Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Comparing Israel and Iran on War Making Capability Compared

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/03/2012326131343853636.html?utm_content=automate&utm_campaign=Trial6&utm_source=NewSocialFlow&utm_term=plustweets&utm_medium=MasterAccount

A look at the comparative strengths of the Iranian and Israeli forces reveals discrepancies in both equipment, capabilities and numbers of enlisted troops.

Iran has a population ten times larger than Israel's, from which to draw its armed forces, but much of its military hardware is of dubious condition - due to the arms embargo in place since in various forms since 1979.

Many Iranian tanks and planes use older technology with varying levels of maintenance and modernity, says David Roberts, deputy director at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI). The country's most recent major engagement was an almost decade-long war with Iraq in the 1980s, after which Iran has credibly maintained a "no first-strike doctrine" along with a code of "plausible deniability" for irregular military actions.

"In a very general sense, it's no secret or cutting-edge analysis that Israel's military is the best-equipped and best-trained in the whole region," says Roberts. "But some sections of [Iran's military] are battle-tested.". "Then again, it's not Iran's conventional forces which are the concern [for the US and its allies]. The Revolutionary Guards are better-paid and organised [than the rest of Iran's military]," Roberts told Al Jazeera. "Their Quds Force and naval capabilities are a big unknown - especially the asymmetrical way that they would fight with these unusual weapons, in small decentralised units."

Any direct confrontation between Israel and Iran would likely involve long-distance aircraft, air-defence weaponry, small naval craft and ballistic missiles.

   Military data
                              Iran                Israel
Total population     78.9 million     7.5 million
Males 16-49          23    million    1.8 million
Active forces         545,000         187,000
Reserve duty         650,000         565,000

Israel has 176,500 personnel on active service, made up of 133,000 in the army, which includes 107,000 conscripts. The navy has 9,500 sailors on active duty and there are 34,000 in the air force, as well as a total reserve force of 565,000.

Defence budget         $9.2 billion     $13.5 billion

Service is compulsory for most Jewish and Druze citizens starting at 18 years old.

Iran reprotedly has more than 523,000 personnel on active service, comprising 350,000 in the army, including 220,000 conscripts. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, viewed as the most loyal guardians of the ruling system, has a further 125,000 soldiers.

Young Iranian men are obliged to serve 18 months in the military service when they turn 19 years old, and volunteers begin at 18 years old. A paramilitary volunteer militia, the Basij Forces (literally "Mobilisation of the Oppressed"), takes members from age 15.

There are 18,000 Iranian naval personnel and 30,000 air force personnel, including 12,000 in air defence.

Tanks, subs and planes

The Israeli army has more than 3,000 tanks, reported to include 441 Merkava MkI, 455 Merkava MkII, 454 Merkava MkIII, 175 Merkava MkIV and 206 Centurion models.

Army weaponry
                                       Iran         Israel
Tanks                              1,613     3,501
Towed artillery                 2,010       456
Self-propelled guns             865       620
Multiple rocket systems      200       138
Mortars                           5,000       750
Anti-tank weapons          1,400       900
Anti-aircraft weapons      1,701       200
Logistical vehicles         12,000     7,684

The Israeli military also has, according to Reuters, some 10,484 armoured personnel carriers (APCs) and 5,432 artillery pieces, including 620 motorised and 456 towed pieces.

Iran's military reportedly has 1,613 tanks, including some 100 locally produced Zulfiqar, about 100 ageing British-made Chieftain Mk3 and Mk5 models obtained before the 1979 revolution, alongside 150 US-made M-60A1s - as well as 480 Soviet-designed T-72 tanks and 540 T-54/T-55 models, according to the Reuters news agency.

Tehran also has about 640 APCs, in addition to 8,196 artillery pieces - of which 2,010 are towed and more than 800 are motorised.

The Israeli Air Force established a reputation for its precision during the 1967 Middle East war, but was heavily criticised in the wake of thousands of civilian deaths in the West Bank, Gaza and Lebanon in subsequent decades. It has 460 combat-capable aircraft, with 168 fighters, including 27 Boeing F15A Eagle, seven F15B and 90 F16A Fighting Falcons. The fleet also includes 227 ground attack fighters and 65 attack aircraft, in addition to nine tanker/transport aircraft and 77 other transport aircraft.

Naval power
                                      Iran     Israel
Total navy ships              261     64
Merchant marine              74      10
Major ports/terminals          3      4
Aircraft carriers                  0      0
Destroyers                         3      3
Submarines                      19      3
Frigates                             5      0
Patrol craft                    198    42
Amphibious assault craft  26      0

Israel maintains 81 attack helicopters, including 30 Bell AH-1E/AH-1F Cobra and 30 Boeing AH-64A Apache gunships, as well as 200 transport helicopters. Its air defence capabilities include 48 towed surface-to-air missile launchers (SAM) and 920 guns, as compared with the 279 SAM missiles reportedly held by Iran.

Iran's air force is believed to contain some 336 combat-capable aircraft, including 189 fighter aircraft such as 20 US-made F5B jets, 60 F5E Tiger IIs and Russian-made 35 Mig-29A jets. The force is also understoof to have 108 ground attack aircraft, among them both Iranian and Russian-built craft, many of which were reportedly taken from Iraq. The country's 116 transport aircraft were made in China, Netherlands and the US, among other places. The IRIAF also has 30 Bell 214C maritime reconnaissance helicopters.

Missile power

Iran's approximately 1,000 strategic missiles, believed capable of striking throughout the Gulf and beyond, are reportedly controlled by the Revolutionary Guards, and include around 300 short-range ballistic missiles, including Iranian-made Shahab-1 (Scud-B), Shahab-2 (Scud-C), as well as Tondar-69 (CSS-8).Tehran has also domestically produced Shahab-3 strategic intermediate-range ballistic missiles (IRBM), with a reported range of up to 1,000km, the Ghadr-1 with an estimated 1,600km range and a Shahab-3 variant known as Sajjil-2 with a reported range of up to 2,400km, according to Reuters reports. If true, Israel and much of eastern Europe would be within range.

"All of this is shrouded in mystery and not really transparent," says Bokhari of Stratfor. "We don't have a very good understanding of what Iran can actually do. There is a greater likelihood of Iranian missiles accurately targeting Arab states in the Gulf, but Israel is far away."Bokhari suggests that Iran's power lies in its "ability to disrupt the global economy" and keeping the other side from unleashing a military campaign via "associated costs that are too high ... The issue right now is Iran's asymmetric capabilities, and future nuclear capabilities".

During war games in early January 2012, Iran tested medium-range surface-to-air missiles in the Gulf which were domestically designed and built. The launch coincided with increasing international pressure over the country's atomic programme.

While Iran has denied it is in the process of producing nuclear weapons, Israel is widely believed to have nuclear capability, despite its policy

of "nuclear ambiguity". Delivery means include Jericho-2 intermediate-range ballistic missiles and Jericho-1 short-range missiles. It is believed to have in the range of 200 nuclear warheads that it can launch with intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM).

On November 2, 2011, Israel test-fired an ICBM thought to be an upgraded Jericho-3 from the Palmachim base, with a potential payload of 1,000kg and capable of reaching as far as South America or Oceania. The next day, Israel staged a mass civil defence drill simulating a missile attack in the centre of the country.

Despite the conventional military advantage to Israel, Roberts, the security specialist at RUSI, believes that "the Israelis don't have enough planes and enough of the right bombs to significantly set back whatever is going on in Iran ... I don't think it's a very sensible thing to do.

There should be no [illusion] that Israel can unilaterally put an end to the Iranian nuclear programme".

"The one absolute kind of certainty is that, subsequent to a strike, Iran would be guaranteed to be pursuing the bomb vigorously and clandestinely."

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