‘The Phoenix’: IAF unveils new advanced remotely piloted aircraft system

August 4, 2022 by Aryeh Savir - TPS
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The Israeli Air Force (IAF) unveiled this week the 144th “Phoenix” squadron which will operate Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS), and deploy new and advanced technologies focused on intelligence collection and support for the maneuvering ground units.

An IAF drone. (IDF)

The Phoenix squadron will be the first to operate the “Spark,” a new and advanced aircraft, as part of the “Storm Clouds” array that will be established in the IDF. The exact nature of these systems is classified.

The “Storm Clouds” array, with the “Spark” at its centre, is “expected to provide capabilities to the air and ground forces, to produce information fusion, quick closing of circuits and operational effectiveness,” the IDF stated Tuesday. “This is a new and groundbreaking capability that will change the face of the battlefield and be the opening gate to the fifth generation of the drone world”.

The original “Phoenix” squadron was established in 1972 as a combat squadron that flew Kfir and F-16 fighters over the years. In 2005 the squadron was closed. The squadron was now re-established as an RPAS squadron that will operate out of the Hazor base in the north.

The IDF noted that establishing the “Phoenix” squadron is an implementation of the Chief of Staff’s decision to increase the IDF’s remote manned aircraft fleet in general and for ground maneuvers in particular.

“The squadron is part of the strengthening of the IDF’s equipping with advanced capabilities to expose the enemy,” the military said.

During a launching ceremony on Monday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Col. Aviv Kochavi said the new squadron is “more innovative in all its forms of operation, as a squadron has never been established in the Air Force for multi-armed needs. The squadron embodies innovative concepts that will break through everything we knew in the past and take us into the future.”

“We need a squadron because the reality on the ground is changing, the enemy is in the urban space and is more difficult to locate,” he explained.

In December 2019, the Israeli Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, an Israeli defence technology company, won a classified tender from the Ministry of Defense worth billions of shekels for supplying intelligence systems to the IDF. The contract includes the development and supply of intelligence collection systems, means of control, and more, which are to be used by the air force, the intelligence division, and the ground units.

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