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Gabriel (missile)

Gabriel is a family of sea skimming anti-ship missiles manufactured by Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI). The initial variant of the missile was developed in the 1960s in response to the needs of the Israeli Navy which first deployed it in 1970. Since then, variants have been exported to navies around the world. The latest variant, the Gabriel V, is in use by the Finnish and Israeli navies as of 2020.

Gabriel
An IAI Gabriel Anti-ship missile
TypeAnti-ship missile
Place of originIsrael
Service history
In service1970
Used bySee operators
Production history
ManufacturerIsrael Aerospace Industries
Variantsdeveloped from Luz (missile)
Specifications
MassMark I: 430 kg (950 lb)
Mark II: 522 kg (1,151 lb)
Mark III: 560 kg (1,230 lb)
Mark III A/S: 590 kg (1,300 lb)
Mark IV: 960 kg (2,120 lb)
Mark V: 1,250 kg (2,760 lb)
LengthMark I: 3.35 m (11.0 ft)
Mark II: 3.36 m (11.0 ft)
Mark III: 3.75 m (12.3 ft)
Mark III A/S: 3.78 m (12.4 ft)
Mark IV: 4.7 m (15 ft)
Mark V: 5.5 m (18 ft)
DiameterMark I/ II /III / IIIA/S: 330 mm (13 in)
Mark IV: 440 mm (17 in)
WarheadMark II: 100 kg (220 lb)
Mark III / IIIA/S: 150 kg (330 lb)
Mark IV: 240 kg (530 lb)

WingspanMark I / II:1.35 m (4 ft 5 in)
Mark III:1.32 m (4 ft 4 in)
Mark IIIA/S1.08 m (3 ft 7 in)
Mark IV:1.60 m (5 ft 3 in)
Operational
range
Mark I: 20 km (12 mi)
Mark II:6–36 km (3.7–22.4 mi)
Mark III:36 km (22 mi)
Mark IIIA/S:60 km (37 mi)
Mark IV:200 km (120 mi)[citation needed]
Mark V/Blue Spear/Sea Serpent:400 km (250 mi)
Flight altitude2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)
Guidance
system
Mark I / II:Semi-Active Radar
Mark III / IIIA/S / IV: Active Radar

Origin

On October 21, 1967, four Styx missiles sank the destroyer INS Eilat, which was patrolling along the northern shores of the Sinai. Forty-seven Israeli sailors and officers were killed or went missing in action and 100 were injured.[1] The loss of the ship prompted the Israeli Navy to ask Israel Aerospace Industries to accelerate the development of an anti-ship missile, which had begun in 1958 with the Luz (or Lutz) program.

Development

 
Testing of the Gabriel missile from Sa'ar 2 class ship, 1969

Faced with Rafael Advanced Defense Systems's anxiety to develop a new guidance system, Shlomo Erell asked Israel Aerospace Industries to take over the program by recruiting Ori Even-Tov, a former Rafael engineer. Even-Tov suggested dropping the guidance joystick approach used by the Luz, and instead proposed the development of an autonomous guidance system which would allow the missile to seek its objective, even in bad weather or bad visibility.[2] He further proposed using an altimeter, allowing the missile to fly some meters over the surface of the sea, making it difficult to detect and allowing it to hit the target just above the waterline. A radar installed on the ship had to guide the missile, while the altimeter would keep the missile in sea-skimming mode.[2]

Gabriel Mk 1

The development of the Gabriel for the Israeli Navy began in 1962,[3] before being first shown to the public in 1970. It was touted to be the world's first operational sea-skimming missile, and saw extensive action during the Yom Kippur War.[4] A batch of 50 was imported by the Republic of China Navy for evaluation and as the interim weapon for the three Allen M. Sumner class destroyers upgraded with Gabriel Mk 2 missile system, and it is also the basis for the Taiwanese Hsiung Feng I missile.

Gabriel Mk 2

The Gabriel Mk 2, an improved version of Gabriel, was created in 1972 and entered service in 1976. It was also built under license in South Africa under the name Skerpioen (Afrikaans for Scorpion).[5] The Taiwanese Hsiung Feng I missile can be considered as a parallel development, being based on Gabriel Mk 1 but with similar improvements, and ordnances used by the two systems are interchangeable.

Gabriel III

Gabriel III and Gabriel III A/S were introduced in 1978[5] with major improvements. The air-launched Gabriel III A/S has a range of over 60 km.[6] Both Gabriel III versions employ the widely used 'fire and forget' mode.[citation needed]

Gabriel IV

Developed in the early 1990s is related to the Gabriel Mk III but larger and with a turbojet engine for sustained flight. It is distinguishable from the Mk III because of its swept wings with cropped tip. Like the Mk III, it has 3 guidance modes: Fire and Forget, Fire and Update with data link, and Fire and command using Radar update[4]

Gabriel V

Israel Aerospace Industries is reportedly working on a Gabriel V Advanced Naval Attack Missile, with an advanced active multi-spectral seeker designed for cluttered littoral environments.[7][8] As of 2020, this variant is deployed by the Finnish and Israeli navies.[9] Range is claimed to be more than 200 km to 400 km.[10]

Successful test firing of the Gabriel V was conducted by the Israel Defense Forces on September 21st 2022.[11]

Blue Spear and Sea Serpent missile systems

In 2020, Israel's IAI and Singapore's ST Engineering started a 50/50 joint venture company called Proteus Advanced Systems to develop, produce and market a derivative of the Gabriel V called the Blue Spear missile system (Blue Spear). The missile has both sea and deep land attack capabilities with enhanced maneuverability for littoral environments. The warhead employs an active radar-homing seeker, accurate INS-based navigation capabilities, beyond-line-of-sight (BLOS) capability and a robust system which is immune to GPS disruptions and maximal accuracy target acquisition. The system is equipped with a variety of deception means to achieve its mission and cope with the different battle-field challenges. ST Engineering’s role in the Blue Spear’s development includes the design, development and production of major subsystems like the booster motor and warhead whilst IAI focuses on other parts. In 2021, IAI and Thales jointly market a variant of Gabriel V or Blue Spear called Sea Serpent to the Royal Navy to replace its ageing Harpoon missile system. At DSEI 2021, IAI revealed that Sea Serpent is developed in parallel with the Blue Spear and based on the Gabriel V missile system and/or older variants. IAI added that Sea Serpent has a low profile mode or sea skimming range of greater than 290 km .[12] This range corresponds with the overall Gabriel V's range of 200 km to 400 km, depending on flight profile. Hence, the Sea Serpent or Blue Spear missile can engage targets at distances of up to 400 km.

In October 2021, it was announced that the Estonian Defence Forces purchased the Blue Spear missile system with a maximum range of 290 km (flight profile not mentioned).[13] It is also rumored that both Israel and Singapore already use variants of the Gabriel V which replaces their older Harpoon missiles. Blue Spear or Sea Serpent or Gabriel V allows both countries to conduct deep land, littoral and open sea surgical strikes effectively. On 13 May 2022, it was reported that Israel gave permission to Estonia to give Ukraine one Blue Spear 5G SSM rocket complex.[14] However, the Estonian Minister of Defense dismissed the claims as false.[15]

Older models

Older models of the Gabriel are still used by Chile (Sa'ar 4 with Gabriel II), Israel (Sa'ar 4.5 with Gabriel II), Mexico (Sa'ar 4.5 with Gabriel II), Sri Lanka (Sa'ar 4 with Gabriel II) and Thailand (FPB-45 with Gabriel I).

Operational history

 
Sa'ar 4 ship launches the Gabriel missile

During the Yom Kippur War the Gabriel I was used for the first time during the Battle of Latakia. Israeli missile boats armed with Gabriel Mk 1 missiles were credited with defeating Syrian ships armed with the Soviet-made P-15 Termit (SS-N-2 Styx) missile. Even though the Styx missile had a longer range, the Gabriel's reliability and flexibility of handling contributed to the Israeli victory. It is known that the Syrians shot missile salvos at the charging Israeli vessels, but missed due to the Israeli ECM technology of the time. When they were in range, the Israeli boats launched their Gabriel missiles, and sank all but one Syrian Osa class ship, which was later sunk by cannon fire. After defeating the Syrian Navy (surviving Syrian ships stayed in port) the Israeli missile boats defeated the Egyptian navy as well, achieving naval supremacy for the remainder of the war.[16][2]

Details

During the Yom Kippur War in 1973, the Styx was shown to be far less effective than previously believed. From October 6 to October 12, 54 missiles were fired to no effect, according to Western sources. The aforementioned Russian sources[which?] however, claim that a total of seven ships were sunk - all small vessels such as trawlers, patrol boats, and missile boats. But the Russian specialists agreed with their Western counterparts that the overall results were unsatisfying, especially considering that seven Egyptian and Syrian vessels were sunk after being hit by Israeli Gabriel Mk.1 anti-ship missiles. This last figure is commonly recognized by specialists in both the West and East.

The first such encounter took place during the night of October 6 to October 7, 1973, near Latakia on the Syrian coast. Israeli forces used helicopters flying slowly at very low altitude, effectively simulating naval targets. No Israeli ship was hit by the large salvo of P-15s subsequently fired by the Syrians, who themselves lost the T-43 class trawler Jarmuk and three torpedo boats to Israeli Gabriel missiles. The Syrian missile boats withdrew successfully, but all of their missiles missed the Israeli helicopters, which had climbed to break the missile radars' locks. On the same night, a similar trick with helicopters was repeated against Egyptian ships north of the Sinai Peninsula. Yet another encounter took place near Latakia on the night of October 10–11. This time, the missile exchange between Israeli and Syrian missile boats took place without the use of helicopters, and Israeli ships relied on chaff. The Syrian vessels maneuvered outside their harbor among the anchored merchant ships. Two of the warships were sunk by Gabriel missiles, which also hit two neutral ships, the Greek Tsimentaros and the Japanese Yamashuro Maru. According to Israeli sources, the use of chaff saved all of its vessels. The following night, the helicopter maneuver was again successfully used during an encounter near Tartus off the Syrian coast. No Israeli ship was hit by a salvo of P-15s fired by Syrian missile boats. On the Syrian side, two Komar-class vessels were sunk by Gabriel missiles, and also the Soviet merchant ship Ilya Mechnikov was hit. On the same night, a similar encounter took place off the coast of Port Said.

Operators

 
Map with Gabriel operators in blue with former operators in red
 
A triple launcher for the Gabriel anti-ship missile

Current operators

  Azerbaijan[17]
  Chile
  Ecuador
  Eritrea
  Estonia
  Finland
  Israel
  Kenya
  Mexico
  Sri Lanka

Former operators

  Singapore
  South Africa
  Taiwan
  • Republic of China Navy (Mk 2, reduced to reserve status due to service entry of the similar Hsiung Feng I missile and decommissioned in early 1990s)
  Thailand

See also

References

  1. ^ Cécile Pilverdier. (in French). Un-echo-israel.net. Archived from the original on 2011-10-23. Retrieved 2011-11-16.
  2. ^ a b c Rebinovich, Abraham (December 24, 2011). "Escape from Cherbourg". Jerusalem Post. from the original on October 18, 2012. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2012-06-29.
  5. ^ a b . Articles.janes.com. 2010-09-08. Archived from the original on 2011-08-11. Retrieved 2011-11-16.
  6. ^ John Pike. "Gabriel III". Globalsecurity.org. from the original on 2011-12-30. Retrieved 2011-11-16.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  9. ^ שניידר, טל (25 September 2020). "צה"ל הודיע על ניסוי מוצלח במערכת טילי ים-ים". Globes (in Hebrew). from the original on 2020-09-27.
  10. ^ a b "Merivoimien uusi pintatorjuntaohjus – Gabriel 5" [New Navy Surface Missile - Gabriel 5] (in Finnish). 13 December 2019. Archived from the original on 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2019-12-13.
  11. ^ "Israeli Navy test-fires Gabriel V anti-ship missile from Sa'ar 6 corvette". 22 September 2022.
  12. ^ {{DSEI 2021 |url=https://www.navalnews.com/event-news/dsei-2021/2021/09/dsei-2021-iai-unveils-new-sea-serpent-anti-ship-missile/
  13. ^ "Estonia buys Blue Spear missiles for coastal defense". Defense News. 8 October 2021. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  14. ^ Israel agrees to equip Ukraine with Blue Spear system through Estonia - report, Retrieved on May 14th, 2022
  15. ^ "Leht: Eesti annab Ukrainale alles hiljuti soetatud ülimoodsad laevatõrjeraketid. Laanet: Ei vasta tõele, see on infooperatsioon". www.delfi.ee. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  16. ^ Razoux, Pierre (October–November 2006). "La marine israélienne d'hier à aujourd'hui". Marines et Forces Navales (in French) (105).
  17. ^ "Azerbaijan Spent $1.6 Bln on Israeli Arms in 2011". 27 March 2012. from the original on 8 October 2012. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  18. ^ "Estonia Awards Contract to Proteus for Blue Spear". Israel Aerospace Industries. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-07-06.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-23.

gabriel, missile, gabriel, family, skimming, anti, ship, missiles, manufactured, israel, aerospace, industries, initial, variant, missile, developed, 1960s, response, needs, israeli, navy, which, first, deployed, 1970, since, then, variants, have, been, export. Gabriel is a family of sea skimming anti ship missiles manufactured by Israel Aerospace Industries IAI The initial variant of the missile was developed in the 1960s in response to the needs of the Israeli Navy which first deployed it in 1970 Since then variants have been exported to navies around the world The latest variant the Gabriel V is in use by the Finnish and Israeli navies as of 2020 GabrielAn IAI Gabriel Anti ship missileTypeAnti ship missilePlace of originIsraelService historyIn service1970Used bySee operatorsProduction historyManufacturerIsrael Aerospace IndustriesVariantsdeveloped from Luz missile SpecificationsMassMark I 430 kg 950 lb Mark II 522 kg 1 151 lb Mark III 560 kg 1 230 lb Mark III A S 590 kg 1 300 lb Mark IV 960 kg 2 120 lb Mark V 1 250 kg 2 760 lb LengthMark I 3 35 m 11 0 ft Mark II 3 36 m 11 0 ft Mark III 3 75 m 12 3 ft Mark III A S 3 78 m 12 4 ft Mark IV 4 7 m 15 ft Mark V 5 5 m 18 ft DiameterMark I II III IIIA S 330 mm 13 in Mark IV 440 mm 17 in WarheadMark II 100 kg 220 lb Mark III IIIA S 150 kg 330 lb Mark IV 240 kg 530 lb WingspanMark I II 1 35 m 4 ft 5 in Mark III 1 32 m 4 ft 4 in Mark IIIA S1 08 m 3 ft 7 in Mark IV 1 60 m 5 ft 3 in OperationalrangeMark I 20 km 12 mi Mark II 6 36 km 3 7 22 4 mi Mark III 36 km 22 mi Mark IIIA S 60 km 37 mi Mark IV 200 km 120 mi citation needed Mark V Blue Spear Sea Serpent 400 km 250 mi Flight altitude2 5 m 8 ft 2 in GuidancesystemMark I II Semi Active Radar Mark III IIIA S IV Active Radar Contents 1 Origin 2 Development 2 1 Gabriel Mk 1 2 2 Gabriel Mk 2 2 3 Gabriel III 2 4 Gabriel IV 2 5 Gabriel V 2 6 Blue Spear and Sea Serpent missile systems 2 7 Older models 3 Operational history 3 1 Details 4 Operators 4 1 Current operators 4 2 Former operators 5 See also 6 ReferencesOrigin EditOn October 21 1967 four Styx missiles sank the destroyer INS Eilat which was patrolling along the northern shores of the Sinai Forty seven Israeli sailors and officers were killed or went missing in action and 100 were injured 1 The loss of the ship prompted the Israeli Navy to ask Israel Aerospace Industries to accelerate the development of an anti ship missile which had begun in 1958 with the Luz or Lutz program Development Edit Testing of the Gabriel missile from Sa ar 2 class ship 1969 Faced with Rafael Advanced Defense Systems s anxiety to develop a new guidance system Shlomo Erell asked Israel Aerospace Industries to take over the program by recruiting Ori Even Tov a former Rafael engineer Even Tov suggested dropping the guidance joystick approach used by the Luz and instead proposed the development of an autonomous guidance system which would allow the missile to seek its objective even in bad weather or bad visibility 2 He further proposed using an altimeter allowing the missile to fly some meters over the surface of the sea making it difficult to detect and allowing it to hit the target just above the waterline A radar installed on the ship had to guide the missile while the altimeter would keep the missile in sea skimming mode 2 Gabriel Mk 1 Edit The development of the Gabriel for the Israeli Navy began in 1962 3 before being first shown to the public in 1970 It was touted to be the world s first operational sea skimming missile and saw extensive action during the Yom Kippur War 4 A batch of 50 was imported by the Republic of China Navy for evaluation and as the interim weapon for the three Allen M Sumner class destroyers upgraded with Gabriel Mk 2 missile system and it is also the basis for the Taiwanese Hsiung Feng I missile Gabriel Mk 2 Edit The Gabriel Mk 2 an improved version of Gabriel was created in 1972 and entered service in 1976 It was also built under license in South Africa under the name Skerpioen Afrikaans for Scorpion 5 The Taiwanese Hsiung Feng I missile can be considered as a parallel development being based on Gabriel Mk 1 but with similar improvements and ordnances used by the two systems are interchangeable Gabriel III Edit Gabriel III and Gabriel III A S were introduced in 1978 5 with major improvements The air launched Gabriel III A S has a range of over 60 km 6 Both Gabriel III versions employ the widely used fire and forget mode citation needed Gabriel IV Edit Developed in the early 1990s is related to the Gabriel Mk III but larger and with a turbojet engine for sustained flight It is distinguishable from the Mk III because of its swept wings with cropped tip Like the Mk III it has 3 guidance modes Fire and Forget Fire and Update with data link and Fire and command using Radar update 4 Gabriel V Edit Israel Aerospace Industries is reportedly working on a Gabriel V Advanced Naval Attack Missile with an advanced active multi spectral seeker designed for cluttered littoral environments 7 8 As of 2020 this variant is deployed by the Finnish and Israeli navies 9 Range is claimed to be more than 200 km to 400 km 10 Successful test firing of the Gabriel V was conducted by the Israel Defense Forces on September 21st 2022 11 Blue Spear and Sea Serpent missile systems Edit In 2020 Israel s IAI and Singapore s ST Engineering started a 50 50 joint venture company called Proteus Advanced Systems to develop produce and market a derivative of the Gabriel V called the Blue Spear missile system Blue Spear The missile has both sea and deep land attack capabilities with enhanced maneuverability for littoral environments The warhead employs an active radar homing seeker accurate INS based navigation capabilities beyond line of sight BLOS capability and a robust system which is immune to GPS disruptions and maximal accuracy target acquisition The system is equipped with a variety of deception means to achieve its mission and cope with the different battle field challenges ST Engineering s role in the Blue Spear s development includes the design development and production of major subsystems like the booster motor and warhead whilst IAI focuses on other parts In 2021 IAI and Thales jointly market a variant of Gabriel V or Blue Spear called Sea Serpent to the Royal Navy to replace its ageing Harpoon missile system At DSEI 2021 IAI revealed that Sea Serpent is developed in parallel with the Blue Spear and based on the Gabriel V missile system and or older variants IAI added that Sea Serpent has a low profile mode or sea skimming range of greater than 290 km 12 This range corresponds with the overall Gabriel V s range of 200 km to 400 km depending on flight profile Hence the Sea Serpent or Blue Spear missile can engage targets at distances of up to 400 km In October 2021 it was announced that the Estonian Defence Forces purchased the Blue Spear missile system with a maximum range of 290 km flight profile not mentioned 13 It is also rumored that both Israel and Singapore already use variants of the Gabriel V which replaces their older Harpoon missiles Blue Spear or Sea Serpent or Gabriel V allows both countries to conduct deep land littoral and open sea surgical strikes effectively On 13 May 2022 it was reported that Israel gave permission to Estonia to give Ukraine one Blue Spear 5G SSM rocket complex 14 However the Estonian Minister of Defense dismissed the claims as false 15 Older models Edit Older models of the Gabriel are still used by Chile Sa ar 4 with Gabriel II Israel Sa ar 4 5 with Gabriel II Mexico Sa ar 4 5 with Gabriel II Sri Lanka Sa ar 4 with Gabriel II and Thailand FPB 45 with Gabriel I Operational history EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Battle of Latakia and Battle of Baltim Sa ar 4 ship launches the Gabriel missile During the Yom Kippur War the Gabriel I was used for the first time during the Battle of Latakia Israeli missile boats armed with Gabriel Mk 1 missiles were credited with defeating Syrian ships armed with the Soviet made P 15 Termit SS N 2 Styx missile Even though the Styx missile had a longer range the Gabriel s reliability and flexibility of handling contributed to the Israeli victory It is known that the Syrians shot missile salvos at the charging Israeli vessels but missed due to the Israeli ECM technology of the time When they were in range the Israeli boats launched their Gabriel missiles and sank all but one Syrian Osa class ship which was later sunk by cannon fire After defeating the Syrian Navy surviving Syrian ships stayed in port the Israeli missile boats defeated the Egyptian navy as well achieving naval supremacy for the remainder of the war 16 2 Details Edit During the Yom Kippur War in 1973 the Styx was shown to be far less effective than previously believed From October 6 to October 12 54 missiles were fired to no effect according to Western sources The aforementioned Russian sources which however claim that a total of seven ships were sunk all small vessels such as trawlers patrol boats and missile boats But the Russian specialists agreed with their Western counterparts that the overall results were unsatisfying especially considering that seven Egyptian and Syrian vessels were sunk after being hit by Israeli Gabriel Mk 1 anti ship missiles This last figure is commonly recognized by specialists in both the West and East The first such encounter took place during the night of October 6 to October 7 1973 near Latakia on the Syrian coast Israeli forces used helicopters flying slowly at very low altitude effectively simulating naval targets No Israeli ship was hit by the large salvo of P 15s subsequently fired by the Syrians who themselves lost the T 43 class trawler Jarmuk and three torpedo boats to Israeli Gabriel missiles The Syrian missile boats withdrew successfully but all of their missiles missed the Israeli helicopters which had climbed to break the missile radars locks On the same night a similar trick with helicopters was repeated against Egyptian ships north of the Sinai Peninsula Yet another encounter took place near Latakia on the night of October 10 11 This time the missile exchange between Israeli and Syrian missile boats took place without the use of helicopters and Israeli ships relied on chaff The Syrian vessels maneuvered outside their harbor among the anchored merchant ships Two of the warships were sunk by Gabriel missiles which also hit two neutral ships the Greek Tsimentaros and the Japanese Yamashuro Maru According to Israeli sources the use of chaff saved all of its vessels The following night the helicopter maneuver was again successfully used during an encounter near Tartus off the Syrian coast No Israeli ship was hit by a salvo of P 15s fired by Syrian missile boats On the Syrian side two Komar class vessels were sunk by Gabriel missiles and also the Soviet merchant ship Ilya Mechnikov was hit On the same night a similar encounter took place off the coast of Port Said Operators Edit Map with Gabriel operators in blue with former operators in red A triple launcher for the Gabriel anti ship missile Current operators Edit Azerbaijan 17 Azerbaijan Navy ChileChilean Navy EcuadorEcuadoran Navy EritreaEritrean Navy EstoniaEstonian Navy Blue Spear 5G SSM 18 FinlandFinnish Navy from 2019 onwards 19 Gabriel V 10 IsraelIsraeli Navy KenyaKenyan Navy MexicoMexican Navy Sri LankaSri Lankan NavyFormer operators Edit SingaporeRepublic of Singapore Navy South AfricaSouth African Navy 20 TaiwanRepublic of China Navy Mk 2 reduced to reserve status due to service entry of the similar Hsiung Feng I missile and decommissioned in early 1990s ThailandRoyal Thai NavySee also Edit3M24 Exocet Qader SOM Noor ASCM Zafar Khalij Fars YJ 83References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gabriel missile Cecile Pilverdier Histoire d Israel annee 1967 Un echo d Israel in French Un echo israel net Archived from the original on 2011 10 23 Retrieved 2011 11 16 a b c Rebinovich Abraham December 24 2011 Escape from Cherbourg Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on October 18 2012 Retrieved November 1 2011 Israel Aerospace Industries LTD Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 8 October 2015 a b Gabriel family Archived from the original on 2012 06 29 a b Gabriel Israel Jane s Air Launched Weapons Articles janes com 2010 09 08 Archived from the original on 2011 08 11 Retrieved 2011 11 16 John Pike Gabriel III Globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 2011 12 30 Retrieved 2011 11 16 Israel Aerospace Industries LTD Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 8 October 2015 IAI Introduces Gabriel 5 Anti Ship Missile System Archived from the original on 24 July 2015 Retrieved 8 October 2015 שניידר טל 25 September 2020 צה ל הודיע על ניסוי מוצלח במערכת טילי ים ים Globes in Hebrew Archived from the original on 2020 09 27 a b Merivoimien uusi pintatorjuntaohjus Gabriel 5 New Navy Surface Missile Gabriel 5 in Finnish 13 December 2019 Archived from the original on 2021 04 15 Retrieved 2019 12 13 Israeli Navy test fires Gabriel V anti ship missile from Sa ar 6 corvette 22 September 2022 DSEI 2021 url https www navalnews com event news dsei 2021 2021 09 dsei 2021 iai unveils new sea serpent anti ship missile Estonia buys Blue Spear missiles for coastal defense Defense News 8 October 2021 Retrieved 8 October 2021 Israel agrees to equip Ukraine with Blue Spear system through Estonia report Retrieved on May 14th 2022 Leht Eesti annab Ukrainale alles hiljuti soetatud ulimoodsad laevatorjeraketid Laanet Ei vasta toele see on infooperatsioon www delfi ee Retrieved May 14 2022 Razoux Pierre October November 2006 La marine israelienne d hier a aujourd hui Marines et Forces Navales in French 105 Azerbaijan Spent 1 6 Bln on Israeli Arms in 2011 27 March 2012 Archived from the original on 8 October 2012 Retrieved 8 October 2015 Estonia Awards Contract to Proteus for Blue Spear Israel Aerospace Industries 6 October 2021 Retrieved 9 October 2021 Finnish Navy to acquire new Surface to surface Missile system Archived from the original on 2018 07 06 Skerpioen Scorpion Gabriel II Ship to Ship Missile Archived from the original on 2011 08 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gabriel missile amp oldid 1138760753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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