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Slow and small, drones find cracks in Israel’s high-tech air defenses

Israel’s multilayered missile defense system, which has been adept at intercepting many of the rockets and missiles fired at population centers throughout this multifront war, is facing a new threat: nimble, slower, and often small drones.

No air raid sirens blared in Israel Sunday, when a drone launched by Hezbollah forces in Lebanon entered Israeli airspace, eventually crashing into an army base deep inside the country and killing four recruits.

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Warfare requires constant adaptation, both offensive and defensive, in tactics and technology. Often the trend lines in innovation point to modern sophistication, but sometimes older and simpler methods are the most effective.

One of three launched simultaneously by Hezbollah, the drone was originally detected, and then lost for 30 minutes, during which it flew roughly 60 miles until its GPS-driven warhead hit its target. The other two were intercepted.

Why are drones such a wily weapon? The challenges they pose are many, although they are relatively low-tech. First, they are slower and smaller, and fly lower than missiles, making it harder for radar systems to detect them. They are built to be light, often using radar-absorbing carbon materials instead of radar-reflecting metal.

“The drones … are one of the biggest challenges facing us in the past year,” says Zvika Haimovitz, a former commander of Israel’s air defense corps. “We are dealing with a multidirectional threat … and the Iranian proxies recognize the potential and the gaps” in Israel’s defenses.

Israel’s multilayered missile defense system, which has been adept at intercepting many of the rockets and missiles fired at population centers throughout this multifront war, is facing a new threat: nimble, slower, and often small drones.

No air raid sirens blared in Israel Sunday, when a drone launched by Hezbollah forces in Lebanon entered Israeli airspace, eventually crashing through the roof of an army base dining hall deep inside the country. The explosion killed four recruits having dinner after a day of training and wounded dozens of others, some of them seriously.

“The drones … are one of the biggest challenges facing us in the past year,” says Zvika Haimovitz, a retired brigadier general and former commander of Israel’s air defense corps.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Warfare requires constant adaptation, both offensive and defensive, in tactics and technology. Often the trend lines in innovation point to modern sophistication, but sometimes older and simpler methods are the most effective.

“We are dealing with a multidirectional threat … and the Iranian proxies recognize the potential and the gaps” in Israel’s defenses, he adds.

Sunday’s fatal drone, one of three launched simultaneously by Hezbollah, was originally detected, and then lost for 30 minutes, during which it flew roughly 60 miles until its GPS-driven warhead hit its target. The other two were intercepted, one by Israel’s vaunted Iron Dome air defense system, and the other by the navy.

Friday night, on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish year, a Hezbollah drone struck a building in Herzliya, in central Israel, but air raid sirens had alerted people to seek shelter and there were no injuries.

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