Israeli Navy

Israeli Navy
Israeli Sea Corps Soldiers.jpg
Israeli navy cadets
Founded 1948
Country Israel
Size Around 85 watercraft
Part of Israel Defense Forces
Motto Open Sea Safe Land
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief Aluf Eli Marom
Insignia
Ensign Naval Ensign of Israel.svg
Patch IsraelNavy-patch.jpg

The Israeli Navy (Hebrew: חיל הים הישראלי‎, Heil HaYam HaYisraeli) is the naval arm of the Israel Defense Forces, operating primarily in the Mediterranean Sea theater as well as the Gulf of Aqaba and the Red Sea theater. The current commander in chief of the Israeli Navy is Aluf Eli Marom.

Contents

History

The origins of Israeli Navy lay at the end of 1920s with the founding of the Yarkon and Zvulun marine sports clubs. In 1938, encouraged by the Jewish Agency, Dr. Shlomo Bardin founded the Marine High School in Bosmat, the Technion's Junior Technical College. 1943 witnessed the founding of the Palyam, the naval branch of the Palmach, whose training was undertaken at the maritime school.

Jewish merchant marine started and they had the SS Tel-Aviv, and cargo ships such as the Atid.

In 1942 1,100 Haganah volunteers joined the Royal Navy, mostly in technical roles (12 of them were officers by the nomination agreement of the Jewish Agency with the Royal Navy). A few reached sea service and combat service. Two of them served with the Fleet Air Arm (FAA), one of which was Edmond Wilhelm Brillant. With the end of the Second World War, Palyam members took part in clandestine immigration activities, bringing Europe's Jews to Palestine, as well as commando actions against Royal Navy deportation ships. Royal Navy volunteers, meanwhile, rejoined the Hagana.

During the last months of British Mandate in Palestine, the former Royal Navy volunteers started working on the captured clandestine immigration ships (known as the Fleet of Shadows) in Haifa harbor, salvaged a few and pressed them into service. These were to become the Navy's first ships and saw service in the 1948 Israeli War of Indepedence.

With the founding of the IDF in early 1948, the Israeli Navy was therefore formed from a core of the following personnel:[1][2]

To make matters worse, Palyam personnel often resisted efforts to instill order, discipline and rank in the newly formed service. Mess rooms were initially shared by both officers and enlisted men. Ships possessed a captain with nautical skills, but also a commanding officer regarded as political. This would cause a great deal of debate between veterans of the Palyam, Royal Navy volunteers from the Haganah and USN Machal volunteers about what form the Navy should take.[1][2][6] Commander Allen Burk is reputed to have said, out of despair, "You cannot make naval officers from cowboys".[2]

The Israeli Navy suffered from a lack of professional command during its early days.[1] Gershon Zak, head of the IDF "Sea Service", was a teacher and bureaucrat without any relevant experience. Having never been recruited into the IDF, Zak was a civilian and had no official rank. The early days of the Israeli Navy were therefore characterized by political infighting, as many groups and individuals jockied for power. Palyam politics blocked the nomination of Paul Shulman (a USN Jewish Officer with a rank of Commander who volunteerd to the Israeli Navy) as Navy-Commander in Chief and he resigned in 1949. The first Navy-Commander in Chief awarded the rank of Aluf was Shlomo Shamir.[1]

The conclusion of the 1948 war afforded the navy the time to build up its strength. Beginning in the early 1950s the navy purchased Frigates, Torpedo Boats, Destroyers and eventually Submarines. The material build-up was accompanied by the training of Israeli Navy officers in Royal Navy academies in the UK and Malta, as well as in France.

Three distinct periods characterize the history of the Israeli Navy:

Until 1967 the Naval Headquarters were located at Stella-Marris, on the slopes of Mount Carmel, Haifa. After the Six-Day War it was relocated to the Kirya in Tel Aviv, next to IDF Headquarters.

Hierarchy

The Israeli Navy is small compared to other Navies and the officers chain of command is as follows with respect to Royal - Navy / USN:[9]

Sleeve rank of Israeli Navy commander in Chief is a rank of honor. This started under special permission from Lt. General Amnon Lipkin-Shahak chief of staff of the IDF and is given to the navy commander in chief to have a sleeve rank of Vice Admiral which is equal to Lt. General as the rank of the IDF chief of staff. However de-facto the rank of Israeli navy commander in chief is Rear Admiral and the gesture given to the navy is ceremonial only when meeting foreign commanding officers only.

Bases

The emblem of Haifa naval base is two arrows - one signifying the Missile Boats Flotilla and the other the Submarine Flotilla.
The emblem of the Ashdod naval base is two opposing arrows.
Eilat naval base was founded in 1951 and has been responsible for the Israeli Navy's Red Sea theater since 1981, when the Red Sea Naval Command Center was withdrawn from Sharm el-Sheikh according to the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty.
The emblem of Eilat naval base represents the red roofs of Eilat.
Ships of the Israeli Navy
The emblem of the Haifa training base is an owl, symbolizing wisdom and hard learning.
Mamtam is a small unit responsible for all Israeli Navy signal and IT systems, both logistic and operational. The soldiers that serve there are mainly programmers and university graduates in engineering, computer science and other technological professions.

Forces

Structure of the Israel Navy

3rd Flotilla

The Missile Boats Flotilla, based at Haifa.

Unit's objectives

7th Flotilla

The Submarine Flotilla, an elite volunteer unit founded in 1959.

Unit's objectives

13th Flotilla

Naval commandos: special forces and a counter terrorist unit.

YALTAM 707

Special salvage and underwater work unit. Started as a branch of Navy Shipyards, the damage control branch and later joined to the unit experienced Flotilla-13 divers.

Intelligence

The Corps' relies on its Naval Intelligence Division for naval intelligence.

Present Fleet

Sa'ar 5-class corvette on Israeli Independence Day 2009
INS Romah (front) and INS Sufa (back) in 2008.
INS Hetz, 1991.
Dolphin class submarine
Dabur class patrol boat 860, 2008.
Super Dvora MK III patrol boat.
Nachshol class patrol boat 752, 2008.

Corvettes

Sa'ar 5-class

Missile boats

Sa'ar 4.5-class

Sa'ar 4-class

Submarines

Dolphin class

Dolphin class AIP-capable submarines

In late 2009 Israel also took delivery of two additional submarines which were ordered from Germany in 2005 at a cost of about US$650 million each.[11] These two new boats are similar to the highly advanced German U212 submarine and feature an air-independent propulsion (AIP) system. Israel is said to be interested in purchasing a third submarine of this type.

Patrol Boats

Support ships

Commando boats

Equipment

Future

In a radical revamp of its surface fleet modernization program, the Israel Navy has shelved long-held plans to purchase Lockheed Martin-produced Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) due to their ever-rising cost estimate, as well as exercising a fallback option involving corvettes built by Northrop Grumman. Instead, sources say, the Navy is pushing to establish a combat shipbuilding industry through customized, locally built versions of a German corvette design.[12] Currently in an exploration phase, the concept calls for a stretched, approximately 2,200-ton version of the MEKO A-100 built by ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS), the Hamburg-based consortium building two Dolphin-class submarines for the Israel Navy. Countries that are building or now operating the 1,650-ton German-designed corvette include Malaysia and Poland. If carried out, the ships would likely be built locally by Israel Shipyards (which built the Sa'ar 4.5 class and earlier INS ships), with IAI acting as prime systems integrator.

The Israeli Navy also plans to buy 4 Super Dvora and 2 Shaldag patrol boats. and is providing funds to Germany for a sixth Dolphin class submarine[10]

The Navy is building up an amphibious assault capability to deliver battalion-sized infantry forces and is in discussion with the Ground Forces Command to decide which battalions will be trained in landing operations.[13]

The Navy announced plans to buy two large ships which would be specifically desgned for the navy's needs, and which would be outfitted with electronic warfare devices, radar, and weapons systems. Israel planned to order each ship for $300 million from the German shipbuilding company Blohm & Voss. After the United Arab Emirates-owned Mar group announced that it would buy the majority of shares in the company, the Israeli Defense Establishment began to look into the potential outcomes of buying ships from an Arab-owned company.[14]

List of Commanders

Eli Marom, commander of the Israeli navy

Source: Jewish Virtual Library[15]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Anat Kidron MA Thesis, Israeli Navy Year of Foundation". Haifa University Israel. October 2000. http://herzl.haifa.ac.il/navy_heb.htm. Retrieved Dec-02-2009. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "The last Battle of the Destroyer INS Eilat by Commander Yitzhak Shushan". Ma’ariv Publishing House. 1993. http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=no:%22123248675%22. Retrieved Dec-02-2009. 
  3. "MACHAL Overseas Volunteers In Israel’s War of Independence Page 28". MOD IDF. 2007. http://www.mahal-idf-volunteers.org/about/Machal.pdf. Retrieved Dec-02-2009. 
  4. "A Tiny, but Hard-Hitting Battle Force". By David Hanovice North American Volunteers In Israel's War of Independence. 2007. http://israelvets.com/hist_navy.html. Retrieved Dec-05-2009. 
  5. "Paul Schulman". NY Times. May 18, 1994. http://www.nytimes.com/1994/05/18/obituaries/paul-shulman-72-headed-israeli-navy.html. Retrieved Dec-02-2009. 
  6. Commander Shlomo, Ya'akobson a Hagana Veteran of the Royal Navy (1997). "Betaltala". MOD House. http://simania.co.il/bookdetails.php?item_id=23657. Retrieved Dec-05-2009. 
  7. "BOATS OF CHERBOURG Abraham Rabinovich". Bluejacket Books ISBN 1557507147. 1973. http://www.usni.org/store/item.asp?ITEM_ID=782. Retrieved Dec-03-2009. 
  8. "The Missile Boat War The 1973 Arab-Israeli War at Sea". By Dave Schueler. 2009. http://www.btinternet.com/~david.Manley/naval/Bulldogs/AIW_Campaign.pdf. Retrieved Dec-03-2009. 
  9. "IDF Ranks". IDF Spoke Man. 2009. http://dover.idf.il/IDF/English/about/insignia/ranks.htm. Retrieved Dec-03-2009. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Israel seeks sixth Dolphin in light of Iranian 'threat'". Janes.com. 2009-10-01. http://www.janes.com/news/defence/jdw/jdw091001_1_n.shtml. Retrieved 2010-06-01. 
  11. Germany Sells, Delivers 2 More Dolphin Subs to Israel
  12. "Israel Eyes Locally Built Warship". Defensenews.com. 2009-06-29. http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?i=4160683. Retrieved 2010-06-01. 
  13. Navy bolsters its amphibious capability
  14. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3910265,00.html
  15. "Israel Navy Commanders-in-Chief". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Society_&_Culture/navy_commanders.html. Retrieved 2010-06-01. 

External links