Aerospace & Defense How U. S. Can Leverage Israel-Cyprus Iron Dome Sale To Get Ukraine More Arms Paul Iddon Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
I write mostly about Middle East affairs, politics and history. New! Follow this author to stay notified about their latest stories. Got it! Aug 23, 2022, 11:14am EDT | New! Click on the conversation bubble to join the conversation Got it! Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Cyprus has reportedly secured a landmark agreement to buy the Iron Dome air defense missile system from Israel.
The deal gives the United States a unique opportunity to push Nicosia to transfer its older Russian air defenses to Ukraine. The Iron Dome could significantly bolster the small island republic’s limited air defenses, which currently consist of Russian-built short-range 9K330 Tor and medium-range 9K37 Buk air defense missile systems and French-built short-range Mistral missiles. While the Iron Dome is well-known for its combat use in Israeli service against small rockets fired from the Gaza Strip, it is also an effective system against drones.
06 August 2022, Israel, Sderot: The Iron Dome anti-missile system fires an interceptor missile as . . .
[+] rockets are launched from Gaza towards Israel. Photo: Ilia Yefimovich/dpa (Photo by Ilia Yefimovich/picture alliance via Getty Images) dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images Cyprus most likely chose the Iron Dome to enable it to defend itself against potential Turkish drone threats . Turkey already deployed military drones to Cyprus’s breakaway north in December 2019.
Those same drones have repeatedly demonstrated their capability to destroy Russian-built air defense systems in Syria, Libya, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Ukraine. The U. S.
has already urged Cyprus to transfer its sizable arsenal of Russian weaponry to Ukraine . And Nicosia has already expressed a willingness to do so if it could acquire equivalent systems to replace them. Even though the Iron Dome is a short-range system, a handful of batteries could protect the island’s entire airspace from various airborne threats.
That, along with its sophisticated active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, doubtlessly make it an adequate replacement for existing Cypriot Buks and Tors. MORE FOR YOU American Airlines Pilots Say Operations Managers Must Go After Summer Breakdowns The U. S.
Air Force Is Gradually Rebuilding Its B-52 Bombers From The Rivets Out An American Bomber Visited Malaysia. A Bizarre Mix Of Local Jets Rose To Meet It. The U.
S. could insist that Cyprus acquire the Iron Dome to completely replace, rather than complement, its older Russian systems and transfer those systems to Ukraine. Military vehicles carry radars of the short-range Russian-made Tor-M1 anti-aircraft missiles during .
. . [+] Cyprus Independence Day military parade in Nicosia 01 October 1999.
Thousands of people lined the streets to watch the military display in which Cyprus showed off its newly-acquired Tor-M1 missile launchers and radars for the first time. (Photo credit should read HASAN MROUE/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images Washington has more than enough leverage to compel Nicosia to do so. The U.
S. imposed an arms embargo on Cyprus back in November 1987, which it only partially lifted in September 2020. Furthermore, the U.
S. helped Israel develop the Iron Dome, which, as already noted in the Israeli press , means that any sale of the system to a third country “cannot take place without the approval of both developer countries. ” The U.
S. has refused to grant export licenses for foreign weapons systems containing U. S.
components. A multi-billion dollar sale of Turkish-built T129 ATAK attack helicopters to Pakistan was repeatedly delayed due to the U. S.
refusal to grant such licenses. Islamabad eventually pulled out and the deal fell through. On the other hand, the U.
S. granted the necessary licenses that allowed Turkey to sell those helicopters to the Philippines. Cyprus knows that the U.
S. could easily complicate or even compromise its Iron Dome acquisition. However, if Nicosia agrees to willingly transfer its Russian missiles to Ukraine, then Washington could become more open to completely lifting the arms embargo and allow Cyprus to buy defensive U.
S. systems, possibly including short-range air defenses. The above-mentioned partial lifting of the embargo in 2020 was little more than a symbolic gesture since it only allowed Nicosia to buy “non-lethal” military gear such as bulletproof vests.
U. S. political support for the Iron Dome sale could also reduce any serious reaction or protestations from Turkey, which is presently patching up its relations with Israel.
Therefore, Cyprus could have an awful lot to gain by offloading its Russian missiles. Follow me on Twitter . Paul Iddon Editorial Standards Print Reprints & Permissions.
From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/pauliddon/2022/08/23/how-us-can-leverage-israel-cyprus-iron-dome-sale-to-get-ukraine-more-arms/