Developed with funding help from Washington, Iron Dome has had a 90
percent shoot-down rate against Palestinian rockets, Israeli and U.S.
officials say. But the system's $50 million unit price and limited reach
have dampened its export appeal.

The United States has tested the short-range interceptor missile used by Israel's Iron Dome system with a view to incorporating it or a future American counterpart in European-based air defences against Russia, a U.S. Army general said on Monday.
Developed with funding help from Washington,
Iron Dome has had a 90 percent shoot-down rate against Palestinian
rockets, Israeli and U.S. officials say. But the system's $50 million
unit price and limited reach have dampened its export appeal.
Visiting Israel, Major-General Glenn Bramhall
of the U.S. Army's Air and Missile Defense Command said he saw a new
need to complement his corps' mid-range Patriot and THAAD interceptors
with a thrifty system for less powerful missile threats.
To that end, he said, U.S. assessors have test-launched Iron Dome's interceptor missile, "Tamir",
which is jointly manufactured by Massachusetts firm Raytheon Co. and
Israel's state-owned Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd.
"With
all that is happening in Europe, especially the fact that Russia has
really awakened itself and has really decided to rebuild its military
and is really posing a threat, we are looking at how we can do the
multi-tiered defence," Bramhall told Reuters at a conference hosted by the Israeli security organisation iHLS.
"We
are looking at multiple solutions to actually create a third tier that
is missing. Patriot and THAAD are great systems that do what they were
designed to do. But I don't think we would want to waste a Patriot or a
THAAD missile on something that can be affected by something that's
lower cost and is actually designed for that job itself."
"I think we are looking at something that is similar to Iron Dome. We have looked at the Tamir as a possible missile,"
he added, raising the prospect of the Israeli-designed missiles being
used with the U.S. Army's Multi Mission Launcher platform.
Bramhall anticipated that the short-range system chosen would be deployed "probably within two or three years". Rafael puts the Tamir unit cost at around $100,000, a price tag Bramhall said he believed was "within an acceptable range".
U.S.
Army purchases of Tamir would buoy Israeli defence industries unsure of
whether they can bank on Washington's largesse in the future. In talks
on a new long-term defence aid package to Israel, the White House wants to cut the amount of grant money the Israelis can spend on their own products.
Bramhall was due to inspect an Iron Dome unit in Israel on Tuesday. A Rafael vice president, Yosi Druker,
was circumspect about whether the U.S. Army should be lobbied to buy
Tamirs rather than await a comparable American interceptor missile.
"It would be right for us at Rafael, and for every Israeli citizen, to support whatever the Americans decide on," Druker told Reuters.
Iron
Dome was initially billed as providing city-sized coverage against
rockets or mortar shells with ranges of between 5 km (3 miles) and 70 km
(42 miles). System upgrades extended that reach to up to 150 km (95
miles), Israeli experts say.