In a little publicized event, Hezbollah forces downed an
Israeli early warning aerostat. The $230M
aerostat radar system, called Sky Dew, was designed to provide stand off early
warning of drones and aircraft with a claimed detection range of 250 km. The aerostat was located around 21 miles from
the Lebanon border and a Hezbollah drone penetrated Israeli airspace undetected
and, in some fashion, suicided on the aerostat, downing it.[1]
Aerostats are a frequent suggestion from commenters on this
blog who believe it can provide nearly unlimited detection of all enemy assets
in the global hemisphere. Okay, a touch
of hyperbole there but not much.
Proponents ascribe nearly miraculous characteristics to these glorified
blimps.
The incident illustrates a couple of noteworthy points:
By the way, just to illustrate that everyone publishes
propaganda, here’s Israel’s statement about the impact of the aerostat downing.
Clearly, the Israeli admiral was just putting out pure
propaganda. Hey, Ukraine does it. Russia does it. The US does it. China does it. Everyone puts out propaganda. One of the reasons this blog exists is to
analyze these things and separate the propaganda from the facts.
Aerostat … you had one job and you failed miserably.
___________________________
- No technology works as advertised. The aerostat had one job: detect drones … and it failed completely. The claimed detection range is 250 km. Apparently, the actual detection range is about a foot. The reality is that all technology is overhyped and will perform poorly in combat. This emphasizes the necessity for realistic testing … which the Navy steadfastly refuses to do.
- Many people believe radar is a miracle of detection. It is not. It is useful, to be sure, but suffers spectacular detection failures on a regular basis. It is not God’s all-seeing eye as so many believe.
- Aerostats are non-stealthy, non-maneuverable, and utterly defenseless. They are a target waiting to be destroyed unless one provides a robust, layered, defensive support scheme.
“Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, Israel’s military spokesman, confirmed that a Hezbollah drone had scored a direct hit on Sky Dew but added there were no casualties and that it “had no impact to the IDF's aerial situational awareness capability in the area”.[1]Okay … so if the loss of the aerostat ‘had no impact’ then why did you spend $230M on it since, according to you, admiral, its presence, or absence, has no impact?
https://www.msn.com/en-ae/news/middleeast/hezbollah-blinds-israeli-defences-with-drone-strike-on-sky-dew-airship/ar-BB1mz3UT?ocid=BingNewsSerp