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Rescue teams are evacuating a soldier, acting as hurt by biological weapons, In Shprinzak Medical Center in tel Aviv on January 13, 2010. A two-day exercise, code named "OrangeFlame", simulating a response to a biological warfare attack began Wednesday in the Dan region. The exercise, which is the largest of its kind in Israel's history, will be carried out in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan and Holon, seeks to evaluate the ability of the Home Front, medical services, rescue teams and municipal authorities to respond to conditions created by a biological catastrophe caused either by terrorists or by some kind of accident. Photo by Gili Yaari / Flash 90
Hospital staff at Ichilov Medical Center in Tel Aviv are treating a fake wounded soldier in a special isolation room during the Orange Flame drill on January 13, 2010. A two-day exercise, code named "OrangeFlame", simulating a response to a biological warfare attack began Wednesday in the Dan region. The exercise, which is the largest of its kind in Israel's history, will be carried out in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan and Holon, seeks to evaluate the ability of the Home Front, medical services, rescue teams and municipal authorities to respond to conditions created by a biological catastrophe caused either by terrorists or by some kind of accident. Photo by Gili Yaari / Flash 90
Women, wearing biological protection gear, of the medical staff in Shprinzak Medical Center at Tel Aviv are participating the Orange Flame Drill on January 13, 2010. A two-day exercise, code named "OrangeFlame", simulating a response to a biological warfare attack began Wednesday in the Dan region. The exercise, which is the largest of its kind in Israel's history, will be carried out in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan and Holon, seeks to evaluate the ability of the Home Front, medical services, rescue teams and municipal authorities to respond to conditions created by a biological catastrophe caused either by terrorists or by some kind of accident. Photo by Gili Yaari / Flash 90
IDF soldiers, participating the Orange Flame Drill, are wearing face masks while acting wounded in Shprinzak Medical Center, Tel Aviv on January 13, 2010. A two-day exercise, code named "OrangeFlame", simulating a response to a biological warfare attack began Wednesday in the Dan region. The exercise, which is the largest of its kind in Israel's history, will be carried out in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan and Holon, seeks to evaluate the ability of the Home Front, medical services, rescue teams and municipal authorities to respond to conditions created by a biological catastrophe caused either by terrorists or by some kind of accident. Photo by Gili Yaari / Flash 90
State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss(L) presents his report at the Israeli Knesset to Speaker of the Knesset Reuven Rivlin(R) in Jerusalem on January 13,2009. photo by Abir Sultan/Flash 90