With
the successful launch Monday, June 11, 2007 of its Ofeq-7 imaging
satellite, Israel sustained its essential intelligence asset for
any war contingency. According to Israel's Ministry of Defense,
the new satellite was launched westward over the Mediterranean
by the local-made Shavit three-stage solid fuel vehicle from the
Palmachim aerospace base at 02:15 IT, June 11. The first images
from space should be received within 24 to 72 hours from launch.
The launching sequence was monitored under strict secrecy, but
with growing tension by the ground crew, which had witnessed the
failure of the Ofeq-6 launch, was destroyed on Monday 6 September
2004, when the third stage of the Shavit rocket launching malfunctioned
a few minutes after launch.
Once firmly deployed in space and functioning, Ofeq-7 will join
its aging predecessor, Ofeq-5, still functioning in orbit, one year
beyond its expected life span. Analysts claim, that the new satellite
will fill the gap in covering long-distant areas, rendering real-time
intelligence on high priority targets, such as Iran. Weighing 300
kilograms, the Ofek 7 will orbit earth from up to 600 kilometers
in space. It has a minimum lifespan of four-years. Like its predecessors,
Ofeq-7 will be able to store images taken during its flight and
download them via downlink when flying over the IAI-run ground station.
The
Ministry of Defense’s (MoD’s) intensified space drive
comes amid increasing concern here about Iran’s nuclear development
program, Syria’s contradictory intimations toward peace talks
or war, and the support both nations provide to Hizbollah, Hamas
and other designated terrorist groups. Three of the new imaging
satellites - Ofeq-7, the TechSAR radar satellite and the planned
Ofeq-8 - have been on the MoD manifest for years. Satellite imaging
services are also available from Imagesat International, a Cyprus-based
joint venture company partly owned by IAI, offering services of
the Eros A and Eros B satellites which are also based on Ofeq technology.
According to foreign sources, the Israel Ministry of Defense has
acquired exclusive rights to the satellite's photographs of Middle
Eastern countries. But sources here said heightened regional tensions
have already compelled near-term, multiyear funding for at least
one additional spacecraft, dubbed Ofeq-Next. Moreover, the MoD plans
to enter into a partnership with Spacecom, based here, so that the
planned Amos-4 multiband communications satellite will serve the
commercial market as well as military needs, reports close to MOD
sources indicate.
While refusing to divulge detailed performance data of the new
satellite, defense officials claim that Ofeq-7 has by far the most
advanced satellite Israel has sofar launched into space. Officials
said that it was superior to the Eros B satellite - launched in
April 2006 - which has the ability to spot images on the ground
as small as 70 centimeters. The officials refused to give exact
data as to what this superiority means. "With this launch we
have improved Israel's operational capabilities by dozens of percent,"
said Brig.-Gen. Haim Eshet, director of Space Programming at the
MOD's Defense Research and Development Directorate (DRDD). "This
is due to the improvements made to the satellite and also since
we now have better coverage in the skies."
Israel has accelerated its activities in space reconnaissance since
the Steinitz Knesset committee on Israeli investigating intelligence
in advance of the 2003 war in Iraq mentioned the crucial contribution
of satellite imagery to reliable intelligence, and included a recommendation
"to expedite Israel's espionage satellite development as a
long-term visual intelligence infrastructure in the regional strategic
balance".
One
of the prime targets for Israel’s space intelligence is the
growing threat posed by the Tehran regime, which has increased recently,
with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s defiant speech. Israeli
military intelligence has placed highest priority on detailed monitoring
of Iranian efforts to obtain chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons,
as well as long-range delivery systems and high resolution imagery
has become one of its major intelligence and reconnaissance assets.
Some of the known technologies involved include Multi-spectral
imagery, which can take images in different wavelengths, including
color. Analysis of images at different wavelengths can indicate
the presence of hidden objects. El-Op, the payload developer is
also working on a hyperspectral imaging sensor which will have a
larger spectral band yielding even more imaging data. Ofeq-7 is
based on the IAI's OPSAT 2000 design (shown on the top of this page).
IAI is already working on its new OPSAT 3000 design (the satellite
is shown in the photo above and a model depicted at the bottom of
this page), utilizing IAI common bus (also employed for the Tecsar
and Eros C). This bus will support a new telescope, yielding greatly
improved imaging without significantly increasing the weight of
the spacecraft. It will employ PAN (pancromatic) and multi-spectral
(MS) imaging cameras, sharing a common optical assembly and capable
of simultaneous operation, including PAN-sharpening functions.

IAI is also planning to launch the TECSAR satellite (pictured above)
, equipped with new synthetic aperture radar developed by Elta.
This satellite is scheduled for launch with an Indian launch vehicle
during this summer. It will provide Israel with all weather, day
and night high resolution radar imaging capability.
But Israel is not alone in its space activities. In fact, Space
has become an integral component of modern military planning and
the Middle East is no exception to its ambitious quest in space.
For a related analysis - read Iran
Challenges Israel's domination of the 'high ground' of Space
- by David Eshel
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