zpostcode
Iron Dome
May 1, 2026 2:56 PM

  

Iron Dome1

  Iron DomeA Tamir interceptor missile being launched from an Iron Dome air defense battery in Ashdod, Israel, on November 12, 2019.(more)Iron Dome, short-range mobile air defense system developed for Israel by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and Israel Aerospace Industries, with additional support from Raytheon. First deployed in 2011, Iron Dome constitutes the innermost layer of the tiered Israeli air defense network.

  

Iron Dome2

  Iron DomeOperation of Israel's Iron Dome air defense system.(more)The 2006 Lebanon War made clear the need for Israel to develop a more effective air defense system. During that conflict, Hezbollah militants fired more than 100 rockets per day into Israeli territory and the occupied Golan Heights, thoroughly overwhelming Israel’s existing air defenses. Nautilus, an antimissile laser weapon that had been under joint development with the United States, was canceled because of budget overruns and inconsistent performance in combat conditions. In February 2007 the Israeli defense minister Amir Peretz authorized Rafael to begin development of a short-range air defense system on a budget of just $100 million. The project had to overcome strong institutional resistance within the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). The Israeli military establishment tended to favor offensive weapon platforms, such as tanks and combat aircraft, over purely defensive systems. Iron Dome completed its first successful field test in March 2009, and the first Iron Dome battery was deployed outside Beersheba in March 2011. From proposal to deployment, Iron Dome’s entire development cycle was slightly more than four years, a remarkably short period for a new weapon system.

  The purpose of Iron Dome is threefold: detection of incoming airborne threats, assessment of their likely point of impact, and interception. Each element of the Iron Dome system was designed to focus on one aspect of this mission. An all-weather fire control radar system detects and tracks potential targets at ranges of 2.5–43 miles (4–70 km). A battle management computer determines whether the incoming rocket or missile will land in an inhabited area. If the projectile likely poses no threat to life or infrastructure, it is disregarded, and an interceptor is conserved. The most conspicuous part of Iron Dome is the interceptor launcher, which contains up to 20 Tamir missiles. A typical Iron Dome battery is equipped with three or four such launchers.

  From the outset, Iron Dome was intended to be effective but also economical, and that guiding principle is apparent in both its design and its operation. The entire system is highly portable, and the truck-towed launchers do not require specialized transports to relocate them. The battle management system ensures that only active threats are engaged, thus reducing Iron Dome’s operating expense. Perhaps most notably, the Tamir interceptor costs as little as $40,000 per missile. By comparison, the AMRAAM interceptors used in the U.S. and Norwegian National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) cost at least $1 million apiece. This massive cost difference can be explained largely by Iron Dome’s rather specialized role within Israel’s air defense network. NASAMS was designed to oppose a broad range of airborne threats, including cruise missiles and fixed-wing aircraft, while Iron Dome was created as a direct counter to the short-range artillery rockets fielded by Hezbollah and Hamas. The Katyusha rockets that make up the bulk of Hezbollah’s arsenal as well as the Qassam rockets commonly used by Hamas are unguided and follow a predictable flight path once launched. Against those threats, Iron Dome has performed admirably. The system’s first successful interception in battlefield conditions came in April 2011, when a battery near Ashkelon downed a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip.

  

Iron Dome3

  Israel: Iron Dome defense systemThe Iron Dome antimissile defense system intercepting rockets launched from the Gaza Strip on October 11, 2023.(more)The system’s first real test came in November 2012 during a conflict between Israel and Hamas. More than 1,500 rockets were fired into Israel over the course of eight days. Iron Dome assessed that nearly 900 would land in open terrain. Of the remainder, the IDF boasted an interception rate above 85 percent. In July 2014 Israel initiated an offensive into the Gaza Strip that lasted nearly two months. Some 2,100 Palestinians and more than 70 Israelis were killed in the ensuing conflict. Of the 4,500 rockets and mortars fired into Israeli territory during the 2014 Gaza war, roughly 800 were identified as threats and more than 90 percent of these were intercepted.

  

Iron Dome4

  aftermath of October 7, 2023, attackSurvivors of a Hamas rocket strike on Tel Aviv talking with rescuers on October 7, 2023.(more)A naval version of Iron Dome (dubbed C-Dome) was unveiled with a live-fire test in 2017, and in 2019 the United States Army purchased a pair of Iron Dome systems. Both of those batteries were leased back to Israel during the early weeks of the Israel-Hamas War. October 7, 2023, the opening day of that conflict, saw Hamas launch some 2,200 rockets from Gaza in just 20 minutes as a precursor to an unprecedented ground offensive into southern Israel. The IDF’s 10 Iron Dome batteries struggled to cope with a barrage of this scale, and casualties from rocket strikes made up some of the 1,200 people estimated to have been killed on October 7.

  Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
Maya Le Tissier
  Born: April 18, 2002, Guernsey, Channel Islands (Show more) Maya Le Tissier (born April 18, 2002, Guernsey, Channel Islands) English football (soccer) player in the Women’s Super League (WSL) and member of the England women’s national team. From 2022, Le Tissier has played for WSL team Manchester United. Le Tissier began playing football at a young age. Her father coached...
Monica Seles
  Born: December 2, 1973, Novi Sad, Yugoslavia [now in Serbia] (age 50) (Show more) Awards And Honors: Australian Open French Open U.S. Open International Tennis Hall of Fame (2009) (Show more) Monica Seles (born December 2, 1973, Novi Sad, Yugoslavia [now in Serbia]) is a Yugoslavian-born retired American professional tennis player who dominated her sport and was nearly unbeatable during...
Novo Nordisk
  Novo Nordisk A/S is an international pharmaceutical research, development, and manufacturing corporation established in 1989 through the merger of competing Danish companies Nordisk Insulaboratorium and Novo Terapeutisk Laboratorium. It specializes primarily in four areas of pharmacological research: Novo Nordisk is headquartered in Bagsvaerd, Denmark, and employs about 55,000 workers worldwide. Its revenues in 2023 were 232 billion Danish kroner ($34.4...
Deferred and immediate annuities: Understanding the difference
     Annuities are financial products sold by insurance companies that help retirees generate a guaranteed stream of lifetime income. Annuities come in two varieties: immediate and deferred. As the names suggest, you receive funds from an immediate annuity sooner than a deferred one.   Annuities can add a degree of certainty to retirement income. But they aren’t right for everyone. Annuities...
Information Recommendation
T. Rex
  Originally called: Tyrannosaurus Rex (Show more) T. Rex, British rock band, a pioneer of glam rock in the 1970s. T. Rex originally was known for its acoustic, psychedelic, folk-influenced sound. From 1970, however, with reconceptualization of its direction and the addition of electronic instruments, the band broke into the glam rock scene. T. Rex went on to achieve significant success,...
smelling salts
  Also called: ammonia inhalants (Show more) smelling salts, any of several different preparations of ammonia-based product and other ingredients used to revive a person affected by syncope (fainting). Historically, smelling salts contained ammonium carbonate and perfume; modern preparations typically consist of ammonia dissolved in water and ethanol, sometimes infused with a scented oil, such as eucalyptus. The salts release ammonia...
Asiatic lion
  Also called: Indian lion or Persian lion (Show more) Asiatic lion, (subspecies Panthera leo leo), population of lions whose geographic range once extended from Turkey to India. In the present day, however, wild Asiatic lions are limited to India’s Gir Protected Area, which is within a dry deciduous forest and includes the Gir National Park, and a handful of smaller...
history of Myanmar
  history of Myanmar, a survey of important events and people in the history of Myanmar. Located in the western portion of mainland Southeast Asia, Myanmar is bordered by China to the north and northeast, Laos to the east, Thailand to the southeast, the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal to the south and southwest, Bangladesh to the west, and India...
Trying to choose a franchise? 9 tips to consider
     You’ve thought long and hard about the pros and cons of buying a business franchise, and you’ve decided that it’s what you want to do. You figure you have the time, business savvy, and you’re pretty sure you have the capital (and courage!) to get started. So, what’s next?   Not only are there numerous brands to consider, from local...
Nollywood
  Also called: Nigerian cinema (Show more) Nollywood, the Nigerian filmmaking industry and the second largest global film industry in terms of output, after that of India (see Bollywood). The term Nollywood, a portmanteau of “Nigeria” and “Hollywood,” can encompass Nigerian films made outside Nigeria as well as English-language Ghanaian films. It also includes films in Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, and other...
Battle of Nineveh
  Generations of bitter warfare characterize the history of the ancient Near East, and especially that of ancient Mesopotamia. In a concerted campaign to end Assyrian dominance Babylonia led an alliance in an attack in 612 bce against the Assyrian capital, Nineveh, the ruins of which are now surrounded by modern-day Mosul, Iraq. The city, whose heyday had come earlier in...
Operation Blue Star
  Also spelled: Operation Bluestar (Show more) Also called: Teeja Ghallughara (Punjabi: “Third Massacre”) (Show more) Operation Blue Star, Indian military operation in June 1984 ordered by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to root out a group of militant Sikh separatists who had occupied the Golden Temple, the Sikhs’ holiest shrine. The leader of the group was Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, a Sikh...