La respuesta: reglas de enfrentamiento (ROE) más laxas que las que usan los estadounidenses y la necesidad de penetrar un búnker debajo de edificios muy altos. Este párrafo me impresionó por algo que nunca había leído: la cantidad de munición para matar literalmente un sólo individuo:
https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedi ... 287a5e2ac3That this process called for a payload of up to 20 weapons per building seems surprising at first glance. But consider the following weaponeering scenario: Setting a salvo of bombs to different fuze delays would allow multiple weapons to penetrate a target building simultaneously, with each bomb detonating at different times on different floors. Imagine four bombs dropped into a high rise, one set to detonate in the top quarter, one halfway down, one near the ground floor, and the last in the basement or sub-basement, then multiply those times four—one for each corner of the building. Then repeat for four buildings. A rough calculation puts that strike at 64 weapons. Adding a similar setup in the buildings’ centers or including spare weapons as backups for malfunctions would yield an 80-bomb payload, spread across multiple F-15Is. This is a complex problem requiring precise coordinates, timing, and weapon setup, but it would certainly be possible for an air force of the IAF’s caliber.