Interesting item from today's NYT:  

<<<<
Israeli Technology to See Action in Iraq
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Bush administration has made clear it wants Israel to stay out of an
Iraq war so as not to provoke Arab and Muslim countries assisting the
United States.

But that won't stop Israel's weaponry and arms technology from being used
against Iraqis.

After decades of U.S. military aid and defense cooperation, the U.S.
military is permeated by technology developed in Israel -- from the Army's
Hunter drones to the targeting systems on the U.S. Marines' Harrier jets to
the fuel tanks on its F-15 fighters.

"We'll be shooting down some (French) Mirage 3s, I think, if the Iraqis
ever come up. We may shoot them with an Israeli missile, from a U.S.
warplane,'' said Joel Johnson, spokesman for the Aerospace Industries
Association, a Washington-based industry lobby.

It would be hard to find a modern military that manages without technology
developed by the Jewish state's feisty industry. Israel emerged last year
as the world's No. 3 arms and military services exporter -- ahead of even
Russia's massive arms industry, according to Jane's Defense Weekly.

That Israel's weaponry has found a place inside the mighty U.S. military
points to the country's engineering prowess -- and its status as a favorite
ally, said Yiftah Shapir of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel
Aviv University.

The U.S.-Israeli friendship ``helps to a certain extent, but when it comes
to commercial competition, these sentiments are put aside,'' Shapir said.
``These are highly advanced and the price is highly competitive.''

Iraqi forces might be on the receiving end of Israeli technology in several
scenarios.

A B-52 bomber could fire Popeye air-to-surface missiles -- dubbed AGM-142
by the U.S. Air Force -- at ground targets. The precision-guided Popeyes
were designed by Rafael, a company partially owned by the government of
Israel.

Israeli-designed Hunter unmanned aerial vehicles are in the service of the
U.S. Army, and its cousin, the Pioneer, is being used by the U.S. Marines
to scout Iraqi defenses. Both originated in the design labs of Israel
Aircraft Industries, the country's largest private company.

The Hunter dropped anti-tank munitions in recent U.S. tests, and could be
used alongside the Air Force's armed Predator missile-firing drone in a
ground attack role.

Some of the Army's Bradley fighting vehicles are guided by on-board
computers supplied by a subsidiary of Israel's Elbit Systems, Shapir said.
U.S. troops riding in the Bradleys might also be protected by armor from
Rafael, said Lova Drori, Rafael's director of international marketing.

Rafael is also the designer of the Litening Targeting Pods used to fire
precision weapons from the Marines' AV-8B Harrier jet, as well as F-15s and
F-16s flown by the Air Force Reserves and Army National Guard, Drori said.

Israel also makes or designs multiple rocket launchers, mortars, laser
target designators for the Army's Comanche helicopter and other components,
Shapir said.

Much of the equipment is manufactured in the United States by subsidiaries
of Israeli companies, or through joint ventures with U.S. weapons
manufacturers.

According to Jane's, Israel made more than $3.5 billion in arms sales last
year, roughly equal to Russia's massive arms export industry. Only the
United States and Britain sold more, Jane's reported.

Other sources don't factor in Israel's exports of services -- such as
upgrades to tanks and fighter aircraft -- and rank Israel as a smaller
exporter. London's International Institute for Strategic Studies called
Israel the world's No. 5 arms exporter last year.

Besides the United States, Israel's top customers include Turkey, India,
Brazil, Canada and Germany. China used to be a major client, but Israel
backed off after protests from the United States, Shapir and others said.
>>>>






----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------
Keith Hudson,6 Upper Camden Place, Bath BA1 5HX, England
Tel:01225 312622/444881; Fax:01225 447727; E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to