system. The chief contractor for the system is Israel Aerospace Industries, and Boeing has in the past acted as a subcontractor. Elbit Systems has built the battle-management system, while IAI’s Elta makes the radar.
Israel’s Ministry of Defense, IAI and other officials did not comment on the recent news regarding German interest in the system.
There has been interest in exporting of the system since at least 2019. In the wake of recent missile threats to the Gulf and other states in the Middle East, there are reports several countries have expressed interest in Israeli air defense systems and the radar used with the Arrow system.
The prospect of Germany buying an antimissile system for primarily national purposes is sure to prompt some head-scratching at NATO. The alliance has always treated the discipline of shooting down long-range missiles targeting Europe from Iran — and now, possibly, Russia — as a multinational team sport because of the continent’s geography.

As it stands, the American SM-3 missile, fired from ships and one land site in Romania, is the predominant NATO interceptor for striking missiles in the upper layer of Earth’s atmosphere, the kind of distance for which Germany is seeking a new system. But alliance officials have said for years the SM-3 infrastructure was aimed solely at threats from Iran.
In contemplating an alliance-wide missile shield for Europe, NATO officials have worked for years though the legal intricacies of the terrain — what to do, for example, in the event of intercept debris crashing down in densely populated areas far from any missile threat. Such questions could make it difficult for one alliance member in Europe to field a system entirely on its own, according to experts.
The Arrow family has undergone some changes in recent years. In 2017, Arrow-2 was first used in an interception of a missile threat when it stopped a surface-to-air missile fired from Syria. In February 2021, Israel announced it was beginning work on an Arrow-4 system.
For Israel, the Arrow system has been envisioned to defend against Iranian and other ballistic missile threats. It most recently tested Arrow-3 in January 2022.
Uzi Rubin, the founder and first director of Israel’s Missile Defense Organization, told Defense News the Arrow system would be “a good choice” for medium- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles. “I believe, although I have no means to substantiate it, that Arrow-3 might be adaptable to deal with the Kinzhal,” he added, referring to a nuclear-capable hypersonic missile in the Russian arsenal.
 
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Germany gets approval for Israel's Arrow 3 missile defense system​

It would mark the first time that the Arrow 3, one of Israel’s most advanced air defense systems, has been sold to another country​

By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Published: APRIL 5, 2022 09:11
Updated: APRIL 6, 2022 07:16
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 Israel's Arrow 3 interceptor.  (photo credit: DEFENSE MINISTRY)

Israel's Arrow 3 interceptor.
(photo credit: DEFENSE MINISTRY)
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Germany has received approval from Israel and the United States to purchase the Arrow-3 missile defense system, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

German legislators have in the past pushed for Berlin to buy Israel’s Iron Dome system to ward off aerial threats, but on Monday the head of the German Air Force, Lt.-Gen. Ingo Gerhartz, told the Post that the Arrow 3 is the most relevant system for the threats facing the European nation.

“The Iron Dome is used for short-range threats, and we have quite a capable industry back home, and we will procure systems for that,” Gerhartz said. “And for higher interceptors, we have the Patriot weapons system that we will modernize. [But] if it means [threats at a range of ] 15,000 km. [9,320 miles] and then it is exo-atmospheric, we don’t have anything, and that is why I had a close look at the Arrow 3 and we are really interested in the system.”



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The purchase of the system, which has been pushed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz, “starts with the approval of Israel and the United States - and they gave us the approval,” Gerhartz said. “They gave us the approval that we can cooperate on it. But, we still have to talk about the details.”

Should Germany buy the system, it would mark the first time that the Arrow 3, one of Israel’s most advanced air defense systems is capable of intercepting ballistic missiles at altitudes of over 100 km. (62 miles) and has a reported range of up to 2,400 km. (1,490 miles), has been sold to another country.

 German Chancellor Olaf Scholz arrives to give a press statement about the war crimes discovered the day before in Bucha, Ukraine, at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany April 3, 2022.  (credit: HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/POOL VIA REUTERS)
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz arrives to give a press statement about the war crimes discovered the day before in Bucha, Ukraine, at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany April 3, 2022. (credit: HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/POOL VIA REUTERS)
Russia has stationed Iskander missiles in locations that could reach many European cities like Berlin. The missiles that have been used in Ukraine fly too high to be destroyed by conventional air defense systems.

“We must all prepare ourselves for the fact that we have a neighbor that is currently prepared to use force to assert its interests. That’s why we have to work together to make sure that doesn’t happen,” Scholz said in an interview with German television last week.

Following the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, Germany increased its defense budget to 2% of the GDP and said it would set up a special €100 billion fund to swiftly upgrade its armed forces.









פותח במעבדות בית החולים הדסה עין כרם והאוניברסיטה העברית בירושליםפותח במעבדות בית החולים הדסה עין כרם והאוניברסיטה העברית בירושליםSponsored by Granalix | GranaGard | גרנליקס | שמן זרעי רימונים


 German Air Force  Lt. Gen. Ingo Gerhartz. (credit: LUFTWAFFE)
German Air Force Lt. Gen. Ingo Gerhartz. (credit: LUFTWAFFE)
According to the German newspaper Bild am Sonntag, the procurement of the system, which is still under development, will cost at least €2b. The report said that it would be operational by 2025 and its Green Pine radar would be set up at three locations in Germany from where data would then be sent to NATO Air Force Combined Air Operations Center in Uedem, Germany.

Should there be a missile threat, an interceptor missile would be launched to destroy it.

The Arrow-3 development program is one of the joint programs between Israel and the United States. It was co-managed by the US Missile Defense Agency and the Israel Missile Defense Organization (IMDO) in the Directorate of Defense R&D of the Israel Defense Ministry.

The primary contractor for the integration and development of the Arrow Weapon System is Israel Aerospace Industries’ (IAI) MALAM division, which is responsible for the radar functions; along with Elbit Systems Elisra division, which developed the firing management systems; and IAI’s TAMAM division together with IMI and Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, which jointly developed the interceptor. America’s Boeing is also a partner in the system.

The Arrow 3 is a highly maneuverable system designed to provide ultimate air defense by intercepting ballistic missiles when they are still outside of the Earth’s atmosphere. It is considered one of the world’s best interceptors due to its breakthrough technological capabilities. The Arrow 3 is the only interceptor that doesn’t carry a warhead but intercepts an incoming missile by crashing into it.

The new latest generation of the Arrow 3 system is believed to have better interceptor capabilities at a much higher altitude and much further away from the ground.

The Arrow 3 forms the uppermost layer of Israel’s multi-layered defense system along with the Arrow 2, David’s Sling and Iron Dome system. Together, the systems provide the country with a protective umbrella able to counter threats posed by both short and mid-range missiles used by terrorist groups in Gaza and Hezbollah, as well as the threat posed by more sophisticated, long-range Iranian ballistic missiles.



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A State Department official told The Post that “The United States strongly supports Germany’s efforts to defend itself from missile threats. This is doubly so given the Russian Federation’s premeditated, unprovoked and unjustified further invasion of Ukraine.”

Israel’s Defense Ministry did not respond at the time of publication; IAI refused to comment.
 
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