The Sky Shield system integrates laser technology with a
thermal camera to protect aircraft against missiles fired from the ground.
Testing of the Sky Shield system was "100 percent
successful," according to Brig. Gen. Eitan Eshel, head of research and
development at the ministry.
The system integrates laser technology with a thermal camera
to protect aircraft against missiles fired from the ground. It deflects
missiles fired at aircraft by changing their direction.
Eshel did not reveal when the system, under development for
about a decade, would become operational, though he said that it would be
deployed on all Israeli civilian aircraft. A contract has already been signed
with El Al, he added.
The testing was conducted in the south of the country by the
ministry's Administration for the Development of Weapons and Technological
Infrastructure, together with the Civil Aviation Authority and the project's
lead contractor, Elbit Systems
The ministry described the system as "the most advanced
of its kind in the world, designed to secure the aircraft automatically."
It added that the system integrates advanced search and evasion technologies
that "meet the most rigid standards of civil aviation.
Islamic militants fired two surface-to-air missiles at an
Israeli charter plane shortly after take-off in Mombasa ,
Kenya , in 2002. The
missiles missed their target but spurred an Israeli effort to improve
countermeasures.
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