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.
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.
In recent days, talk of a possible strike on
Iran has dominated the headlines, largely coming from unsourced
officials quoting intelligence reports, none of which it was possible to
verify.
"Iran has made progress toward nuclear warhead," was the headline in the Haaretz newspaper.
"The Iranians greatest progress recently is
in the manufacture and assembly of a nuclear warhead," the paper said,
quoting the official who was drawing his information from an
intelligence report which an Israeli newspaper said was recently
presented to US President Barack Obama.
Although US officials declined to comment on
the report, Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak referred to it directly
last week, saying it "brings the American assessment much much closer to
ours" and makes the Iranian issue "a bit more urgent."
"Not prepared for war" was the headline in
Yediot Aharonot, which questioned Israel's readiness to both mount a
decisive military strike and to cope back home with the expected
fallout.
"Will those preparations be enough to deal a
crushing blow to Iran's nuclear facilities and allow Israel to cope with
the repercussions of such an attack?" it said. "It is not at all clear
that that is the case."
It quoted statistics saying 700,000 civilians
did not have bomb shelters, only half of Israel's population of 7.8
million people had gas masks, and that work to fortify 70 percent of the
country's hospitals would not be completed until 2015.
Although Israel charges that its arch foe
Iran is driving for a nuclear bomb, the US intelligence services say
only that they suspect it is seeking a weapons capability but that no
decision has been taken on actually making one.
Israel is widely suspected to have the region's sole, if undeclared, nuclear arsenal.
© 2012 AFP
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© 2012 AFP
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