Israel successfully test-fired a ballistic missile on Thursday, army radio said, two days after warning that all options were on the table to prevent archfoe Iran from obtaining atomic weapons.
"There was an important test, which was carried out successfully, of a ballistic missile," the radio said, without providing any further details.
The test was "part of a future multi-layered defence system designed to counter various aerial threats against the Jewish state," the YNet website said.
Israel has in recent years concentrated efforts on countering the threat of missile attacks from neighbouring Arab states and Iran, which has itself conducted several long-range missile tests.
Israel is currently thought to be developing the Jericho-3 ground-to-ground missile that can be equipped with a nuclear, chemical or biological warhead and could have a range of up to 4,500 kilometres (2,800 miles).
Widely considered to be the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear power with an estimated arsenal of 200 warheads, Israel accuses Iran of using its controversial nuclear programme as a cover for developing atomic weapons, a charge Tehran denies.
Thursday's test came two days after Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned that all options were on the table to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
"We are not ruling out any option," a senior government official quoted him as telling parliament's foreign affairs and defence committee, echoing main ally Washington in ratcheting up the rhetoric against Tehran.
"Anything that can lead to preventing Iran from nuclear capability is part of the legitimate context when dealing with the problem," Olmert said.
The premier's comments came amid US President George W. Bush's Middle East trip that was largely devoted at bolstering his campaign to isolate Iran, which he repeatedly branded a "threat to world peace."
Iran figured prominently in Olmert's talks with Bush during his visit to Israel, officials here said.
"The Iranians are continuing their ingrained efforts to produce non-conventional capabilities and therefore we should use all the available means to stop it," Olmert told the parliament committee.
"There are many options that should be applied wisely, with determination and consistence," he said. "We should continue international efforts on this issue and we have a strong basis to assume, in view of my talks with the president, that this activity will not stop."
A US intelligence report in December said that Iran halted a nuclear weapons programme in 2003, although Washington is still pushing for a new set of UN sanctions against the Islamic republic.
The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency, which has been investigating Iran's nuclear programme for several years, said on Sunday that Tehran has agreed to clear up remaining questions on its activities in four weeks.
Tensions were heightened following a confrontation in the strategic Strait of Hormuz between Iranian speedboats and US warships just days before Bush began his week-long tour of the region. 
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