Posted on 10/28/2003 11:38:50 AM PST by anotherview
Oct. 28, 2003
Israel, US to fund laser that shoots down rockets
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Israel and the U.S. are to spend at least US$57 million for development of a laser cannon that can shoot down short-range missiles, an Israeli legislator and security officials said Tuesday.
A recent Israeli delegation successfully lobbied Congress to approve the new funding package for the joint U.S.-Israeli Nautilus laser weapon project, said Israeli lawmaker Yuval Steinitz, who was part of the delegation.
Israel wants the Nautilus to help protect its northern border towns from Katyusha rockets, fired by the Lebanese guerrilla group Hizbullah during Israel's 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon that ended in 2000.
Israel claims that Hizbullah now has 11,000 rockets aimed at Israel.
Congress approved US$57 million to fund the project, and Israel will also contribute funding, Steinitz said, but could not say how much.
There is, however, no public record of congressional approval for Nautilus funding.
It may fall under the classified portion of the 2004 Defense Authorization bill, passed by Congress and signed by U.S. President George W. Bush on Sept. 30.
The laser beam system was successfully tested at the U.S. White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, in February 1996. However, since then, development of the project had been held up by skeptics in the U.S. Congress, said an Israeli security official.
New funding is now needed to transform the technology into a practical weapon, said Steinitz, who is the chairman of the parliamentary foreign affairs and defense committee.
"Now we have to make it an efficient, compact weapon that can be used in the battlefield and in the war on terrorism," Steinitz said.
The Nautilus uses a high power radar to track and lock onto the incoming projectile. Then a Mid-Infrared Advanced Chemical Laser (MIRACL), which looks like a large spotlight, shoots out an intense beam that destroys the rocket.
The White Sands test marked the first time that a rocket has been destroyed in flight by a laser beam. The laser has also proved its ability to shoot down artillery shells.
Israeli security officials said that the potential to use this technology in the war against terrorism was a major factor in convincing Congress to renew support for the project.
"If the technology is developed, it will be applicable to many other military mechanisms," said Steinitz, "It could be a central mechanism in the future battlefield." Congress also approved a further $89 million for a second joint U.S.-Israeli project, the Arrow anti-ballistic missile system, which has already entered production, Steinitz said. The system is already operational.
Also Tuesday, the Maariv daily reported that a U.S.-Israeli company has developed a gun that can fire at right angles.
According to the report, the pistol, produced by the Florida-based Corner Shot Holdings, is being tested by the Israeli military and has already been bought by a number of Special Forces around the world.
A spokesman for the Israeli branch of the company refused to comment on the report.
Pictures of the weapon show a gun composed of two parts - the front, that can swivel from side to side, containing a pistol with a color camera mounted on top, and the back section which consists of the stock, trigger and a monitor.
The unique weapon allows the soldier to remain behind cover, with only the barrel of the rifle exposed in the direction of the hostile fire, even at a sharp angle.
And, suddenly, a bolt of green light lances downward from the heavens and cooks the imam right there on the spot. (Green chosen because it is the color of Islam.)
The folks gathered for the imam's harangue quickly pass the word: "Allah ain't happy with us, folks. Cool it with the jihad s**t."
A laser gun blasted a pair of rockets out of the sky Friday, in a first-ever dual shoot-down of incoming missiles
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