Pilot managed to shoot down the UAV on his second try
The air force required two shots to bring down
the drone that penetrated deep into the country’s airspace Saturday,
Yedioth Ahronoth reported Wednesday, suggesting the operation was not
the major success initially proclaimed.
The report, which cited an unnamed official,
said that in addition to the drone flying around “for some 30 minutes,”
while F-16 fighter jets trailed it, the pilots missed their first
attempt to hit the target.
According to Yedioth Ahronoth’s account of the
events, after the initial warning systems detected the drone flying
over the Mediterranean Sea into Israeli airspace, two F-16 fighter jets
were scrambled to intercept it.
A pilot trailed the drone, and fired a panther
missile – considered the most advanced in the IDF arsenal — towards the
drone. Shortly afterwards a second missile was shot at the drone — this
time successfully hitting the target — while it was flying north of
Beersheba.
Hours after the incident, Defense Minister
Ehud Barak congratulated IDF Chief of General Staff Benny Gantz and head
of the Israel Air Force, Amir Eshel, on a job well done.
“We had monitoring contact from the ground and
from the air. We alerted jet planes that escorted the unmanned aerial
vehicle and due to some operational considerations we decided to
intercept the unmanned aerial vehicle in the northern Negev area, where
there are no residents,” IDF Spokesperson Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich said.
According to the report, this was the first time the IAF had missed hitting an enemy drone. Hezbollah has flown drones into Israeli airspace a few times in the past, though not for several years.
However, a senior IAF official told the paper
that small targets such as drones are extremely difficult to hit with
precision every time, adding that “other countries with such advanced
air defense systems [like Israel's] would not be able to shoot every
drone down, without error.”
The IAF said it would conduct an investigation into the incident, but the particular findings would not be divulged publicly.
After an initial investigation, military officials said the drone was likely dispatched from Lebanon.
Iran claimed that the drone managed to capture
images from Israel’s Negev nuclear facility in Dimona, according to an
al-Arabiya report. However, Israeli reports indicated that the drone was
relatively primitive and incapable of relaying real-time information back to its dispatchers.
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