December 28, 2024

The United States will send a Terminal High Altitude Area Defence battery to Israel, along with the troops needed to operate it, the Pentagon said today, even as Iran warned Washington to keep American military forces out of Israel.

Major General Pat Ryder, Pentagon spokesman, said in a statement that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin authorised the deployment of the THAAD battery at the direction of President Joe Biden.

He said the system will help bolster Israel’s air defences following Iran’s ballistic missile attacks on Israel in April and October.

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The delivery of the sophisticated missile defence system risks further inflaming the conflict in the Middle East despite widespread diplomatic efforts to avoid an all-out war.

The Iranian warning came in a post on the social platform X long associated with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who noted the earlier reports that the US was considering the deployment.

Israeli forces and Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon have been clashing since October 8, 2023, when the Lebanese militant group began firing rockets over the border in support of its ally Hamas in Gaza.

Late last month, Israel launched a ground invasion into Lebanon.

Israel is widely believed to be preparing a military response to Iran’s October 1 attack when it fired roughly 180 missiles into Israel.

In a brief exchange with reporters before leaving Florida today, Biden said he agreed to deploy the THAAD battery “to defend Israel”.

Biden spoke at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa after making a quick visit to see the damage caused by Hurricane Milton and meet with first responders, residents and local leaders.

Ryder, in his statement, said the deployment “underscores the United States’ ironclad commitment to the defence of Israel, and to defend Americans in Israel, from any further ballistic missile attacks by Iran”.

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It was not immediately clear where the THAAD battery was coming from or when it will arrive.

Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani, an Israeli army spokesman, declined to provide any timeline for its arrival, but thanked the US for its support.

The US deployed one of the batteries to the Middle East along with additional Patriot battalions to bolster protections for US forces in the region late last year after the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas militants.

Ryder also said that the US sent a THAAD battery to Israel in 2019 for training.

It also is not unusual for the US to have a limited number of troops in Israel, which the US considers a key regional ally.

There generally has been a small number of forces there consistently as well as routine rotational deployments for training and exercises.

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The THAAD will add another layer to Israel’s already significant air defences, which include separate systems designed to intercept long-range, medium-range and short-range threats.

Israel recently retired its US-made Patriot systems after decades of use.

According to an April report by the Congressional Research Service, the Army has seven THAAD batteries.

Generally each consists of six truck-mounted launchers, 48 interceptors, radio and radar equipment and requires 95 soldiers to operate.

The THAAD is considered a complementary system to the Patriot, but it can defend a wider area.

It can hit targets at ranges of 150km to 200km and is used to destroy short-range, medium-range and limited intermediate-range ballistic missile threats that are either inside or outside the atmosphere.

The US Missile Defence Agency is responsible for developing the system, but it is operated by the Army.

An eighth system has been funded and ordered and is expected to be in the field sometime next year.

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