The United States has deployed its advanced THAAD missile defence system temporarily to Israel for a joint military exercise, the first
of its kind, officials said on 4 March 2019.
The two countries confirmed the deployment, with Israel's
military stressing it was ‘not related to any specific current event’.
It is the first such exercise in Israel, although the two
allies hold regular joint war games. No dates have been announced for the
manoeuvres.
Israel has its own missile defence system, but the exercise
aims in part to examine how to incorporate THAAD so that ‘we are ready for any
challenges in the future’, military spokesman Jonathan Conricus said.
It will also allow the US military to practice the rapid
deployment of THAAD across the globe, officials said.
‘We see this as an opportunity to practice the integration
of advanced American air defence systems into the Israeli air force air defence
array,’ Conricus told journalists. ‘The THAAD system is considered to be one of
the most advanced of its kind in the world,’ the Israeli spokesman said.
The exercise with THAAD, or Terminal High Altitude Area
Defence, involves more than 200 US military personnel and its components
include radars and launching systems, Conricus said.
Components and personnel have come from the United States
and Italy, Conricus said.
The THAAD will be deployed in southern Israel, but officials
declined to say specifically where and for how long.
Israel's enemies in the region include Iran and Lebanon's
Tehran-backed Hezbollah, both of which are supporting President Bashar al-Assad
in neighbouring Syria.
THAAD is capable of destroying short, medium and
intermediate-range missiles.
In 2017, the US government approved its sale to Saudi
Arabia, providing Riyadh with state-of-the-art capabilities that could thwart
an Iranian rocket attack.
It had already been supplied to Saudi Arabia's neighbours
Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
Its deployment by the US military in South Korea as defence
against North Korean drew protests from Beijing, which feared its sensors would
be capable of penetrating Chinese air space and upset the balance of power.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the joint
exercise, calling it ‘additional testimony to the commitment of the US to the
security of Israel’.