Much as in Operation
Pillar of Defense and in the almost two years since, Iron Dome saved the
day. Over 100 rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip at Israel on
Tuesday, with 40 of them raining down in the span of just one hour on
Tuesday night, from Ashdod to Ramat Hasharon, from Beersheba to Beit
Shemesh, and even farther.
Only one rocket
achieved its goal, hitting and damaging a building in Ashdod. A handful
of rockets landed in open areas, including in the greater Jerusalem
area. The rest were successfully intercepted by Iron Dome, and no
injuries were reported.
In the wake of
Operation Pillar of Defense, many commentators attempted to question
Iron Dome's success rate, which the IDF Spokesperson's Unit pegged at 85
percent, and criticized its performance. Thankfully, the military
dismissed them and the Defense Ministry continued funding the program,
which has proved itself once more.
Despite the grouped
rocket fire, the system intercepted every rocket believed to threaten
lives or property. Truth be told, there is no need for learned
commentary -- the public sees the results with its own eyes.
This cannot be taken
for granted. Think about what our life here would look like if all other
systems in Israel operated on the same level as Iron Dome, and with the
same success rate. So far, Hamas has no way to counter Iron Dome,
meaning it does what it is supposed to do.
Naturally, no system is
foolproof and if the rocket salvos continue at this rate, one or two
rockets may breach the shield, and may -- heaven forbid --- cause
casualties. But in the grand scheme of things, Iron Dome dramatically
reduces the potential number of casualties to a minimum, and with it
public panic.
As such, Iron Dome is a
game changer, in the sense that the lack of casualties means that
decision makers can consider their options free of public pressure,
affording them much greater leeway. Iron Dome provides a protective
umbrella under which the IDF can operate more freely, and since it is a
defense system by nature, even the international community cannot fault
it.
We owe thanks for this unique
system first and foremost to the Israeli Air Force's aerial defense
units, which operate it, as well as to its team of developers, headed by
Col. (res.) Daniel Gold, who against all odds and despite harsh
criticism by the State Comptroller's Office, insisted on completing the
project; to then-Defense Minister Amir Peretz, who refused to listen to
his critics and gave the project the green light; and to Rafael Advanced
Defense Systems, the project's main contractor, for producing such a
fine system.
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