Haifa / Tel Aviv: Israeli company Elbit Systems has been awarded new contracts worth a total of approximately $150 million to supply its advanced Directed Infrared Countermeasures (DIRCM) systems.
Under the first contract, Elbit Systems will equip a European country’s aircraft fleet with its cutting edge DIRCM technology, providing an advanced layer of protection for high value airborne platforms. The additional orders include the supply of DIRCM systems for the transport aircraft fleet of European NATO member countries, enhancing operational safety and survivability for strategic airlift missions. These contracts add to the growing number of agreements the company has secured across Europe and globally for the protection of high value aircraft fleets.
Elbit Systems’ J-MUSIC DIRCM system is specifically designed to protect aircraft from manpads. The system integrates cutting-edge laser technology with state-of-the-art imaging capabilities. It is deployed on a wide range of military and commercial aircraft worldwide, providing proven, high-quality protection and strengthening its position as the preferred solution for safeguarding airborne platforms.
With its ability to counter evolving threats, Elbit Systems’ DIRCM systems deliver reliable performance, flexibility, and seamless integration across multiple aircraft types, enhancing the safety of critical missions and the personnel who carry them out.
Oren Sabag, General Manager of Elbit Systems ISTAR & EW commented, “The continued trust the European and global community places in Elbit Systems’ DIRCM self-protection solutions reflects the company’s growing reputation as an innovative airborne defence technology provider, offering effective protection for aircraft and personnel against the most advanced threats.”
As reported by Raksha Anirveda, in recent years there is a renewed interest in systems that can protect aircraft from shoulder launched missiles. Israeli companies that make these systems have been contacted mainly by operators of business jets that fly in areas where these missiles are in the hands of terror organisations.
Israeli sources told Raksha Anirveda that the demand can be partially explained by the great number of humanitarian flights connected with the war in Ukraine that are performed by business jets.
According to a report in the website of the arms control association, despite the global campaign to counter the illicit proliferation of Man Portable Air Defence Systems ( MANPADS ), the Small Arms Survey has identified reports of illicit MANPADS in over 32 countries and territories since 2011. These reports include the imagery of dozens of advanced systems acquired by non-state actors including Russian proxies in Ukraine prior to Russia’s 2022 invasion and ethnic armed groups in Myanmar.
Although the vast majority of MANPADS are in national stockpiles, terrorists and other non-state actors have acquired the anti-aircraft missiles through deliberate transfers, the black market, or theft.
Israel was confronted with the threat of MANAPDS in 2002 when two such rockets , were launched in the direction of an Israeli passenger aircraft that took off from Mombasa in Kenya. The rockets missed the aircraft and it continued its flight and landed safely in Tel Aviv.
Following this incident, the Israel ministry of defence asked the defence industry to find a solution to the threat. The first system was based on dispensing decoy flares but soon it was followed by a more advanced one.
The Elbit Systems MUSIC protection systems was the first operational systems that was installed on Israeli passenger aircraft of the Israeli airlines. The Directed Infra-Red Counter Measure (DIRCM) systems developed by Elbit Systems are made to defend aircraft from ground-to-air missiles that home on the heat of the aircraft’s engines.
The different versions of the Elbit MUSIC systems combines a compact, extremely dynamic mirror turret, a high frame rate thermal camera, and cutting edge laser technology. According to the Israeli company, this innovative combination provides efficient, dependable, and reasonably priced protection for all kinds of aircraft under all operating conditions.
Elbit Systems says that the systems can be easily linked with any kind of MWS (missile warning system) and other defensive aids on any kind of aircraft. The Israeli government has chosen Elbit Systems’ DIRCM systems to safeguard Israeli commercial airliners. The Israeli Air Force has chosen them to safeguard military platforms; NATO has chosen them to safeguard the multi-national A330 MRTT fleet programme and the German Air Force has chosen them to safeguard the A400M national programme.
-The writer is an Israel-based freelance journalist. The views expressed are of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of Raksha Anirveda





