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A Method for Civilian Damage Assessment from Rockets & Missiles ISMOR 2011. Maj. Barak Corem Center of System Analysis Planning Division IDF. Contents. Background Motivation Study Questions Scope The Method Numerical Example Method’s Limitation Summary. Background. WW-II
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A Method for Civilian Damage Assessment from Rockets & MissilesISMOR 2011 Maj. Barak Corem Center of System Analysis Planning Division IDF
Contents Background Motivation Study Questions Scope The Method Numerical Example Method’s Limitation Summary
Background WW-II The battle on London V1/V2 attacks 11,500launches 9,000 casualties The blitz 57 continuous bombing days 43,000 casualties 1,000,000 destroyed buildings WW-II Attacks on Berlin Iran-Iraq War “War of the Cities” 300 air strikes 20,000-50,000 casualties 200 Al-Hussein & SCUD Missiles 700 casualties
BackgroundDesert Storm 1991 • 39 Al-Hussein Missiles (SCUD) were launched at Israel • 10,000 Apartments suffered damage
2nd Lebanon War 2006 • ~4,000 rockets were fired at Israel • Hundreds of apartments were damaged • About 40 civilian casualties
Motivation for the Analysis • Hezbollah & Hamas Massive Arming • Civilians are targeted • Israel • Protected Rooms / Shelters • Advanced Warning Systems
StudyQuestions • How many apartments are expected to suffer damage in a future war? • Estimation of structural damage • Home Front Command preparations • How many casualties are expected in a future war? • Deployment of missile defense assets • HMS Preparations
Scope of the Analysis • Conventionalrockets & missiles, not NBC weapons • Civilian damage only
Civilian Damage Assessment Method Intelligence estimation Threat to Civilian Targets Civilian Database Construction & Population Characteristic Analysis Ammunition Specifications Intelligence Warhead Testing Population Behavior Damage from Single Rocket/Missile Number of Damaged Apartments & Casualties
Threat to Civilian Initial Threat Legend Enemy Capabilities Offensive Achievements Interception Remaining Threat Remaining Threat
Construction Data • Building-level statistics • Built Area (sq. km) • Density (buildings / sq. km) • Height (m) • Apartment-level statistics • Area (sq. m) • Volume (cubic m)
Weapon Damage Criteria Minor Medium Heavy
Affected apartments Explosion on the Roof (illustration) Explosion point volume of the damage Upper half - no damage Affected volume* Buildings density Apartment volume No. of affected apartments =
Population Density • Raw damage estimate • (Accuracy( X)population density) • Crisis factors • Self evacuation • Reserve forces mobilization
High “average density” Medium “average density” Low “average density” Illustration of Density Calculation Medium “average density”
Method’s Limitation • High variance between hits (a few extreme events might cause a large proportion of the casualties) • High levels of uncertainty: • Population Obedience • Opponent Strategy
Summary • A method for civilian damage assessment was presented • Apartment damage • Casualties • Method applications • Prioritization of missile defense asset deployment • Interception policy • Defense systems build-up • Home front command units deployment • Preparationof the civil authorities