Lavi

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Lavi

The United States, Israel, and a Controversial Fighter Jet

John W. Golan

450 pages
27 photographs, 45 figures, 14 tables, 7 appendixes

Hardcover

January 2016

978-1-61234-722-6

$39.95 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

January 2016

978-1-61234-785-1

$39.95 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

January 2016

978-1-61234-783-7

$39.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

The Lavi fighter program, the largest weapons-development effort ever undertaken by the State of Israel, envisioned a new generation of high-performance aircraft. In a controversial strategy, Israel Aircraft Industries intended to develop and manufacture the fighters in Israel with American financial support. The sophisticated planes, developed in the mid-1980s, were unique in design and intended to make up the majority of the Israeli air force. Though considerable prestige and money were at stake, developmental costs increased and doubts arose as to whether the Lavi could indeed be the warplane it was meant to be. Eventually the program became a microcosm for the ambitions, fears, and internal divisions that shaped both the U.S.-Israeli relationship and Israeli society itself. But the fighter never made it to operational service, and until now, the full breadth and significance of the Lavi story have never been examined and presented.
 
Lavi: The United States, Israel, and a Controversial Fighter Jet traces the evolution of the Lavi fighter from its genesis in the 1970s to its scrapping in August 1987. John W. Golan examines the roles of Israeli military icons and political leaders such as Ezer Weizman, Ariel Sharon, Menachem Begin, and Yitzhak Rabin in the program and in relation to their counterparts in the United States. On the American side, Golan traces the evolution of government policy toward the program, detailing the complex picture of the U.S. foreign policy apparatus and of U.S.-Israeli relations in general—from President Reagan’s public endorsement of the program on the White House lawn to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger’s unremitting attempts to cancel it in succeeding years.

Author Bio

John W. Golan has served as a designer, structural analyst, and engineering manager in the U.S. aerospace industry for the last two decades, developing future-generation technology concepts. He has published articles with Air Forces Monthly, Combat Aircraft, Aviation History, and the Jerusalem Post Magazine.

Praise

"John Golan's Lavi is a unique and welcome contribution to the field as the history of defence procurement, in general, remains a somewhat esoteric research area."—Richard Shimooka, From Balloons to Drones

"[An] excellent book."—Moshe Arens, Jerusalem Post

"An excellent read for Airmen."—Maj Matthew C. Wunderlich, USAF, Air Force Research Institute

“A fascinating read, Lavi includes multiple books in one, discussing the tactical reasons leading to the development of the Lavi; examining the evolving political and budget intrigue leading to its cancellation; and offering a detailed technical analysis of the Lavi versus its alternatives. An important addition to Middle East aviation history.”—Lon O. Nordeen, author of Air Warfare in the Missile Age and commentator on the History Channel

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

List of Tables

Preface

1. The First Lion

2. Superpower Relations

3. The Lion’s Den

4. The Next Lion

5. The Power of Decision

6. Encountering Turbulence

7. Mysterious as a Ghost Ship

8. Funding Measures

9. The Lion Unveiled

10. Inside the Department of Defense

11. With the Sky at Stake

12. In the Ministry of Defense

13. Broken Wings

14. Jerusalem Takes Stock

15. America in the Mirror

Appendix Nomenclature

Appendix 1: Aerodynamics and a Philosophy for Design

Appendix 2: Stability and Control

Appendix 3: Airframe and Structure

Appendix 4: Propulsion and Defining the Mission

Appendix 5: Avionics, Electronics, and the Man-Machine Interface

Appendix 6: Armament and Combat

Appendix 7: Performance and Bringing the Pieces Together

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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