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Israel's Tavor gives the bullet to US-made M-16

Mig-29

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Fondly patting his dust-covered rifle at the end of day-long shooting practice, Israeli platoon commander Afik Soher says he wouldn't replace it with any other. Israel's army is gradually phasing out the veteran US-made M-16 assault rifle in favour of the modern, home-produced Tavor, which has become a symbol of pride for the Givati infantry brigade where it first became standard issue. "It's a great gun and I wouldn't trade it for anything," Soher says. Malfunctions cut short earlier attempts to introduce it to troops and the weapon was used on a wide scale for the first time during this year's war in the Gaza Strip, when it performed with no reported problems.

The acrid smell of gunpowder fills the air of the sandy shooting range in the heart of the Negev desert in southern Israel where recruits, mainly in their late teens, are spending the week practising shooting techniques. Wearing full combat vests and camouflage helmets, the company soldiers run in file into the shooting range, take positions and fire five rounds towards a cardboard target positioned 100 metres (yards) away. They then run through the case-littered stretch of sand to check their shots before comparing their results. "It is fun working with it because soldiers have special motivation to hold an Israeli-made rifle," says company commander Second Lieutenant Yinon Guttel. The TAR-21, or "Tavor Assault Rifle - 21st Century", is made of strong, composite materials and features an integral electro-optical sight and a bullet-loading action mechanism located in the butt stock which makes it short and ergonomic. However, the Tavor, the Hebrew name for mount Tabor in northern Israel, uses the same 5.56 millimetre cartridges and magazines as the M-16.

"Advanced countries with modern armies develop their own weapons. We have our tank, now our infantry has a rifle," says Guttel. Designed to meet urban fighting requirements that Israeli troops first encountered during the 1982 Lebanon invasion, the Tavor has been years in research and development. Work on it was begun by the now-privatised Israel Weapons Industries, with the aim of replacing the ageing M-16 and the locally-manufactured but unpopular Galil rifle. "The gun was developed on the basis of lessons drawn during the First Lebanon War," said Zalman Sheves, head of development department of the Tavor at IWI, referring to the 1982 invasion. "The IDF (Israel Defence Forces) fighters encountered urban warfare for the first time in a massive way, which was completely different from previous wars. The conclusions were that a very compact, light rifle that can be easily used in rooms and when getting off vehicles was needed." "We applied in the gun everything the IDF wanted a future rifle to be after the war," he said.

The IWI factory has produced thousands of the Tavor rifles in recent years for the Israeli army as well as for an undisclosed number of foreign clients. Sheves refused to give the rifle's price. The Israeli army began issuing the gun to the Givati brigade, one of five infantry brigades in regular forces, in 2006, but suspended use just months later after numerous malfunctions were exposed. In August 2008 the TAR-21 was reintroduced in Givati and today the entire brigade is equipped with it, while other brigades are gradually being supplied.

Unlike the M-16 that has been used by dozens of armies in numerous battlefields across the world from Vietnam in the 1960s to Iraq and now Afghanistan, the Tavor has yet to fully prove its effectiveness. The 22-day war in Gaza in December-January was the first major offensive in which Israeli troops used the rifle and no malfunctions were notified. The main difference between the Tavor and the M-16 is the use of the Bullpup configuration in the Tavor, where the action and magazine are located in the buttstock, considerably shortening the rifle's length. "For someone who has also had an M-16, I must say that I would recommend to assign new recruits with the Tavor," says Guttel. "It was built on the basis of an existing rifle but included modifications and improvements of the M-16's flaws, such as fitting it for left-handed (people), a short weapon that better fits urban warfare but that can still fire long distances." Sheves says replacement of the M-16 with the Tavor reflects the change in warfare in the 20th and 21st centuries. "The M-16 is a very veteran rifle that was developed in the early 1960s. It is a good rifle but the needs in the battle field have changed. The M-16 was a good fit for warfare in the 1960s and 1970s that involved open areas and fortified targets. The Tavor is better fitted than the M-16 to the modern battle field," he told.

ASIAN DEFENCE: Israel's Tavor gives the bullet to US-made M-16
 
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Israel trains SAM battalion for Iron Dome.

The Israeli air force is training a new battalion of air-defense troops to man the first batteries of the Iron Dome system designed to shoot down short-range rockets, which is scheduled for deployment in the southern Negev Desert in May 2010. The first units will be arrayed to counter Qassam and Grad rockets fired from the Gaza Strip by Hamas, which controls the coastal territory between Israel and Egypt, and by its Palestinian allies. The deployment of Iron Dome, specifically designed to counter this growing threat, is becoming a matter of some urgency. The Palestinian militants have been extending the range of their missiles of late from the thinly populated desert area in Israel abutting the Gaza Strip that has been their target for almost a decade. The Grads, versions of the 122mm Soviet-era battlefield rocket, can now reach as far north as the Negev town of Beersheba, near the Dimona nuclear reactor, and the outer fringes of the major urban conurbation around Tel Aviv. Most of the strategic targets in Israel lie within the country's narrow central zone between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. Iron Dome, still under fast-track development by state-run Israel Aerospace Industries, is designed to counter rockets, and 155mm shells, from ranges of 3 miles to 43 miles.


At present, the Israelis have no defense system capable of countering the Iranian-supplied Grads and the Qassams, which are manufactured by Hamas in makeshift factories in the labyrinthine Gaza Strip. This is a political hot potato because until now every Israeli government of the last decade failed to produce a defensive system capable of countering the increasingly dangerous threat of short-range rockets. Iron Dome successfully intercepted three Grads during live-fire tests on July 15-16, the first full interception trials for the system and the end of its initial development phase. Eventually, Iron Dome battalions will be deployed along Israel's northern border with Lebanon to defend against rockets fired by Hezbollah. These include Grad-type rockets known by the generic name Katyusha, and longer-range Iranian-made Zelzal and Fajr rockets with a range of up to 150 miles and capable of hitting central Israel.


Hezbollah, armed by Iran and Syria, unleashed a non-stop barrage of some 4,000 rockets against Israel during its 34-day war with Israel in July-August 2006. Israel says Hezbollah currently has re-armed with some 40,000 rockets of various calibers. By comparison, Hamas fired 800 Qassams and Grads during the 22-day Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip in December-January. Other systems capable of combating short-range rockets, which many in Israel believe have become a serious military threat, are in the works. Iron Dome will be supplemented by the David's Sling system currently being developed by Israel's Rafael armaments company and Raytheon of the United States. It successfully intercepted a simulated 122mm Grad on March 23. Israel's military planners hope to deploy a more advanced system, Rafael's Magic Wand, in 2012-13. This will probably supplant the Iron Dome system.


Magic Wand will employ the Rafael-Raytheon Stunner interceptor, which will be able to intercept incoming missiles, such as the Iranian-produced Zelzals and Fajrs that threaten central Israel, in the medium-range envelope of 25 miles to 160 miles. Israel has also announced that it wants to buy the land-based derivative of the U.S. Phalanx naval close-in weapon system as a counter to the short-range rockets and mortar shells used by Hamas. This system, made by Raytheon, combines a six-barreled, 20mm Vulcan Gatling gun capable of firing 3,000 to 4,500 rounds per minute, a digital search radar, a tracking radar and a forward-looking-infrared imaging system with automatic target acquisition and tracking capability.

ASIAN DEFENCE: Israel trains SAM battalion for Iron Dome
 
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Pakistan should recognize Israel and try to negotiate some sort of deal so we can manufacture the Tavor.
 
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Pakistan should recognize Israel and try to negotiate some sort of deal so we can manufacture the Tavor.

what can i say,amazing......you guys bash israel all year long,now that they have got a beast in their kitty,pyar ki dastaan shuru ho gayeen???.....lolz.....no,that would never happen....islamic republic od pakistan would never do so,hurting its image and honour!!!....i am sure bout that.....i think pak sf operates the belgian fn2000 bullpup,which is also operated by the indian spg......indian special force commandos use the TAR-21
 
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Pakistan should recognize Israel and try to negotiate some sort of deal so we can manufacture the Tavor.

If that move is to procure a gun, than it would be the nastiest move in history. If the move is from heart for peace, then it would be a game changer in this era of terrorism!

atleast its a thinking in the right direction!
 
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I have never said anything against Israel, I really don't care what a "majority" of Pakistanis have said. I think it is stupid that we condemn Israel even though it has done nothing to us, just to suck up to the Arabs...
 
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If that move is to procure a gun, than it would be the nastiest move in history. If the move is from heart for peace, then it would be a game changer in this era of terrorism!

atleast its a thinking in the right direction!

Don't do it over a gun...do it because it is the right thing to do. The same thing needs to happen with all sides in the area of India and Pakistan as well.
 
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I have never said anything against Israel, I really don't care what a "majority" of Pakistanis have said. I think it is stupid that we condemn Israel even though it has done nothing to us, just to suck up to the Arabs...

I don't think that will happen in near future , the political establishment has to face a lot of flak even if they try suggesting it .
 
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Don't do it over a gun...do it because it is the right thing to do. The same thing needs to happen with all sides in the area of India and Pakistan as well.

Tell me why they shouldn't do it over a gun!!! If Israelies make a good gun and it is worth having why shouldn't Pakistan or someone else go for it? Similarly, why shouldn't India go for something good the Chinese make? Maybe we should go for Chinese diesel-electric subs. They are cheap and they work. Of course Israel and China may not want to sell to Pakistan and India. That is a different thing. But if the order is large enough with a lot of zeros..........who knows. These things work in national interest only and not with morality in mind.
 
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Tell me why they shouldn't do it over a gun!!! If Israelies make a good gun and it is worth having why shouldn't Pakistan or someone else go for it? .....................................................

Because Pak doesnt recognise Israel's existence as far as our foriegn policy is concerned Israel is no more than land grabbers !
 
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I used to own a Israeli Galil 5.56 mm. Best gun up to that point in my opinion (1980's). Was a cross between a AK-47 and Belgium Fabrique National. Only draw back was it's weight. Which is one reason why most Israeli soldiers at that time preferred the Colt M4.
 
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I have never said anything against Israel, I really don't care what a "majority" of Pakistanis have said. I think it is stupid that we condemn Israel even though it has done nothing to us, just to suck up to the Arabs...

You dont care about the majority of the Pakistani's do you think we care about a minority like you especially for a gun, ...no ofcourse not.

I am not a big fan of Arabs but before bashing Arabs dont you remember our Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) was Arab as well.:coffee:
 
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[video=google;-1527774491931033984]http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1527774491931033984[/video]
Nice documentary about the Tavor
 
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