Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta IDF. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta IDF. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 16 de junio de 2017

IAF: female squadron commander "not far off"


According to the army, there has been a 5% increase in motivation –as measured by requests – of female recruits as compared to last year’s enlistment, and the army is expecting a spike in female combat recruits in 2017 which will see over 2,500 female combat soldiers enlisting, a senior IDF officer in the Manpower Directorate told the Jerusalem PostBut one of the main challenges for the next generation of pilots is to train for the next war which will be completely different than in the past. Female pilots need to be very strong mentally to finish their course and “overcome all obstacles that may be in front of you,” he said.



Not in vain, a recent Defense Ministry report by IDF Ombudsman, Yitzhak Brick, found a significant decrease in the motivation of women to serve in combat positions. According to Brick, there is a discrepancy between the expectations of soldiers and the reality they face once placed in operational battalions which led to the decrease in the motivation of fighters. However, the senior Manpower Directorate officer disagreed with the findings of the report, telling the Post that the motivation in female combat soldiers continues to increase as well as the need for them to fill positions that have opened up due to the shortening of army service. “There is a significant jump in the recruitment of women into combat roles, and this is all due to their motivation to serve in those positions,” he said, adding that 15% of women volunteer to serve as long as their male counterparts. “That’s something we didn’t see in previous years. We should have put women in these roles even if we didn’t shorten the service period,” he said, stressing that the army “gives them the opportunity and they succeed. With women enlisting in increasingly greater numbers for IDF combat positions, a female Israel Air Force squadron commander is not far off."

jueves, 26 de junio de 2014

Skylark for tracking supects


In this video we can see how IDF forces use the Skylark UAV to track a suspect as a part of Operation Brother's Keeper.



IDF troops continue to search relentlessly for the three kidnapped teens.

viernes, 26 de abril de 2013

IDF shoots down drone from Lebanon opposite Haifa coast

 
At around 13:30 P.M., the Air Force control system identified the UAV, and launched fighter jets into the air. An F-16 jet then fired an air-to-air missile and downed the unmanned aircraft. (Read more)

 

viernes, 15 de febrero de 2013

IDF boots on the ground get better eye in the sky

The Sky Rider, a 7-kilogram UAV system that cost NIS 200 million to develop, is intended to aid a battalion on the ground by providing aerial intelligence images in real time. The Israel Defense Forces is currently in the final stages of testing the second generation of Sky Riders – a mini, unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) system intended to aid a battalion on the ground, providing it with aerial intelligence images in real time. The Sky Rider weighs about 7 kilograms and is equipped with cameras that produce video images of the battlefield where the battalion is active. This is the only tool that provides forces in the field with such information. The tests are being carried out by Elbit Systems, the main contractor in the project – in which about NIS 200 million has been invested – in cooperation with the IDF. (Read more)
 
 

lunes, 20 de agosto de 2012

Israel: Nuevos UAVs Elbit Skilark I LE para el Comando de Fuerzas Terrestres


En los próximos meses, el Comando de Fuerzas Terrestres del ejército israelí va a dotarse de un nuevo modelo del conocido UAV Skylark I-LE, desarrollado por la empresa Elbit Systems (Haifa, Israel).


El nuevo modelo del Skylark I-LE incluye un novedoso sistema de encriptación que lo hace invulnerable a un hipotético ciberataque. Tambien cuenta con un sistema de control que permite a los comandantes el relevo de distintos UAVs durante una misma misión, sin por ello interrumpir en modo alguno el seguimiento del objetivo.


Básicamente se trata de un UAV portátil, de tan sólo 3 metros de envergadura y 7,5 Kg de peso total al despegue, diseñado para misiones de reconocimiento. La carga de pago consta de camaras CCD (Charge-Copupled Device) para luz de día, y cámaras FLIR (Forward-Looking Infra Red) para operaciones nocturnas.


Puede ser lanzado a mano, y cuenta con una autonomía de 3 horas a una altitud de hasta 15.000 pies (4.572 metros) con un radio de acción de 20-40 Km. Su hermano mayor Skylark I ha venido siendo suministrado durante los ultimos dos años a los batallones de tierra del ejercito israelí como parte del programa "Sky Rider", puesto en marcha para dotar al ejército de tierra de un sistema propio de vigilancia aerea, no dependiente de la Fuerza Aerea Israelí.
 
David del Fresno
Móvil: +34 681284196