Iran fired a missile barrage at Israel on Friday. For the first time in this conflict, 11 Iranian cluster missiles reached central Israeli population centres — Shoham, Holon, and Rishon LeZion, all within the greater Tel Aviv metropolitan area. Haaretz analysis found one warhead dispersed 70 submunitions over a residential neighbourhood. A building fire in Shoham forced 30 residents to evacuate. Sirens sounded across Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, the West Bank, and as far north as Metula. No injuries were reported. The IDF stated it is "investigating" the gap — language that acknowledges the penetrations fell outside acceptable performance.
The penetrations follow the IRGC's doctrinal shift announced on 8 March, when Air and Space Force commander Majid Mousavi declared all future strikes would carry warheads exceeding one tonne . Friday's barrage paired that mass with cluster submunitions — a combination that attacks Israeli defences on two axes simultaneously. Heavy unitary warheads stress kinetic interceptors such as Arrow 2 and David's Sling, which must match the incoming object's energy to destroy it. Cluster variants that scatter dozens of bomblets at altitude create a different problem: multiple simultaneous small targets appearing inside Iron Dome's engagement envelope, where the system was designed to track and intercept single projectiles on predictable trajectories.
Israel's layered architecture — Arrow 3 for exo-atmospheric threats, Arrow 2 and David's Sling for mid-course, Iron Dome for terminal defence — was engineered against unitary warheads arriving on ballistic arcs. A cluster munition that opens above a city and releases 70 independent submunitions defeats the geometry of point defence. Each submunition falls on its own path; intercepting all of them requires an engagement ratio Iron Dome's battery density in any given sector may not support. That 11 warheads reached residential neighbourhoods without causing casualties owes more to low population density in the impact zones than to any property of the weapons themselves — submunitions are indiscriminate across the area they cover.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch hold that cluster munitions use in populated civilian areas violates customary International humanitarian law regardless of whether the firing state has signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Iran has not publicly addressed the legal objection. The immediate military question is whether Friday's penetrations reflect a structural limitation — the architecture cannot handle area-saturation weapons at current battery density — or an incidental gap that redeployment can close. If structural, Israel's vulnerability calculus changes: Iran has found a weapon class that reaches cities the defence network was built to protect.
