Iran launched a wave of hypersonic and ballistic missiles over the weekend that exposed some uncomfortable truths about Israel’s air defense reputation. As a retaliation for Israeli aggression, Tehran’s strike did not just aim for military bases. It went straight for the myth of invulnerability.
According to Iran’s Tasnim News Agency, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fired its Fattah 1 hypersonic missiles at targets in Tel Aviv, Haifa, Ben Gurion Airport and Negev’s Nevatim Airbase. The result, according to Iranian sources, was a series of direct hits. For a country that has spent billions building a multi-layered missile shield, it was a humbling reminder that not everything flying in gets intercepted on cue.
Fattah 1 is not just fast. It reaches speeds between Mach 13 and 15, flies low, evades radar and is specifically engineered to challenge interception systems that rely on slower reaction windows. Iranian officials say the strikes dealt damage not only to military infrastructure but to Israel’s deterrence image as well. That long-standing idea that Israel is untouchable in the region may have taken a serious hit.
Israeli officials maintain that most of the missiles were successfully intercepted. Still, visuals from Tel Aviv, Rishon LeZion and Galilee tell a different story. Damaged buildings and shaken residents suggest that at least a few missiles got through. And when the attacker is a state actor firing hypersonic missiles instead of makeshift rockets, the margin of error gets very small, very fast.
Iron Dome has long been hailed as Israel’s miracle shield. Originally designed to intercept short-range projectiles from Gaza and southern Lebanon, it has proven remarkably effective against that category of threats. But it was never meant to stop long-range, high-speed ballistic missiles. And this weekend, that design limitation became all too obvious.
Arrow 3 and the Space LayerTo defend against those longer-range threats, Israel turns to the Arrow 3. This system, developed in partnership with Boeing, is built to intercept ballistic missiles while they are still in space. It is one of the few systems worldwide that offers that level of protection. In theory, it is Israel’s ace in the hole.
In practice, Arrow 3 also faces limits. It cannot be everywhere at once. Coordinated salvos, multiple trajectories and decoy targets can stretch its capacity. The Iranian barrage appears to have been designed precisely with this in mind.
The takeaway from the weekend strikes is that Israel’s layered missile defense structure still performs under pressure but is not immune to overload. And when the adversary brings hypersonics into the mix, even the most advanced network can find itself outpaced.
From Tehran’s perspective, the message was loud and clear. Your skies are not locked. And while Iron Dome and Arrow 3 are impressive pieces of technology, speed and innovation are rewriting the rulebook.