Israel
tests SMS missile alerts as Iran chatter grows
Israel
on Sunday began testing an SMS system for warning the public of an
imminent missile attack as chatter over a possible strike on Iran
dominated the Israeli press headlines.
13
August, 2012
As
testing began, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel had
chalked up "a significant improvement" in its home front
defence capabilities, mentioning its highly-vaunted anti-missile
systems such as Iron Dome and Arrow 2.
"There
has been a significant improvement in our level of defence capacity
on the home front: with Iron Dome, with the Arrow, in terms of
protection and shelters, in advanced warning systems and in other
areas," he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting.
"But
all the threats which are directed towards the Israeli home front are
dwarved by another threat -- different in both its scope and its
essence. And so I repeat: Iran must never be allowed to get nuclear
weapons."
With
front page stories in two papers suggesting Tehran had made progress
towards the manufacture and assembly of a nuclear warhead, Israel’s
Home Front Command began final tests of the SMS warning system which
is expected to be operational by September. “The Home Front Command
will today start conducting nationwide testing of the ‘Personal
Message’ alert system, which will end on Thursday,” said a
statement indicating that SMS texts in Hebrew, Arabic, English and
Russian would be sent to subscribers on Israel’s three main
networks: Cellcom, Pelephone and Orange.
The
idea is that the SMS system could be used to warn the population of
an imminent missile attack by Iran or Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia
if Israel strikes Tehran’s nuclear facilities which it believes is
a front for developing a bomb.
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