I doubt the Israel would buy from Russia, i.e.,
the state who provided advanced weapon systems, and trained personnel to operate these systems, to Israel's enemies in several wars. But AgustaWestland, Dassault, Eurocopter, Eurofighter, and/or Saab
will benefit from this refusal.
Pelranius wrote:Anyways, Israel already has a bunch of Apaches. If they want to shoot up Palestinians, I'm sure their UAVs would be suitable for the job.
Spoken like someone oblivious to a UAV's limitations. If you want a UAV to be
useful against enemies with air defense systems more advanced than "Shoot your AK-47 up in the air, and pray for a lucky shot that brings down the enemy aircraft," e.g., MANPADS, you
must install electronic warfare and other
very expensive systems that'll raise the UAV's price to that of a
manned aircraft.
The UAV's advantage is loiter time, i.e., you don't need to land the aircraft to change a tired flight crew for a fresh one. The disadvanges are
1) Reduced field of vision- I've yet to see a UAV with
two independent cameras that can look in
two different directions at once, like a manned aircraft's flight crew can.
2) Related to #1, difficult takeoffs and landings- the USAF lost
1/3 of its Predators because of these difficulties.
3) Difficulties when the ground station is unable to maintain communications w/ the UAV. Reasons include
terrain inhibiting line-of-sight communications- see this accident involving a
US Customs and Border Patrol Reaper- and jamming from enemy EW systems.
4) Difficulties w/ interoperability, i.e., operating a UAV alongside manned aircraft. It'll be years before an Army or Marine Corps officer will trust an MQ-8 Fire Scout to escort a Blackhawk to a
POI's house, and then provide air support while infantry rappel from the Blackhawk and storm the house.
5) Vulnerability to enemy fighters- you must be
insane or
delusional to think a UAV can beat a
manned aircraft in a dogfight, considering #1 means the UAV pilot can lose track of a maneuvering airborne target, with ridiculous ease.