IDF
Speaking during the unveiling of a new factory belonging to the Rafael defense company near the border with Lebanon, the Israeli defense minister says Israel is “working all of the time to prevent war.”
“The idea of the drill was to examine how we provide solutions so that basic services keep can keep running for civilians and information keeps flowing,” said Col. Dr. Tomer Koler, chief medical officer of the Home Front Command.
The strikes are the fourth attributed to Israel in the past three weeks.
The Israeli military said it monitored the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) throughout the entire incident.
Yoav Turgeman, CEO of Elta Systems: AI-powered ground vehicles will begin fulfilling missions much like drones began in air forces.
Developed and manufactured by TCOM, a U.S. company specializing in aerostat surveillance solutions, it is one the biggest to date.
The attack, the second attributed to Israel in the past five days, is said to have targeted weapons and ammunition storehouses near Zakiyah in the Damascus countryside.
“Developments being produced by Israeli industries assist the IDF in becoming more accurate, powerful and lethal,” emphasized Israel’s defense minister.
The system, which is to be integrated with Germany’s Leopard 2 tanks, achieved an interception rate exceeding 90 percent, according to the Israeli Defense Ministry.
In the coming years, as during the coronavirus pandemic, Israel could face a range of threats: security, environmental and others.
The rare daytime strike targeted a weapons shipment headed to Lebanon, according to a U.K.-based Syria war monitor.
JINSA task force found it was Hamas that was launching indiscriminate attacks against Israel, directing those assaults against Israeli civilians and exposing Gazan civilians to avoidable risk.