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Israel's secret drone Pilotless aircraft latest response to
Hamas mortars, rockets
Israel the past two weeks has been utilizing a secret device to
counter the growing threat of mortars and Qassam rockets Hamas
regularly launches at the Jewish communities of Gaza – a pilotless
drone that identifies and takes out militants and their equipment
before they can fire the rockets, senior Israeli security sources
told WND.

The IDF has been debating how best to respond to the new rocket
threat. The drone is one answer. Aside from the drone, as WND first
reported, military experts have been developing a "remote control"
border with Gaza that includes unmanned sensor patrol cars and
computerized observation posts that would automatically spot and kill
terrorists.
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The Israel Air Force Monday fired three missiles at two teams of
Palestinian militants planning a mortar attack in a Gaza refugee
camp. Palestinian residents told reporters Israeli drones fired the
missiles near where a group of militants was gathering. The IDF only
confirmed that missiles destroyed both launchers, but would not
reveal which kind of aircraft was used in the operation.
A week earlier, Israel fired missiles at a Hamas crew preparing to
launch a Qassam rocket against Neve Dekalim, the main Gaza Jewish
community, from the Khan Younes cemetery in the southern Gaza Strip.
Again, residents said they saw a drone, and the IDF was silent.
An IDF spokeswoman told WND she "cannot reveal or discuss operational
methods or means used in combat." But security officials said the
recent operations utilized an advanced aerial pilotless drone
equipped with precision-guided missiles capable of taking out
stationary and moving targets with minimal collateral damage.
The officials wouldn't identify the exact drone Israel has been
using, but said it is a modified version of a model similar to
America's MQ-1 Predator, a system guided by a ground control station
that receives several real-time video feeds from sensors located on
the drone as well as images from a Predator-linked satellite.
The Israeli drone, which can remain in the air for up to 24 hours, is
equipped with a color nose camera, a daytime-applicable TV lens, a
variable infrared camera for low light and night, and a synthetic
radar for looking through smoke, clouds or haze. The cameras produce
full motion video as well as still frame radar images.
America has used the Predator, as well as a more sophisticated
system, the American Global Hawk UAV, in Afghanistan and Iraq. The
U.S. used a drone May 8 to kill a wanted al-Qaida operative in North
Waziristan.
"Use of this drone should send shivers down the spines of terrorists
planning further attacks," said an Israeli official. "Israel is using
it to serve as a deterrent for further attacks. It provides us with
constant intelligence in real time from afar, and enables us to
respond immediately and forcefully."
Rannan Gissin, a senior aide to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon,
told WND: "I can't talk specifics. The method used is not important,
but I can say if Palestinians do not stop attacks, we will have to do
it. And we will use methods that will be effective."
Hamas has been launching almost daily rocket and mortar attacks
against the Jewish communities in Gaza slated for evacuation this
summer. Analysts have warned the attacks will escalate as the Gaza
withdrawal draws closer so Hamas can claim it has driven Israel from
the area.
Israel has been reluctant to conduct ground operations inside Gaza in
keeping with a cease-fire agreement signed with the Palestinians in
February.
"The drone shows we can still operate without being there," said a
security source. Some worry after the Gaza evacuation, Hamas will use
the territory gained to stage rocket attacks deeper inside Israel.
Since February, the Palestinians have smuggled multiple rockets and
five anti-aircraft missile batteries into Rafah from across the Egypt-
Gaza border, reports Israel's Center for Special Studies.
Hamas also recently started manufacturing a new rocket, the Nasser 3,
capable of reaching further than the currently used Qassam 2 rockets,
which, unlike the Nasser, have improvised fuses and warheads that
don't always explode on impact.
"The Nasser 3 brings things to a whole new level of warfare," a
security source previously told WorldNetDaily. "Hamas knows they
can't get inside Israel because of the security fence, and they are
setting the stages for a major shift in tactics from suicide bombings
to firing effective rockets from Palestinian areas deep inside
Israel."
The IDF has been debating how best to respond to the new rocket
threat. The drone is one answer. Aside from the drone, as WND first
reported, military experts have been developing a "remote control"
border with Gaza that includes unmanned sensor patrol cars and
computerized observation posts that would automatically spot and kill
terrorists.
An army think tank, working with Israel's high-tech sector, has put
together a computerized observation system that will
identify "hostile elements" for the IDF, and upon human
authorization, will fire deep into Gaza. The system itself will
recommend the most appropriate weapon to use to hit a specific
target.
The technology was quietly built years ago by Israeli firms and is
now in the testing and approval stages. Said Gissin: "Rockets may be
the latest threat, but Israel will neutralize it."
By
Aaron Klein writing in the World Net Daily
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