Azerbaijan’s defense minister said his country had purchased the Iron Dome missile defense system from Israel, reported Jerusalem post.
Prime Minister Netanyahu traveled last year to Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, both Muslim countries with whom Israel has strong security and business ties.
The Azerbaijani Press Agency reported that Azerbaijan Defense Industry Minister Yaver Jamalov told reporters that the central Asian country reached an agreement with Israel to purchase the anti-missile batteries.
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, the company that developed the Iron Dome with Israel Aircraft Industries, had no comment on the sale.
The system intercepts short-range to medium-range rockets, air breathing targets and artillery shells fired from a distance of four to 70 kilometers if their trajectory takes them into populated areas.
Azerbaijan is believed to be one of the first countries to purchase the weapon. Over the years, there have been reports of other countries – including South Korea, Singapore and India – that have expressed interest in the system, but only Poland, Azerbaijan and USA publicly confirmed purchase of Iron Dome.
Azerbaijan’s interest in the system is believed to stem from Armenia’s purchase of Russian Iskander short-range ballistic missiles. Azerbaijan and Armenia have been in conflict for decades over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh territory, a conflict that flared up again in October 2020. After meeting with Netanyahu, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev revealed that his country has signed $5 billion worth of long-term contracts over the years to buy weapons and security equipment from Israel.
Netanyahu said Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan “admire” Israel and want to strengthen their relationships with it.He described his reception in Azerbaijan – which he visited once before briefly as prime minister in 1997 – as “extraordinary.”In addition, he said that Kazakhstan, which he described as “a gigantic country in central Asia, which has wide-ranging ties with Russia and China, and also with Iran,” wants to open its markets to Israeli investments, and to Israeli developments in agriculture, technology, industry, “and – of course – security.”.
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