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Jerusalem (AFP) Feb 12, 2007 Israeli defence officials reiterated Monday that a successful night-time test of its Hetz (Arrow) anti-missile missile system was intended as a clear message to chief enemy Iran. "Last night's test is the answer to the advanced ballistic missiles that Iran develops or buys," Deputy Defence Minister Efraim Sneh was reported as saying by public radio. "In the (armaments) race between Israel and Iran, Israel is ahead at this stage," he added. The test-firing, the first since December 2005 when the military announced the system was fully operational, was announced by the defence ministry Sunday. "This test-firing was aimed at checking the functioning of the Hetz at night and in extreme conditions against a ballistic missile," the ministry said. "All the system's components worked perfectly." "Our anti-missile system is capable in the future of countering Iranian and Syrian threats such as they exist today," Colonel Moshe Fattal, the coordinator of the project for the defence ministry, said. "I think that Israeli citizens can sleep well knowing we have again proved we can deal with these kind of threats, as well as future threats," he added. Public radio said the missile firing was designed to imitate Iran's Shahab-3, which has a range sufficient to reach Israel. The firing coincided with the Iranian regime's celebrations for the anniversary of its 1979 Islamic revolution. For the first three years after its launch in 1988, the United States paid 80 percent of the Hetz project's cost, but now the costs are shared equally. Since the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, the project's primary focus has been Iran, which Israel now sees as its main threat.
Source: Agence France-Presse
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![]() ![]() Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov protested Friday against US plans to set up a missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic and vowed that Moscow would take steps to counter it. Speaking after talks with NATO defence ministers, he raised doubts about the purpose of the US plan and said that if Washington were serious it should base missile interceptors closer to perceived threats such as Iran and North Korea. |
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