The Japan Times - Questions over Israel's interceptor stockpiles as Mideast war drags on

EUR -
AED 4.185134
AFN 72.933428
ALL 94.246138
AMD 420.014833
ANG 2.040322
AOA 1045.57234
ARS 1688.021964
AUD 1.654922
AWG 2.051258
AZN 1.937266
BAM 1.956801
BBD 2.298125
BDT 140.631932
BGN 1.926907
BHD 0.430218
BIF 3394.606517
BMD 1.139588
BND 1.475942
BOB 7.902042
BRL 5.89657
BSD 1.141059
BTN 107.816782
BWP 15.506864
BYN 3.30912
BYR 22335.922587
BZD 2.294823
CAD 1.621873
CDF 2592.562166
CHF 0.922377
CLF 0.026724
CLP 1051.782541
CNY 7.742303
CNH 7.742377
COP 3933.082466
CRC 517.562457
CUC 1.139588
CUP 30.199079
CVE 110.321428
CZK 24.248725
DJF 203.189472
DKK 7.474198
DOP 67.854409
DZD 151.977731
EGP 56.076881
ERN 17.093818
ETB 183.959786
FJD 2.563218
FKP 0.859979
GBP 0.86093
GEL 3.008195
GGP 0.859979
GHS 12.905601
GIP 0.859979
GMD 83.755249
GNF 10003.028665
GTQ 8.705453
GYD 238.682083
HKD 8.936397
HNL 30.536485
HRK 7.536215
HTG 149.134972
HUF 354.917238
IDR 20410.474893
ILS 3.404861
IMP 0.859979
INR 107.906722
IQD 1494.731748
IRR 1568072.93223
ISK 143.998096
JEP 0.859979
JMD 179.671112
JOD 0.807954
JPY 184.974468
KES 147.56815
KGS 99.657075
KHR 4588.306607
KMF 492.301472
KPW 1025.629497
KRW 1766.668625
KWD 0.352987
KYD 0.950865
KZT 554.011217
LAK 25591.528374
LBP 102178.421609
LKR 383.667825
LRD 207.661661
LSL 18.747578
LTL 3.364907
LVL 0.689325
LYD 7.330589
MAD 10.692769
MDL 20.167873
MGA 4855.462214
MKD 61.682247
MMK 2392.550476
MNT 4082.07126
MOP 9.217512
MRU 45.539093
MUR 53.776618
MVR 17.617777
MWK 1978.603353
MXN 19.891619
MYR 4.64895
MZN 72.762692
NAD 18.747578
NGN 1575.878853
NIO 41.99111
NOK 11.294945
NPR 172.50948
NZD 2.014843
OMR 0.438177
PAB 1.141084
PEN 3.896593
PGK 5.00954
PHP 69.909199
PKR 317.28943
PLN 4.295152
PYG 6948.401601
QAR 4.159327
RON 5.245183
RSD 117.371814
RUB 88.706768
RWF 1675.049421
SAR 4.286298
SBD 9.190823
SCR 15.67614
SDG 684.305049
SEK 11.08345
SGD 1.475282
SHP 0.850817
SLE 28.265594
SLL 23896.592374
SOS 652.130697
SRD 42.728281
STD 23587.168444
STN 24.51243
SVC 9.983888
SYP 125.96104
SZL 18.743176
THB 37.832001
TJS 10.577278
TMT 3.999953
TND 3.379829
TOP 2.743855
TRY 53.173744
TTD 7.756797
TWD 36.287329
TZS 2991.421622
UAH 51.210169
UGX 4182.13912
USD 1.139588
UYU 45.913484
UZS 13752.034019
VES 709.101178
VND 29983.127103
VUV 136.697043
WST 3.169126
XAF 656.289806
XAG 0.019859
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.079793
XCG 2.056407
XDR 0.816214
XOF 656.278282
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.900369
ZAR 18.666679
ZMK 10257.655405
ZMW 20.658113
ZWL 366.946835
  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.06

    +0.59%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.81

    +0.59%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    83.76

    +0.9%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    62.74

    -0.03%

  • BP

    0.2200

    37.35

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.6600

    22.26

    -2.96%

  • CMSD

    0.1300

    21.9

    +0.59%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    94.29

    +0.58%

  • AZN

    2.5400

    190.95

    +1.33%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    31.29

    -0.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.2900

    18.68

    +1.55%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    13.69

    -1.46%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.86

    +0.54%

  • BCC

    -1.7600

    79.26

    -2.22%

Questions over Israel's interceptor stockpiles as Mideast war drags on
Questions over Israel's interceptor stockpiles as Mideast war drags on / Photo: JACK GUEZ - AFP

Questions over Israel's interceptor stockpiles as Mideast war drags on

The ability of Israel's highly sophisticated air defences to keep intercepting Iranian attacks is coming under scrutiny as the Middle East war drags on into a second month.

Text size:

The military has dismissed reports that it is running low on the interceptors used to shoot down the steady stream of Iranian missiles and Hezbollah rockets fired at Israel.

However, some analysts suggest that the war against Iran has significantly drained allied resources, with long-range interceptors among the most severely depleted.

Israel has a multi-layered air defence array, with a variety of systems intercepting threats at different altitudes.

The top tier consists of the anti-ballistic missile Arrow systems, with Arrow 2 operating both within the Earth's atmosphere and in space and Arrow 3 intercepting above the Earth's atmosphere.

Below that sits David's Sling, which was created to target medium-range threats including drones, shorter-range ballistic missiles and cruise missiles.

Israel's famed Iron Dome system is the third tier and was originally designed to intercept short-range rockets and artillery shells.

US systems also complement Israel's air defences with some THAAD anti-missile batteries reportedly in Israel.

"There is no area in Israel that is not under multi-layer defence," said reservist Brigadier General Pini Yungman, who played a key role in developing the country's air defences and is now president of defence company TSG.

But "there is no 100 percent in defence," he told AFP.

"To get the 92 percent that we are getting all together with all the systems, it's outstanding".

The Israeli military, which reveals few details about its air defences, says Iran has launched more than 400 ballistic missiles since the start of the war on February 28 -- sparked by US and Israeli strikes on the Islamic republic.

Spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani recently lauded the interception rate as "exceeding expectations".

Most damage in Israel has been caused by falling debris, but among the 19 civilians killed in the country since the start of the war, more than half died when Iranian missiles broke through.

- 'Nearing exhaustion' -

Around two weeks after the war began, news outlet Semafor first reported that Israel was "running critically low on ballistic missile interceptors", citing unnamed US officials.

An Israeli military source at the time denied the reports, saying there was no shortage "as of now" and that the military was "prepared for prolonged combat".

But analysis published by the London-based RUSI defence think tank on Tuesday indicates that the US, Israel and regional allies have burned through vast quantities of missiles and interceptors since the end of February.

Researchers estimated that in the first 16 days of conflict, allied forces expended 11,294 munitions costing roughly $26 billion.

Stockpiles of long-range interceptors and precision munition in particular, it said, were "nearing exhaustion".

"This basically means that if the war continues, coalition aircraft have to fly deeper into Iranian airspace -- and on the defensive side it means absorbing more Iranian missiles and drones," one of the co-authors, US Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jahara Matisek, told AFP.

Long and costly production timelines make the depletion of high-end interceptors, like Israel's Arrows, particularly critical.

Each Arrow 2 interceptor costs an estimated $1.5 million, with Arrow 3s around $2 million.

"The bottleneck isn't just money. It's industrial physics", Matisek said, pointing to issues including capacity constraints at the supplier level.

These are "production lines that don't scale like an iPhone factory," he said.

These are munitions "you save for the worst threats" he said, and the supply "is never going to be huge".

The RUSI analysis estimated that 81.33 percent of Israel's pre-war Arrow interceptor stocks had already been depleted, and that they would likely "be completely expended by the end of March".

- Accelerated production -

Yungman insisted that, taking into account all its air defence systems, Israel could produce interceptors faster than Iran could produce ballistic missiles.

He added that Israel accelerated its interceptor production after Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack and upgraded its systems to deal with ballistic missiles.

The military confirmed on Monday that it was a malfunction in David's Sling that had allowed Iranian ballistic missiles to strike the southern towns of Dimona and Arad last week.

Dimona is widely believed to hold Israel's undeclared nuclear arsenal.

Israeli financial newspaper Calcalist reported that the military had chosen to use David's Sling in a bid to preserve Arrow interceptor stocks.

Faced with the challenges posed by Iranian missiles, Israel has three options to conserve interceptor stocks, Jean-Loup Samaan, a senior researcher at the Middle East Institute of the National University of Singapore, told AFP.

"Mixing the different missile systems in order to avoid massive shortages; not intercepting missiles or drones if they land in unpopulated areas; and increasing the pressure on the offensive campaign, hoping that they are able to degrade Iran's capabilities before the IDF's air defence resources run out".

T.Sato--JT