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Jericho (missile)

Jericho (Hebrew: יריחו, romanizedYericho) is a general designation given to a loosely-related family of deployed ballistic missiles developed by Israel since the 1960s. The name is taken from the first development contract for the Jericho I signed between Israel and Dassault in 1963, with the codename as a reference to the Biblical city of Jericho. As with most Israeli unconventional weapons systems, exact details are classified, though there are observed test data, public statements by government officials, and details in open literature especially about the Shavit satellite launch vehicle.

The later Jericho family development is related to the Shavit and Shavit II space launch vehicles believed to be derivatives of the Jericho II IRBM and that preceded the development of the Jericho III ICBM.[1] The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US concluded that the Shavit could be adapted as an ICBM carrying a 500 kg warhead over 7,500 km.[2] Additional insight into the Jericho program was revealed by the South African series of missiles, of which the RSA-3 are believed to be licensed copies of the Jericho II/Shavit, and the RSA-4 that used part of these systems in their stack with a heavy first stage. Subsequent to the declaration and disarming of the South African nuclear program,[3] the RSA series missiles were offered commercially as satellite launch vehicles, resulting in the advertised specifications becoming public knowledge.[4]

The civilian space launch version of the Jericho, the Shavit, was studied in an air launched version piggybacked on a Boeing 747 similar to a U.S. experimental launch of the Minuteman ICBM from a C-5 Galaxy.[5]

Jericho I edit

Jericho I was first publicly identified being an operational short-range ballistic missile system in late 1971. It was 13.4 metres (44 ft) long, 0.8 m (2 ft 7 in) in diameter, weighing 6.5 tonnes (14,000 lb). It had a range of 500 km (310 mi) and a CEP of 1,000 m (3,300 ft), and it could carry a payload estimated at 400 kilograms (880 lb). It was intended to carry a nuclear warhead.[6][7] Due to Israel's ambiguity over its nuclear weapons program, the missile is classified as a ballistic missile. Initial development was in conjunction with France, Dassault provided various missile systems from 1963 and a type designated MD-620 was test fired in 1965. French co-operation was halted by an arms embargo in January 1968, though 12 missiles had been delivered from France.[7] Work was continued by IAI at the Beit Zachariah facility and the program cost almost $1 billion up to 1980, incorporating some U.S. technology.[8] Despite some initial problems with its guidance systems, it is believed that around 100 missiles of this type were produced.

In 1969, Israel agreed with the United States that Jericho missiles would not be used as "strategic missiles", with nuclear warheads, until at least 1972.[9]

During the October 1973 Yom Kippur War, with the initial surprise breakthroughs on both northern and southern borders by Arab armies, the alarmed Defense Minister Moshe Dayan told Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir that "this is the end of the third temple."[10] He was warning of Israel's impending total defeat, but "Temple" was also the code word for nuclear weapons.[11] Dayan again raised the nuclear topic in a cabinet meeting, warning that the country was approaching a point of "last resort".[12] That night Meir authorized the assembly of thirteen nuclear weapon "physics packages" to arm Jericho I missiles at Sdot Micha Airbase, and F-4 aircraft at Tel Nof Airbase, for use against Syrian and Egyptian targets.[11] The range on the Jericho 1 is sufficient to strike major cities such as Damascus and Cairo from secured launch locations.[13] They would be used if absolutely necessary to prevent total defeat, but the preparation was done in an easily detectable way, likely as a signal to the US.[12] U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger learned of the nuclear alert on the morning of October 9. That day, in keeping with his deal and warning that prevented a preemptive Israeli attack on gathering Arab armies,[14] President Nixon ordered the commencement of Operation Nickel Grass, a U.S. airlift to replace all of Israel's material losses.[15] Anecdotal evidence suggests that Kissinger told Sadat that the reason for the U.S. airlift was that the Israelis were close to "going nuclear".[11]

It is believed that all Jericho 1 missiles were taken out of service in the 1990s and replaced with the longer-range Jericho 2. The Jericho 1 missiles were housed in Zekharia, located southeast of Tel Aviv and stationed in caves.[16]

Jericho II edit

 
Shavit 3rd stage

The Jericho II (YA-3) is a solid fuel, two-stage long-range ballistic missile system and a follow on from the Jericho I project. As many as 90 Jericho 2 missiles are currently based in caves near Zekharia (Sdot Micha Airbase), southeast of Tel Aviv.[17]

A request from Israel for 1,100 mile (1,770 km) range Pershing II medium range ballistic missiles was rejected by the United States for inclusion as part of a military assistance incentive package offered in 1975 during negotiations over transferring the Sinai from Israeli to Egyptian control as part of a US-brokered peace deal.[18] Jericho II development began in 1977, and by 1986 there were reports of test firings. According to Missilethreat, a project of the George C. Marshall Institute, there is evidence the Jericho II originated as a joint Israeli-Iranian project, cooperation that ended with the loss of friendly relations after the 1979 Islamist revolution overthrew the Shah's rule.[19] There was a series of test launches into the Mediterranean from 1987 to 1992, the longest at around 1,300 km, mostly from the facility at Palmachim, south of Tel Aviv. Jane's reports that a test launch of 1,400 km is believed to have taken place from South Africa's Overberg Test Range in June 1989.[20]

The Jericho II is 14.0 m long and 1.56 m wide, with a reported launch weight of 26,000 kg (although an alternative launch weight of 21,935 kg has been suggested). It has a 1,000 kg payload, capable of carrying a considerable amount of high explosives or a 1 Megaton yield nuclear warhead. It uses a two-stage solid propellant engine with a separating warhead. The missile can be launched from a silo, a railroad flat car, or a mobile vehicle. This gives it the ability to be hidden, moved quickly, or kept in a hardened silo, largely ensuring survival against any attack.[21] It has an active radar homing terminal guidance system similar to that of the Pershing II, for very accurate strikes.[22]

The Jericho II forms the basis of the three-stage, 23 ton Shavit NEXT satellite launcher, first launched in 1988 from Palmachim. From the performance of Shavit it has been estimated that as a ballistic missile it has a maximum range of about 7,800 km with a 500 kg payload.[8]

The Jericho II as an available Israeli counterattack option to Iraqi missile bombardment in the 1991 Gulf War is disputed. Jane's at the time believed that Jericho II entered service in 1989.[23] Researcher Seth Carus claims that, according to an Israeli source, the decision to operationally deploy the Jericho-2 was only made after 1994, several years after the Scud attacks had ended and a cease fire and disarmament regime were in place.[24] Raytheon Technologies, quoting Soviet intelligence archives, showed them believing the Jericho-2 to have been fully developed weapon in 1989, but did not indicate when it was available for deployment.[25] Investigators for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace accessed commercial satellite images of the Sdot Micha Airbase near Zachariah, a suspected Jericho missile base, comparison shows expansion between 1989 and 1993 of the type that would accommodate suspected Jericho II launchers and missiles.[26] Such an expansion would be more consistent with a post-1991 deployment chronology.

Jericho III edit

It is believed that the Jericho III (YA-4) is a nuclear-armed ICBM[27][28] that entered service in 2011.[29] The Jericho III is believed to have two or three-stages, using solid propellant and having a payload of 1,000 to 1,300 kg. The payload could be a single 750 kg (150–400 kiloton)[29] nuclear warhead or two or three low-yield MIRV warheads. It has an estimated launch weight of 30,000 kg and a length of 15.5 m with a width of 1.56 m. It may be similar to an upgraded and re-designed Shavit space launch vehicle, produced by Israel Aerospace Industries. It probably has longer first and second-stage motors. It is estimated by missilethreat.com that it has a range of 4,800 to 6,500 km (2,982 to 4,038 miles),[30] though a 2004 missile proliferation survey by the Congressional Research Service put its possible maximum range at 11,500 km (missile range is inversely proportional to payload mass).[31]

According to an official report that was submitted to the U.S. Congress in 2004, it may be that with a payload of 1,000 kg the Jericho III gives Israel nuclear strike capabilities within the entire Middle East, Africa, Europe, Asia and almost all parts of North America, as well as large parts of South America and North Oceania. Missile Threat reports: "The range of the Jericho 3 also provides an extremely high impact speed for nearby targets, enabling it to avoid any Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) defenses that may develop in the immediate region."[30] On 17 January 2008 Israel test fired a multi-stage ballistic missile believed to be of the Jericho III type, reportedly capable of carrying "conventional or non conventional warheads."[32] On 2 November 2011, Israel successfully test fired a missile believed to be an upgraded version of the Jericho III at Palmachim; the long trail of smoke was seen throughout central Israel.[33] Israel's intercontinental ballistic missile launchers are believed to be buried so deeply that they would survive a first strike nuclear attack.[34][35]

After a successful missile test launch conducted in early 2008, Israeli weapons expert General Itzhak Ben-Israel, former chairman of the Israeli Space Agency at the Ministry of Science, said "Everybody can do the mathematics... we can reach with a rocket engine to every point in the world", thus appearing to confirm Israel's new capability. Israeli Ministry of Defense officials said that the 2008 test launch represented a "dramatic leap in Israel's missile technologies".[36]

After a further test in 2013 Alon Ben David published this opinion in an article in Aviation Week on the missile's range and throw weight: "Reportedly, Israel's Jericho III intermediate-range ballistic missile is capable of carrying a 1,000-kg (2,204-lb.) warhead more than 5,000 km."[37] Further tests conducted in July 2013 could have been for the Jericho 3 or possibly the Jericho 3A missile, a follow-up missile believed to have a new motor.[29]

South African RSA Series edit

 
RSA-3

The Jericho II/Shavit SLV was also license produced in the Republic of South Africa as the RSA series of space launch vehicles and ballistic missiles.

The RSA-3 was produced by the Houwteq (a discontinued division of Denel) company at Grabouw, 30 km east of Cape Town. Test launches were made from Overberg Test Range near Bredasdorp, 200 km east of Cape Town. Rooi Els was where the engine test facilities were located. Development continued even after South African renunciation[38] of its nuclear weapons for use as a commercial satellite launcher. Development reached its height in 1992 a year after nuclear renunciation with 50–70 companies involved, employing 1300–1500 people from the public and private sector.[39][40] A much heavier ICBM or space launch vehicle, the RSA-4, with a first stage in the Peacekeeper ICBM class but with Jericho-2/RSA-3 upper stage components was in development,[41] the RSA-2 was a local copy of the Jericho II ballistic missile and the RSA-1 was a local copy of the Jericho II second stage for use as a mobile missile.[4][42][43][44]

The missiles were to be based on the RSA-3 and RSA-4 launchers that had already been built and tested for the South African space programme. According to Al J Venter, author of How South Africa Built Six Atom Bombs, these missiles were incompatible with the available large South African nuclear warheads, he claims that the RSA series being designed for a 340 kg payload would suggest a warhead of some 200 kg, "well beyond SA's best efforts of the late 1980s." Venter's analysis is that the RSA series was intended to display a credible delivery system combined with a separate nuclear test in a final diplomatic appeal to the world powers in an emergency even though they were never intended to be used in a weaponized system together.[45] Three rockets had already been launched into suborbital trajectories in the late 1980s in support of development of the RSA-3 launched Greensat Orbital Management System (for commercial satellite applications of vehicle tracking and regional planning). Following the decision in 1989 to cancel the nuclear weapons program, the missile programs were allowed to continue until 1992, when military funding ended, and all ballistic missile work was stopped by mid-1993. In order to join the Missile Technology Control Regime, the government had to allow U.S. supervision of the destruction of key facilities applicable to both the long range missile and the space launch programmes.[46]

Variant Date of launch Launch location Payload Mission status
RSA-3 1989 June 1 Overberg Test Range   RSA-3-d 1 Apogee: 100 km (60 mi)
RSA-3 1989 July 6 Overberg Test Range   RSA-3 2 Apogee: 300 km (180 mi)
RSA-3 1990 November 19 Overberg Test Range   RSA-3 3 Apogee: 300 km (180 mi)

In June 1994, the RSA-3 / RSA-4 South African satellite launcher program was cancelled.[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Delivery systems", (country profile), NTI, archived from the original on 2013-09-21, retrieved 2013-06-23.
  2. ^ https://unoda-web.s3-accelerate.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/assets/HomePage/ODAPublications/DisarmamentStudySeries/PDF/SS-23.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Von Wielligh, N. & von Wielligh-Steyn, L. (2015). The Bomb: South Africa’s Nuclear Weapons Programme. Pretoria: Litera.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on August 20, 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  5. ^ "Israel Studies Airborne Launch Scheme for Shavit Rocket". SpaceNews.com. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  6. ^ Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (PDF), Special National Intelligence Assessment, CIA, 23 August 1974, SNIE 4-1-74, retrieved 2008-01-20
  7. ^ a b Kissinger, Henry A (16 July 1969), "Israeli Nuclear Program" (PDF), Memorandum for the President, The White House, retrieved 2009-07-26
  8. ^ a b . Canadian Security Intelligence Service. March 23, 2001. 2000/09. Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
  9. ^ Kissinger, Henry A (7 October 1969), "Discussions with the Israelis on nuclear matters" (PDF), Memorandum for the President, The White House, retrieved 2006-07-02
  10. ^ . Time. April 12, 1976. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  11. ^ a b c Farr, Warner D. "The Third Temple's Holy of Holies: Israel's Nuclear Weapons". Counterproliferation Paper No. 2, USAF Counterproliferation Center, Air War College, September 1999.
  12. ^ a b Cohen, Avner. "The Last Nuclear Moment" The New York Times, October 6, 2003.
  13. ^ "Jericho 1".
  14. ^ http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB98/octwar-10.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  15. ^ October 9, 1973, conversation (6:10–6:35 pm) between Israeli Ambassador to the United States Simcha Dinitz, Henry Kissinger, Brent Scowcroft, and Peter Rodman. Transcript George Washington University National Security Archive.
  16. ^ "Jericho 1".
  17. ^ "Jericho 2".
  18. ^ . Time. September 29, 1975. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 2, 2008.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-01-21. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  20. ^ "Shavit (Israel), Space launch vehicles – Orbital". Jane's Information Group. 2009-04-21. Retrieved 2010-04-17.
  21. ^ . MissileThreat. 2008-01-17. Archived from the original on 2010-06-24. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
  22. ^ "5 Weapons That Make It Clear Israel Dominates the Sky". 2018-04-14.
  23. ^ Duncan Lennox, ed., "Jericho 1/2/3 (YA-1/YA-3) (Israel), Offensive Weapons," Jane's Strategic Weapon Systems, Issue 50, (Surrey: Jane's Information Group, January 2009), pp. 84-86.
  24. ^ Seth W. Carus, "Israeli Ballistic Missile Developments," Testimony before the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States, 15 July 1998, www.fas.org.
  25. ^ Raytheon Systems Company, Missile Systems of the World, (Bremerton, WA: AMI International, 1999), p. 459.
  26. ^ Joseph Cirincione, Jon B. Wolfsthal and Miriam Rajkumar, Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction (Washington, DC, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2002), p. 230. Identifying the specific deployment date of the Jericho-2 arsenal at Sdot Micha would provide knowledge about the operational status of the Jericho-2 during the 1991 Iraq War. Probable test flights from Israel and South Africa around 1989 would indicate that the R&D phase of the Jericho-2 project was nearing completion at that date. Scale-up and transition from the R&D phase to the manufacturing phase would likely have required several years, however, as would necessary expansion or modifications to the Sdot Micha airbase. Commercial satellite images showing expansion of the base would be consistent with a deployment date roughly 4 to 5 years after the initial test flights, thus implying that the Jericho-2 was not yet deployed during the 1991 Iraq War.
  27. ^ "Israel's new anti-ballistic missile system 'phenomenal' in testing". The Times of Israel.
  28. ^ "Report: Israel improving nuclear abilities". Ynetnews. October 31, 2011.
  29. ^ a b c "Jericho 3".
  30. ^ a b . Missile Threat. 2012-03-26. Archived from the original on 2013-01-21. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  31. ^ [Missile Survey: Ballistic and Cruise Missiles of Foreign Countries http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/crs/rl30427.pdf], Andrew Feickert, Congressional Research Service, March 5, 2004.
  32. ^ Azoulay, Yuval (18 January 2008). . Haaretz. Archived from the original on 14 April 2010. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  33. ^ Pfeffer, Anshel (2 November 2011). "IDF test-fires ballistic missile in central Israel". Haaretz. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  34. ^ Plushnick-Masti, Ramit (2006-08-25). "Israel Buys 2 Nuclear-Capable Submarines". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
  35. ^ "Missile survey: ballistic & cruise missiles of foreign countries" (PDF)..
  36. ^ Cordesman, Anthony H. (2015-11-10). The Arab-U.S. Strategic Partnership and the Changing Security Balance in the Gulf: Joint and Asymmetric Warfare, Missiles and Missile Defense, Civil War and Non-State Actors, and Outside Powers. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-5899-0.
  37. ^ . Aviation Week. Archived from the original on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  38. ^ http://www.armscontrol.org/system/files/ACT_South%20Africa_9601.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  39. ^ Iain McFadyen. "The South African Rocket & Space Programme". Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  40. ^ Guy Martin (25 January 2011). "Satellites for South Africa". Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 August 2014. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 June 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  45. ^ Leon Engelbrecht (4 January 2010). "Book Review: How SA built six atom bombs". Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 May 2010. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  47. ^ . astronautix.com. Archived from the original on August 20, 2016. Retrieved 2016-07-08.

External links edit

  • "Israel Missile Update", , Wisconsin project, 2005, archived from the original on 2006-07-19.
  • "Jericho 3 the main Israel ballistic missile", , 2006, archived from the original on 2007-11-14, retrieved 2007-10-20
  • (PDF), NDIA, archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-10-09.
  • (PDF) (graphics), vol. 1, NDIA, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03, retrieved 2009-09-04.

jericho, missile, jericho, hebrew, יריחו, romanized, yericho, general, designation, given, loosely, related, family, deployed, ballistic, missiles, developed, israel, since, 1960s, name, taken, from, first, development, contract, jericho, signed, between, isra. Jericho Hebrew יריחו romanized Yericho is a general designation given to a loosely related family of deployed ballistic missiles developed by Israel since the 1960s The name is taken from the first development contract for the Jericho I signed between Israel and Dassault in 1963 with the codename as a reference to the Biblical city of Jericho As with most Israeli unconventional weapons systems exact details are classified though there are observed test data public statements by government officials and details in open literature especially about the Shavit satellite launch vehicle The later Jericho family development is related to the Shavit and Shavit II space launch vehicles believed to be derivatives of the Jericho II IRBM and that preceded the development of the Jericho III ICBM 1 The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US concluded that the Shavit could be adapted as an ICBM carrying a 500 kg warhead over 7 500 km 2 Additional insight into the Jericho program was revealed by the South African series of missiles of which the RSA 3 are believed to be licensed copies of the Jericho II Shavit and the RSA 4 that used part of these systems in their stack with a heavy first stage Subsequent to the declaration and disarming of the South African nuclear program 3 the RSA series missiles were offered commercially as satellite launch vehicles resulting in the advertised specifications becoming public knowledge 4 The civilian space launch version of the Jericho the Shavit was studied in an air launched version piggybacked on a Boeing 747 similar to a U S experimental launch of the Minuteman ICBM from a C 5 Galaxy 5 Contents 1 Jericho I 2 Jericho II 3 Jericho III 4 South African RSA Series 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksJericho I editJericho I was first publicly identified being an operational short range ballistic missile system in late 1971 It was 13 4 metres 44 ft long 0 8 m 2 ft 7 in in diameter weighing 6 5 tonnes 14 000 lb It had a range of 500 km 310 mi and a CEP of 1 000 m 3 300 ft and it could carry a payload estimated at 400 kilograms 880 lb It was intended to carry a nuclear warhead 6 7 Due to Israel s ambiguity over its nuclear weapons program the missile is classified as a ballistic missile Initial development was in conjunction with France Dassault provided various missile systems from 1963 and a type designated MD 620 was test fired in 1965 French co operation was halted by an arms embargo in January 1968 though 12 missiles had been delivered from France 7 Work was continued by IAI at the Beit Zachariah facility and the program cost almost 1 billion up to 1980 incorporating some U S technology 8 Despite some initial problems with its guidance systems it is believed that around 100 missiles of this type were produced In 1969 Israel agreed with the United States that Jericho missiles would not be used as strategic missiles with nuclear warheads until at least 1972 9 During the October 1973 Yom Kippur War with the initial surprise breakthroughs on both northern and southern borders by Arab armies the alarmed Defense Minister Moshe Dayan told Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir that this is the end of the third temple 10 He was warning of Israel s impending total defeat but Temple was also the code word for nuclear weapons 11 Dayan again raised the nuclear topic in a cabinet meeting warning that the country was approaching a point of last resort 12 That night Meir authorized the assembly of thirteen nuclear weapon physics packages to arm Jericho I missiles at Sdot Micha Airbase and F 4 aircraft at Tel Nof Airbase for use against Syrian and Egyptian targets 11 The range on the Jericho 1 is sufficient to strike major cities such as Damascus and Cairo from secured launch locations 13 They would be used if absolutely necessary to prevent total defeat but the preparation was done in an easily detectable way likely as a signal to the US 12 U S Secretary of State Henry Kissinger learned of the nuclear alert on the morning of October 9 That day in keeping with his deal and warning that prevented a preemptive Israeli attack on gathering Arab armies 14 President Nixon ordered the commencement of Operation Nickel Grass a U S airlift to replace all of Israel s material losses 15 Anecdotal evidence suggests that Kissinger told Sadat that the reason for the U S airlift was that the Israelis were close to going nuclear 11 It is believed that all Jericho 1 missiles were taken out of service in the 1990s and replaced with the longer range Jericho 2 The Jericho 1 missiles were housed in Zekharia located southeast of Tel Aviv and stationed in caves 16 Jericho II edit nbsp Shavit 3rd stageThe Jericho II YA 3 is a solid fuel two stage long range ballistic missile system and a follow on from the Jericho I project As many as 90 Jericho 2 missiles are currently based in caves near Zekharia Sdot Micha Airbase southeast of Tel Aviv 17 A request from Israel for 1 100 mile 1 770 km range Pershing II medium range ballistic missiles was rejected by the United States for inclusion as part of a military assistance incentive package offered in 1975 during negotiations over transferring the Sinai from Israeli to Egyptian control as part of a US brokered peace deal 18 Jericho II development began in 1977 and by 1986 there were reports of test firings According to Missilethreat a project of the George C Marshall Institute there is evidence the Jericho II originated as a joint Israeli Iranian project cooperation that ended with the loss of friendly relations after the 1979 Islamist revolution overthrew the Shah s rule 19 There was a series of test launches into the Mediterranean from 1987 to 1992 the longest at around 1 300 km mostly from the facility at Palmachim south of Tel Aviv Jane s reports that a test launch of 1 400 km is believed to have taken place from South Africa s Overberg Test Range in June 1989 20 The Jericho II is 14 0 m long and 1 56 m wide with a reported launch weight of 26 000 kg although an alternative launch weight of 21 935 kg has been suggested It has a 1 000 kg payload capable of carrying a considerable amount of high explosives or a 1 Megaton yield nuclear warhead It uses a two stage solid propellant engine with a separating warhead The missile can be launched from a silo a railroad flat car or a mobile vehicle This gives it the ability to be hidden moved quickly or kept in a hardened silo largely ensuring survival against any attack 21 It has an active radar homing terminal guidance system similar to that of the Pershing II for very accurate strikes 22 The Jericho II forms the basis of the three stage 23 ton Shavit NEXT satellite launcher first launched in 1988 from Palmachim From the performance of Shavit it has been estimated that as a ballistic missile it has a maximum range of about 7 800 km with a 500 kg payload 8 The Jericho II as an available Israeli counterattack option to Iraqi missile bombardment in the 1991 Gulf War is disputed Jane s at the time believed that Jericho II entered service in 1989 23 Researcher Seth Carus claims that according to an Israeli source the decision to operationally deploy the Jericho 2 was only made after 1994 several years after the Scud attacks had ended and a cease fire and disarmament regime were in place 24 Raytheon Technologies quoting Soviet intelligence archives showed them believing the Jericho 2 to have been fully developed weapon in 1989 but did not indicate when it was available for deployment 25 Investigators for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace accessed commercial satellite images of the Sdot Micha Airbase near Zachariah a suspected Jericho missile base comparison shows expansion between 1989 and 1993 of the type that would accommodate suspected Jericho II launchers and missiles 26 Such an expansion would be more consistent with a post 1991 deployment chronology Jericho III editIt is believed that the Jericho III YA 4 is a nuclear armed ICBM 27 28 that entered service in 2011 29 The Jericho III is believed to have two or three stages using solid propellant and having a payload of 1 000 to 1 300 kg The payload could be a single 750 kg 150 400 kiloton 29 nuclear warhead or two or three low yield MIRV warheads It has an estimated launch weight of 30 000 kg and a length of 15 5 m with a width of 1 56 m It may be similar to an upgraded and re designed Shavit space launch vehicle produced by Israel Aerospace Industries It probably has longer first and second stage motors It is estimated by missilethreat com that it has a range of 4 800 to 6 500 km 2 982 to 4 038 miles 30 though a 2004 missile proliferation survey by the Congressional Research Service put its possible maximum range at 11 500 km missile range is inversely proportional to payload mass 31 According to an official report that was submitted to the U S Congress in 2004 it may be that with a payload of 1 000 kg the Jericho III gives Israel nuclear strike capabilities within the entire Middle East Africa Europe Asia and almost all parts of North America as well as large parts of South America and North Oceania Missile Threat reports The range of the Jericho 3 also provides an extremely high impact speed for nearby targets enabling it to avoid any Anti Ballistic Missile ABM defenses that may develop in the immediate region 30 On 17 January 2008 Israel test fired a multi stage ballistic missile believed to be of the Jericho III type reportedly capable of carrying conventional or non conventional warheads 32 On 2 November 2011 Israel successfully test fired a missile believed to be an upgraded version of the Jericho III at Palmachim the long trail of smoke was seen throughout central Israel 33 Israel s intercontinental ballistic missile launchers are believed to be buried so deeply that they would survive a first strike nuclear attack 34 35 After a successful missile test launch conducted in early 2008 Israeli weapons expert General Itzhak Ben Israel former chairman of the Israeli Space Agency at the Ministry of Science said Everybody can do the mathematics we can reach with a rocket engine to every point in the world thus appearing to confirm Israel s new capability Israeli Ministry of Defense officials said that the 2008 test launch represented a dramatic leap in Israel s missile technologies 36 After a further test in 2013 Alon Ben David published this opinion in an article in Aviation Week on the missile s range and throw weight Reportedly Israel s Jericho III intermediate range ballistic missile is capable of carrying a 1 000 kg 2 204 lb warhead more than 5 000 km 37 Further tests conducted in July 2013 could have been for the Jericho 3 or possibly the Jericho 3A missile a follow up missile believed to have a new motor 29 South African RSA Series edit nbsp RSA 3The Jericho II Shavit SLV was also license produced in the Republic of South Africa as the RSA series of space launch vehicles and ballistic missiles The RSA 3 was produced by the Houwteq a discontinued division of Denel company at Grabouw 30 km east of Cape Town Test launches were made from Overberg Test Range near Bredasdorp 200 km east of Cape Town Rooi Els was where the engine test facilities were located Development continued even after South African renunciation 38 of its nuclear weapons for use as a commercial satellite launcher Development reached its height in 1992 a year after nuclear renunciation with 50 70 companies involved employing 1300 1500 people from the public and private sector 39 40 A much heavier ICBM or space launch vehicle the RSA 4 with a first stage in the Peacekeeper ICBM class but with Jericho 2 RSA 3 upper stage components was in development 41 the RSA 2 was a local copy of the Jericho II ballistic missile and the RSA 1 was a local copy of the Jericho II second stage for use as a mobile missile 4 42 43 44 The missiles were to be based on the RSA 3 and RSA 4 launchers that had already been built and tested for the South African space programme According to Al J Venter author of How South Africa Built Six Atom Bombs these missiles were incompatible with the available large South African nuclear warheads he claims that the RSA series being designed for a 340 kg payload would suggest a warhead of some 200 kg well beyond SA s best efforts of the late 1980s Venter s analysis is that the RSA series was intended to display a credible delivery system combined with a separate nuclear test in a final diplomatic appeal to the world powers in an emergency even though they were never intended to be used in a weaponized system together 45 Three rockets had already been launched into suborbital trajectories in the late 1980s in support of development of the RSA 3 launched Greensat Orbital Management System for commercial satellite applications of vehicle tracking and regional planning Following the decision in 1989 to cancel the nuclear weapons program the missile programs were allowed to continue until 1992 when military funding ended and all ballistic missile work was stopped by mid 1993 In order to join the Missile Technology Control Regime the government had to allow U S supervision of the destruction of key facilities applicable to both the long range missile and the space launch programmes 46 Variant Date of launch Launch location Payload Mission statusRSA 3 1989 June 1 Overberg Test Range nbsp RSA 3 d 1 Apogee 100 km 60 mi RSA 3 1989 July 6 Overberg Test Range nbsp RSA 3 2 Apogee 300 km 180 mi RSA 3 1990 November 19 Overberg Test Range nbsp RSA 3 3 Apogee 300 km 180 mi In June 1994 the RSA 3 RSA 4 South African satellite launcher program was cancelled 47 See also editShavit Military equipment of Israel List of missilesReferences edit Delivery systems Israel country profile NTI archived from the original on 2013 09 21 retrieved 2013 06 23 https unoda web s3 accelerate amazonaws com wp content uploads assets HomePage ODAPublications DisarmamentStudySeries PDF SS 23 pdf bare URL PDF Von Wielligh N amp von Wielligh Steyn L 2015 The Bomb South Africa s Nuclear Weapons Programme Pretoria Litera a b RSA 3 Archived from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Israel Studies Airborne Launch Scheme for Shavit Rocket SpaceNews com Retrieved 6 February 2015 Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons PDF Special National Intelligence Assessment CIA 23 August 1974 SNIE 4 1 74 retrieved 2008 01 20 a b Kissinger Henry A 16 July 1969 Israeli Nuclear Program PDF Memorandum for the President The White House retrieved 2009 07 26 a b Ballistic Missile Proliferation Canadian Security Intelligence Service March 23 2001 2000 09 Archived from the original on December 26 2010 Retrieved 2010 06 21 Kissinger Henry A 7 October 1969 Discussions with the Israelis on nuclear matters PDF Memorandum for the President The White House retrieved 2006 07 02 Violent Week The Politics of Death Time April 12 1976 Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved March 4 2011 a b c Farr Warner D The Third Temple s Holy of Holies Israel s Nuclear Weapons Counterproliferation Paper No 2 USAF Counterproliferation Center Air War College September 1999 a b Cohen Avner The Last Nuclear Moment The New York Times October 6 2003 Jericho 1 http nsarchive gwu edu NSAEBB NSAEBB98 octwar 10 pdf bare URL PDF October 9 1973 conversation 6 10 6 35 pm between Israeli Ambassador to the United States Simcha Dinitz Henry Kissinger Brent Scowcroft and Peter Rodman Transcript George Washington University National Security Archive Jericho 1 Jericho 2 Missiles for Peace Time September 29 1975 Archived from the original PDF on February 2 2008 Jericho 1 2 3 Missile ThreatYA 1 YA 3 YA 4 Missile Threat Archived from the original on 2013 01 21 Retrieved 2012 09 12 Shavit Israel Space launch vehicles Orbital Jane s Information Group 2009 04 21 Retrieved 2010 04 17 Jericho 2 MissileThreat 2008 01 17 Archived from the original on 2010 06 24 Retrieved 2010 06 21 5 Weapons That Make It Clear Israel Dominates the Sky 2018 04 14 Duncan Lennox ed Jericho 1 2 3 YA 1 YA 3 Israel Offensive Weapons Jane s Strategic Weapon Systems Issue 50 Surrey Jane s Information Group January 2009 pp 84 86 Seth W Carus Israeli Ballistic Missile Developments Testimony before the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States 15 July 1998 www fas org Raytheon Systems Company Missile Systems of the World Bremerton WA AMI International 1999 p 459 Joseph Cirincione Jon B Wolfsthal and Miriam Rajkumar Deadly Arsenals Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction Washington DC Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 2002 p 230 Identifying the specific deployment date of the Jericho 2 arsenal at Sdot Micha would provide knowledge about the operational status of the Jericho 2 during the 1991 Iraq War Probable test flights from Israel and South Africa around 1989 would indicate that the R amp D phase of the Jericho 2 project was nearing completion at that date Scale up and transition from the R amp D phase to the manufacturing phase would likely have required several years however as would necessary expansion or modifications to the Sdot Micha airbase Commercial satellite images showing expansion of the base would be consistent with a deployment date roughly 4 to 5 years after the initial test flights thus implying that the Jericho 2 was not yet deployed during the 1991 Iraq War Israel s new anti ballistic missile system phenomenal in testing The Times of Israel Report Israel improving nuclear abilities Ynetnews October 31 2011 a b c Jericho 3 a b Jericho 3 Missile Threat 2012 03 26 Archived from the original on 2013 01 21 Retrieved 2012 09 12 Missile Survey Ballistic and Cruise Missiles of Foreign Countries http www au af mil au awc awcgate crs rl30427 pdf Andrew Feickert Congressional Research Service March 5 2004 Azoulay Yuval 18 January 2008 Missile test will improve deterrence Haaretz Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 5 January 2012 Pfeffer Anshel 2 November 2011 IDF test fires ballistic missile in central Israel Haaretz Retrieved 3 November 2011 Plushnick Masti Ramit 2006 08 25 Israel Buys 2 Nuclear Capable Submarines The Washington Post Retrieved 2010 05 20 Missile survey ballistic amp cruise missiles of foreign countries PDF Cordesman Anthony H 2015 11 10 The Arab U S Strategic Partnership and the Changing Security Balance in the Gulf Joint and Asymmetric Warfare Missiles and Missile Defense Civil War and Non State Actors and Outside Powers Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 5899 0 Israel Tests Enhanced Ballistic Missile Aviation Week Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 6 February 2015 http www armscontrol org system files ACT South 20Africa 9601 pdf bare URL PDF Iain McFadyen The South African Rocket amp Space Programme Retrieved 6 February 2015 Guy Martin 25 January 2011 Satellites for South Africa Retrieved 6 February 2015 RSA 4 Archived from the original on 5 August 2014 Retrieved 6 February 2015 RSA Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2015 RSA 1 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2015 RSA 2 Archived from the original on 19 June 2012 Retrieved 6 February 2015 Leon Engelbrecht 4 January 2010 Book Review How SA built six atom bombs Retrieved 6 February 2015 Jericho Archived from the original on 29 May 2010 Retrieved 6 February 2015 South Africa astronautix com Archived from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved 2016 07 08 External links edit Israel Missile Update Countries Wisconsin project 2005 archived from the original on 2006 07 19 Jericho 3 the main Israel ballistic missile Sketchup 2006 archived from the original on 2007 11 14 retrieved 2007 10 20 Feasibility of Third World Advanced Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat PDF NDIA archived from the original PDF on 2006 10 09 Feasibility of Third World Advanced Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat PDF graphics vol 1 NDIA archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 retrieved 2009 09 04 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jericho missile amp oldid 1214576355 Jericho II, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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