Mock-up of Lavi for fitting and testing of components. Richard Nowitz © Discover Magazine 7/87, Time Inc. aircraft for reconnaissance. Israel has more recently produced a heavy tank called the Merkava (meaning "chariot"), which has proved to be the equal of any produced by the superpowers. The Lavi, however, should surpass these attainments. At least 4,000 Israelis owe their jobs to it. About 100 U.S. sub- conctractors, employing many thousands more, are working on Lavi systems. The ultimate cost of developing and building 300 Lavis for the Israeli air force by the early 2000s may exceed $8 billion — near- ly all of it in U.S. aid money. Although designed from scratch, the Lavi won't be a revolutionary aircraft. "We don't need to re-invent the wheel," says Eini. Rather than creating an entire airplane, the Israelis to a large extent have used the latest available components — most of them American. For example, the wings, being built by Grumman, represent the state of the art in carbon-fiber corn- posite technology. The powerful PW1120 turbofan engine is one of Pratt & Whit- ney's most advanced. The "fly by wire" flight-control system is made by Lear Siegler and Moog. Israel's principal con- tributions are in the field of avionics (air- borne electronics). They include a sophis- ticated home-grown radar, a weapons de- livery system, an advanced cockpit design, and, most important, a whole package of "black boxes" dedicated to the highly secret art of electronic warfare. One might think that developing a fighter with a maximum capacity for sur- vival would command almost universal support among Israelis. Not so. The Lavi has a startling number of critics, who on- ly seem to grow more numerous as the pro- ject gets further along. Many are members of Israel's defense establishment, in- cluding General Dan Shomron, the Israeli deputy chief of staff and commander of the famous Entebbe hostage rescue operation of 1976. In January he charged that the Lavi was taking too much money from other essential defense projects. The Lavi has also been forsaken by Ezer Weizman, the former air force chief who was among the first to propose that Israel develop a new fighter-bomber. He doesn't approve of the way the project has ex- panded and been made more complex tech- nically. Skeptical voices can be heard even at Israel Aircraft Industries, where one- fifth of the workers are involved in build- ing the Lavi. Perhaps most surprising, the plane hasn't been fully embraced by those who will fly it. The battle over the Lavi is, in one sense, - development project ever undertaken by Israel — the creation of a highly advanced fighter-bomber called the Lavi (Hebrew for "Lion"). In its multiple roles, the Lavi will be the equal of opposing fighters — so long as it isn't burdened by bombs, of which it can carry seven tons. But the plane's real dis- tinction is its toughness. It's designed to survive in the same environment in which Eini's Phantom died: while making bomb- ing runs over targets ringed by missiles. Israel's stakes in this undertaking are high. "We're in the unique position of hav- ing to face enemies who have the best of both Free World and Eastern Bloc wea- pons," says the project's deputy director. "Survivability must be our priority." Above all, the Lavi is meant to survive the next generation of Soviet SAMs by using technology unavailable in the Phantom and the fighters that have come after it. In tiny Israel, with its population of 4.2 million, the loss of any soldier or weapon looms large. And among Israeli weapons, none is more precious than the fighter air- craft, which can cost as much as $25 34 Friday, September 19, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS million (the "flyaway" price of an F-15). The case for putting survivability first among the Lavi's priorities, however, has ramifications beyond the obvious one of cost. Says the deputy director, "If our air force suffers, say, a two percent loss rate in battle, it doesn't sound too bad, given the ferocious anti-aircraft environment our pilots must enter. But if we have two hun- dred and fifty aircraft each flying four sor- ties a day, we're actually losing two per- cent of a thousand sorties. That's twenty aircraft. Still that may not sound too bad. But after one week, we're without more than a hundred of our airplanes. And we've lost more than just airplanes, be- cause the remaining pilots no longer per- form the way they should. They just drop their bombs as fast as they can and run." In many defense areas, Israel has dis- played a technological prowess far out of proportion to its size and national wealth. It has created its own small arms like the Uzi submachine gun, the Gabriel surface- to-surface missile, sophisticated electronic jamming equipment, and remote-con- trolled, television-camera-equipped drone