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An example for israel
The Osirak Strike
The Israeli raid on the Osirak reactor was a high-risk gamble born out of desperation. The government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin was divided on the wisdom of the raid in discussions that began almost immediately after Begins election in 1977. The Iraqi program had been underway for several years at that point, but had made only moderate progress. New intelligence available in May 1977 indicated that the nuclear complex at al-Tuwaitha was growing rapidly and that the reactor facility might soon be ready. The debate was intense enough and the risk high enough that Begin stated he would not act without the support of the full cabinet. Several in the cabinet, including the Deputy Prime Minister and the head of the Mossad intelligence service were strongly opposed. Others, including most notably the Agricultural Minister Ariel Sharon, were in favor.9
Begin decided to wait as long as possible before acting. In the meantime, the Mossad would take steps to buy additional time. These steps included allegedly sabotaging the reactor cores for Osirak before the French could deliver them, as well as assassinating Iraqi nuclear officials. At the same time, the IAF began contingency planning for a strike on Osirak.
The plan to buy time worked to some degree, but could not stop the Iraqi nuclear program. In October 1980, the Mossad reported to Begin that the Osirak reactor would be fueled and operational by June 1981. Begin called another cabinet meeting, where the intense debate about both the possibility and utility of attacking Osirak was renewed. Agriculture Minister Sharon again weighed in on the side of attacking. When some argued that the attack would alienate both the United States and Europe, Sharon allegedly quipped If I have a choice of being popular and dead or unpopular and alive, I choose being alive and unpopular.10 Prime Minister Begin ultimately agreed and the rest of the cabinet fell in behind him. Osirak would be struck before it became operational.11
A sixteen-plane strike package launched from Etzion airbase in the Sinai. The flight profile was low altitude, across the Gulf of Aqaba, southern Jordan and then across northern Saudi Arabia. Two F-15s remained circling over Saudi Arabia as a communications link back to Israel.
The remaining six F-15s and the F-16s continued on to al-Tuwaitha, the site of the Osirak reactor. The F-16s carried two Mk 84 2,000 lb bombs with delayed fuses. These bombs were dumb, meaning that they had no guidance other than that provided by the aircraft dropping them. The F-16 did have onboard targeting systems that would make the dumb bombs fairly accurate, but it would require the plane to get close to the target.
The strike package arrived near Osirak undetected and at low altitude. The F-16s formed up on predetermined points to begin their bombing runs, while the F-15s set up barrier combat air patrols to intercept Iraqi fighters. At four miles from the target, the F-16s climbed to five thousand feet in order to dive at Osirak and release their bombs. Despite some navigation problems and Iraq air defenses, at least eight of the sixteen bombs released struck the containment dome of the reactor.
The strike package then turned and climbed to high altitude, returning much the way it had come. All sixteen of the planes successfully returned to Israel after recrossing Jordan. The results of the raid were spectacular. The reactor was totally destroyed, leaving much of the surrounding area undamaged. President Ronald Reagan, upon being shown satellite imagery of Osirak after the strike, is alleged to have called it a terrific piece of bombing.
link http://web.mit.edu/ssp/Publications/working_papers/wp_06-1.pdf
The Osirak Strike
The Israeli raid on the Osirak reactor was a high-risk gamble born out of desperation. The government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin was divided on the wisdom of the raid in discussions that began almost immediately after Begins election in 1977. The Iraqi program had been underway for several years at that point, but had made only moderate progress. New intelligence available in May 1977 indicated that the nuclear complex at al-Tuwaitha was growing rapidly and that the reactor facility might soon be ready. The debate was intense enough and the risk high enough that Begin stated he would not act without the support of the full cabinet. Several in the cabinet, including the Deputy Prime Minister and the head of the Mossad intelligence service were strongly opposed. Others, including most notably the Agricultural Minister Ariel Sharon, were in favor.9
Begin decided to wait as long as possible before acting. In the meantime, the Mossad would take steps to buy additional time. These steps included allegedly sabotaging the reactor cores for Osirak before the French could deliver them, as well as assassinating Iraqi nuclear officials. At the same time, the IAF began contingency planning for a strike on Osirak.
The plan to buy time worked to some degree, but could not stop the Iraqi nuclear program. In October 1980, the Mossad reported to Begin that the Osirak reactor would be fueled and operational by June 1981. Begin called another cabinet meeting, where the intense debate about both the possibility and utility of attacking Osirak was renewed. Agriculture Minister Sharon again weighed in on the side of attacking. When some argued that the attack would alienate both the United States and Europe, Sharon allegedly quipped If I have a choice of being popular and dead or unpopular and alive, I choose being alive and unpopular.10 Prime Minister Begin ultimately agreed and the rest of the cabinet fell in behind him. Osirak would be struck before it became operational.11
A sixteen-plane strike package launched from Etzion airbase in the Sinai. The flight profile was low altitude, across the Gulf of Aqaba, southern Jordan and then across northern Saudi Arabia. Two F-15s remained circling over Saudi Arabia as a communications link back to Israel.
The remaining six F-15s and the F-16s continued on to al-Tuwaitha, the site of the Osirak reactor. The F-16s carried two Mk 84 2,000 lb bombs with delayed fuses. These bombs were dumb, meaning that they had no guidance other than that provided by the aircraft dropping them. The F-16 did have onboard targeting systems that would make the dumb bombs fairly accurate, but it would require the plane to get close to the target.
The strike package arrived near Osirak undetected and at low altitude. The F-16s formed up on predetermined points to begin their bombing runs, while the F-15s set up barrier combat air patrols to intercept Iraqi fighters. At four miles from the target, the F-16s climbed to five thousand feet in order to dive at Osirak and release their bombs. Despite some navigation problems and Iraq air defenses, at least eight of the sixteen bombs released struck the containment dome of the reactor.
The strike package then turned and climbed to high altitude, returning much the way it had come. All sixteen of the planes successfully returned to Israel after recrossing Jordan. The results of the raid were spectacular. The reactor was totally destroyed, leaving much of the surrounding area undamaged. President Ronald Reagan, upon being shown satellite imagery of Osirak after the strike, is alleged to have called it a terrific piece of bombing.
link http://web.mit.edu/ssp/Publications/working_papers/wp_06-1.pdf
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