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Iraqi Insurgents Claim New Generation of Missiles Being Used
The Jamestown Foundation ^
| February 14, 2007
| Andrew McGregor
Posted on 02/22/2007 10:55:04 PM PST by neverdem
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Volume 4, Issue 1 (February 14, 2007) | Download PDF Version
Iraqi Insurgents Claim New Generation of Missiles Being Used
By Andrew McGregor
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A soldier demonstrating the launch of a Strela-3 missile. |
In the short span of January 20 to February 7, four U.S. military and two private security firm helicopters were lost due to enemy ground fire in Iraq, raising concerns that insurgents have introduced new tactics or weapons in their battle against coalition air supremacy. According to the February 8 issue of al-Hayat, Iraqi insurgents may have acquired "a new generation" of Strela missiles, presumably the Strela-3 (SA-14 Gremlin), which has increased range and a warhead twice the size of the SA-7. After an Apache gunship was downed with the loss of its two-man crew, the Islamic State of Iraq (an umbrella group for Sunni insurgents led by Abu Omar al-Baghdadi) claimed that it had "new ways" of bringing down coalition aircraft (al-Furqan Foundation, February 2). Responsibility for the attacks has been claimed by a variety of Sunni insurgent groups through internet statements and video recordings, such as those found on http://www.hanein.net.
The Pentagon has claimed that only four of the six helicopters were brought down by ground fire, while two others suffered mechanical failure (AHN, February 9). Eyewitness and video evidence suggests three helicopters were lost to missile fire, and three to automatic weapons fire. Some 400 coalition helicopters are active in Iraq, and nearly 60 have been lost to various causes since the start of the invasion in 2003. The military craft lost since January 20 include two AH-64 Apache gunships, a UH-60A Black Hawk and a CH-46 Sea Knight troop transport (the naval version of the twin rotor Chinook).
Helicopters are used heavily in central Iraq to avoid the roadside IEDs that cause most U.S. casualties. The majority of U.S. military helicopters in the theater are fitted with missile sensors, infrared emitters, chaff dispensers and flares designed to deflect incoming missiles. Helicopters typically stay low to the ground, flying quickly at tree-top level when possible. This makes them more difficult to strike with a heat-seeking missile, but increases the chance of damage through machine gun fire. Although numerous technical means have been found to increase ballistic tolerance and reduce the chance of flight-threatening damage from small-arms fire, helicopters simply cannot be fitted with enough armor to make them impervious to bullets. An RPG has little chance of hitting a fast-moving helicopter, but can be used with some chance of success against hovering or slow-moving aircraft. Sand and dust pose additional challenges in keeping the aircraft operational.
The pre-invasion Iraqi army was well-equipped with shoulder-fired, surface-to-air missiles, and thousands of these remain unaccounted for. Most common is the Russian-made 1971-model Strela 2-M (SA-7b in Iraq), a "tail-chase" heat-seeking system with filters for infrared emissions and decoy flares. This weapon is produced in many countries under license and is easily available on the arms market. Last year, there were unverified reports that SA-7 missiles were included in Iranian arms shipments to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al-Qaeda in Iraq (Zaman, May 13, 2006). The Iraq Study Group also alleged that Iraqi insurgents used Saudi money to buy missiles through the black market in Romania (AP, November 8, 2006).
While worrisome, recent helicopter losses are partly the result of increased exposure in the midst of a U.S. offensive and a greater reliance on helicopter transport to avoid IEDs. Increased exposure equals increased risk. Varying flight schedules and flight patterns, flying at night and other evasive tactics were already introduced in November 2003 to counter growing helicopter losses. There is no evidence yet that a new generation of surface-to-air missiles has been introduced. Greater use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles is one means of reducing the threat to manned reconnaissance aircraft, and the U.S. Army is deploying a wide variety of such craft, including those capable of attacking targets, like the Air Force's Predator. |
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Find this article at:
http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2370245
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TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iraq
1
posted on
02/22/2007 10:55:06 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Russian and former Soviet surface-to-air missiles
The SA designation sequence:
SA-1 Guild | SA-2 Guideline | SA-3 Goa | SA-N-3 Goblet | SA-4 Ganef | SA-5 Gammon | SA-6 Gainful | SA-7 Grail | SA-8 Gecko | SA-9 Gaskin | SA-10 Grumble | SA-11 Gadfly | SA-12 Gladiator\Giant | SA-13 Gopher | SA-14 Gremlin | SA-15 Gauntlet | SA-16 Gimlet | SA-17 Grizzly | SA-18 Grouse | SA-19 Grisom | SA-20 Gargoyle | SA-21 Growler | SA-22 ? | SA-23 ? | SA-24 ? |
List of Russian and former Soviet missiles
Missiles
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This is just the Russian list,,,
I found,and lost the link to the factory in iran that is in production of the latest type,,,Chinese...
related link(sorta)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1788929/posts ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lookin'...
2
posted on
02/22/2007 11:25:23 PM PST
by
1COUNTER-MORTER-68
(THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
To: neverdem
Since regional wars are experimental proving grounds, it could well be that our choppers are being hit with meaner hornets (manpads)
I might guess the Soviets want us to feel the sting/er> they got in Afghanistan. IOW they are the source.
3
posted on
02/22/2007 11:56:18 PM PST
by
RunningWolf
(2-1 Cav 1975)
To: 1COUNTER-MORTER-68
4
posted on
02/22/2007 11:58:43 PM PST
by
1COUNTER-MORTER-68
(THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
To: 1COUNTER-MORTER-68; neverdem
For some reason (when they are knocking down Apaches and BlackHawks) I suspect that the genuine missile needs a little more than MANPAD in actual use.
5
posted on
02/23/2007 12:11:22 AM PST
by
RunningWolf
(2-1 Cav 1975)
To: RunningWolf
Some 400 coalition helicopters are active in Iraq, and nearly 60 have been lost to various causes since the start of the invasion in 2003. The military craft lost since January 20 include two AH-64 Apache gunships,
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The military craft lost since January 20 include two AH-64 Apache gunships,[[[This Tells It All]]]
It Must Be The Later Type To Bring These Down...
Soon to come,,,If it ain't already in the field,,,
is the laser guided type...two AH-64's makes me wonder...
6
posted on
02/23/2007 12:36:23 AM PST
by
1COUNTER-MORTER-68
(THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
To: 1COUNTER-MORTER-68
craft lost since January 20 include two AH-64 Apache gunships.
Yep, that tells it all.
7
posted on
02/23/2007 12:52:52 AM PST
by
RunningWolf
(2-1 Cav 1975)
To: neverdem
Iraqi Insurgents Claim New Generation of Missiles Being Used Oh. For a minute there I thought the article was going to be about the insurgents' use of ICBDems against US troops... Inter-Continental Ballistic Democrats.
8
posted on
02/23/2007 1:33:48 AM PST
by
piasa
(Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
To: RunningWolf
Time to use remote control stuff to draw them out, then
follow up on the location to exterminate the source of enemy fire.
9
posted on
02/23/2007 2:27:53 AM PST
by
Son House
( The Presidents enemies, are my enemies.)
To: 1COUNTER-MORTER-68
"Although numerous technical means have been found to increase ballistic tolerance and reduce the chance of flight-threatening damage from small-arms fire, helicopters simply cannot be fitted with enough armor to make them impervious to bullets."
This is quite at odds with the claimed ability for an AH-64 to shrug off .50 cal hits, and tolerate most 20 mm. cannon hits:
The Apache is of conventional configuration for a modern attack helicopter. It has a main-tail rotor arrangement, a tandem-seat cockpit, nose-mounted sight, and two stub wings with a total of four pylons for underwing stores. The airframe is made mostly of aircraft aluminum alloys, but is designed to withstand 12.7 (0.50 caliber) millimeter projectile hits from all quarters, and can tolerate 23 millimeter projectile hits.
http://www.faqs.org/docs/air/avah64.html#m2
I'd be surprised if the insurgents are firing 23 mm. or heavier weapons, those tend to get noticed. ;-)
Thinking about it, though, I find it hard to believe a helicopter (and crew) would be completely safe from .50 cal fire.
To: neverdem
Unmaned aircraft is the future.
11
posted on
02/23/2007 3:41:11 AM PST
by
Pro-Bush
(hater)
To: PreciousLiberty; RunningWolf
I'd be surprised if the insurgents are firing 23 mm. or heavier weapons, those tend to get noticed. ;-)
Thinking about it, though, I find it hard to believe a helicopter (and crew) would be completely safe from .50 cal fire.
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not much armor around the engine...
low~n~fast is still best...
12
posted on
02/23/2007 10:21:32 AM PST
by
1COUNTER-MORTER-68
(THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
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