Some of the missiles reportedly struck "Israel's" Nevatim Air Force base, which is one of "Israel's" largest airports and is the main base for F-35 fighter jets.
Some of the missiles reportedly struck "Israel's" Nevatim Air Force base, which is one of "Israel's" largest airports and is the main base for F-35 fighter jets.
Iran has ballistic missiles, which are hypersonic in the terminal phase on re entry of the earth's atmosphere. Most modern day ballistic missiles are hypersonic at this stage anyways, and so any country with ballistic missiles technically has "hypersonics". However these are not true hypersonic cruise missiles or hypersonic glide vehicles. They cannot turn, generate lift or significantly change course at hypersonic speeds. Iran is still busy developing and testing these weapons, and have publicly unveiled prototypes of them in Fattah 1 and 2. The missiles that defeated Israeli air defences last night were just standard ballistic missiles. Iran's cruise missiles are also still not hypersonic. Russia is the only country in the world with hypersonic cruise missiles in the Zircon.
This is a helpful graphic to understand the differences between the types of missiles.
Those were no the weapons used though, the Fattah 1 and 2 haven't even been properly tested. Israeli air defences failed to intercept normal Iranian ballistic missiles, which have a hypersonic terminal velocity.
Not really with modern weapons, yes their launches are easy to detect on early warning radars, but once ballistic missiles enter the terminal phase they are extremely hard to shoot down, because the warhead is traveling at hypersonic speeds while re entering the atmosphere, and all the booster stages have been jettisoned. Then there's also the concept of plasma stealth if the warhead is traveling fast enough at these hypersonic speeds. To intercept ballistic missiles reliably you need to shoot them down before that, while they are in space or the upper atmosphere in mid flight with something like an Arrow-2 interceptor missile. Which Israel has managed before when the Houthis tried to bomb the port at Eilat last year. But once the warhead enters the terminal phase, it's very difficult to intercept. Ballistic missiles are a lot more advanced these days, it's why Russia has had so much success with the Kinzhals, which are modified ballistic missiles designed to be launched by fighter jets.