Thursday, April 25, 2013

Netanyahu was in Chopper when UAV was Spotted

Prime Minister's helicopter landed, waited until UAV from Lebanon was shot down before taking off again.

By Gil Ronen -- Arutz Sheva 7
First Publish: 4/25/2013, 4:28 PM

IAF UAVs
IAF UAVs
Israel news photo: Flash 90
 
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was in a helicopter flight on the way to a tour of northern Israel, when the IAF spotted what is believed to have been a Hizbullah UAV in the skies of Haifa Thursday.

The prime minister's staff, in consultation with security elements, decided to take no chances and instructed the helicopter pilot to land for a short time, until the successful interception of the UAV.

The unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) penetrated Israeli air space from Lebanon Thursday, and was shot down.

At around 2:00 p.m. Israel time (11:00 GMT), IAF aircraft belonging to the aerial defense array identified an aircraft making its way from Lebanon into Israeli airspace.

Fighter jets and combat helicopters were scrambled. The UAV was still over the Mediterranean sea when the IAF Commander gave instructions to shoot it down.

An air-to-air missile from an F-16 hit the UAV and demolished it. According to an official statement, it was shot down 5 nautical miles away from Haifa's coast.

The IAF is now attempting to determine who sent the UAV.

"I view with utmost gravity this attempt to violate our border," Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said following the incident. "We will continue to do everything necessary to safeguard the security of Israel's citizens."

Military censorship allowed publication of the news after a gag order was in place for about two hours.

Hizbullah sent a UAV into Israeli territory in October. The IAF shot it down when it was well within Israeli territory, over Judea. The embedded video was released by the IAF after that event.

In Thursday's incident, the IAF shot down the UAV before it entered the airspace over Israeli land. The latest UAV was most likely also sent by Hizbullah.

Senior IAF officers voiced concern after that incident, and said that up to 50 kilograms of explosives could be loaded onto a UAV which would serve as a precise rocket.

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