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M47 Dragon

The M47 Dragon, known as the FGM-77 during development, is an American shoulder-fired, man-portable anti-tank guided missile system. It was phased out of U.S. military service in 2001, in favor of the newer FGM-148 Javelin system.[9]

M47 Dragon
An M47 Dragon, shown here with its daytime tracker attached.
TypeAnti-tank missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service
  • 1975–1990s (US Army)
  • 1975–2001 (US Marine Corps)
  • 1979–present (other countries)
Used bySee Operators
Wars
Production history
DesignerRaytheon
Designed3 March 1966[citation needed]
ManufacturerMcDonnell Douglas, Raytheon
Produced1975
No. built
  • 7,000 launchers, 33,000 missiles (U.S. Army)[4]
  • 17,000 missiles (U.S. Marine Corps)[4]
  • 250,000 missiles (total)[5]
VariantsDragon II, Dragon III, Saeghe 1, 2, 3 and 4[6]
Specifications (FGM-77)
Mass32.1 lb (14.57 kg) (w/ day sight)[7]
46.9 lb (21.29 kg) (w/ night sight)
Length1,154 mm (45.4 in)
Diameter140 mm
Crew1

Effective firing range65–1,000 meters
Maximum firing range
  • 1,000 meters
  • 1,500 meters (Dragon III)
WarheadHollow charge
Warhead weight3.5 lb (1.6 kg) Octol[8]

Maximum speed
  • Dragon/Dragon II: 100 m/s (330 ft/s)
  • Dragon II: 200 m/s (660 ft/s)
Guidance
system
SACLOS

The M47 Dragon uses a wire-guidance system in concert with a high explosive anti-tank warhead and was capable of defeating armored vehicles, fortified bunkers, main battle tanks, and other hardened targets. While it was primarily created to defeat the Soviet Union's T-55, T-62, and T-72 tanks, it saw use well into the 1990s, seeing action in the Persian Gulf War. The U.S. military officially retired the weapon in 2001. The United States destroyed the last of its stocks of the missile in 2009.[10] The weapon system remains in active service with other militaries around the world.

History edit

 
A U.S. Army soldier firing M47 Dragon
 
U.S. Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division armed with the M47 Dragon during the 1983 Invasion of Grenada

In 1959, the US Army Ordnance Missile Command suggested the development of a heavy medium range assault weapon.

In 1960, the United States Army launched the MAW (Medium Anti-tank Weapon) program on a proposal from Douglas. In 1966, Douglas was awarded the contract to develop the XM47. In 1967, the XM47 was redesignated FGM-77 and FTM-77 (the FTM-77 being the training version). The first missile test took place in December 1967 followed by the first shot in real conditions (firing set, guidance and launcher) on 5 July 1968.

Used by the U.S. Army, the U.S. Marine Corps, as well as many foreign militaries, the M47 Dragon was first fielded in January 1975 to U.S. Army soldiers stationed in mainland Europe. In April 1981, the deployment of the base version of the Dragon in the Army was complete. The Army initially deployed the Dragon as a squad weapon, with every rifle squad containing an antiarmor specialist who carried the weapon.[11]

Reorganization in the 1990s saw Dragons moved, with mechanized infantry received two launchers per squad.[12] Infantry, Airborne, and Air Assault units received a pair of two-man ATGM teams in the platoon's weapons squad, while Light Infantry (six teams) and Ranger (three teams) units held their Dragons at the company level.[13]

In USMC service, the Dragon was concentrated at the battalion level in a dedicated missile platoon with 32 Dragon teams. The platoon was organized with four sections, each with four squads of two 2-man teams.[14]

Guidance system edit

The M47 Dragon uses a so-called "tracking control assembly" (TCA) guidance system previously used on the TOW and Shillelagh missiles. With this system, all that is required of the infantryman is to look through an amplifying optical sight and keep it exactly aligned with the objective.

During this time, a second electro-optical system mounted parallel to the sight visually receives thermal radiation (generally infrared) from a pyrotechnic system located on the tail of the missile and focuses it on a sensitive receiver / locator. This continuously measures via a computer the position of the heat source (the missile) in relation to the line of sight fixed on the objective, any deviation automatically causing the desired correction signal, which is in turn transmitted along wires (connecting the missile to the launcher) and that without any intervention by the operator.

Variants edit

Dragon edit

The basic missile, the M222 missile, weighs 11.5 kilograms and is 744mm long in a 1154mm long launch tube.[15] The fairly basic warhead can penetrate 330 mm of armor plate.[16][17]

Dragon II edit

Dragon II is a simple warhead upgrade, originally called "Dragon PIP" and officially known as MK1 MOD0. The Dragon II received a new warhead that offers an 85% increase in penetration, to about 600mm.[18] Weight increased to 12.3 kilograms and length to 846mm. Dragon II entered service in 1988.

Dragon III edit

A further improved Dragon II, the Dragon III received an even more powerful tandem shaped charge[19] warhead, reportedly a Dragon II head with additional precursor charge.[20] Exact penetration remains unknown, though it is claimed[by whom?] to be "several hundred millimeters" better than the SMAW's 600 mm pen HEAA rocket.

Additionally, the motor is improved, allowing the missile to reach a range of 1,000 meters in 6.5 seconds, much faster than the original missile's 11 second flight time. The improved motor increases the range as well, propelling Dragon III to 1,500 meters.

The second final improvement is a new combined day/night tracker with laser guidance.[21] Only the United States Marine Corps bought this variant, beginning in 1991,[22] while the Army opted to wait for Javelin to enter service.

Saeghe edit

Iran has reverse-engineered a version of the Dragon, the Saeghe. They displayed it in 2002 at the Defendory exhibition in Athens, when it was in mass production.[6] Hezbollah has acquired Saeghes for anti-tank and anti-armor uses.[23]

Known versions include Saeghe 1, a copy of Dragon II and Saeghe 2, a copy of Dragon III. Saeghe 3 is not confirmed to exist and Saeghe 4 is believed to use a thermobaric warhead. It is mostly produced for export, only issued to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Iranian National Guard).

Saeghe (also transliterated as Saegheh, Saeqeh and several other variations) is a very common name for Iranian weapon systems. Other things with the name include a recon drone, a target drone, a fighter jet, an air-to-air missile, and an RPG-7 warhead.[6]

Components edit

The launcher system of the M47 Dragon consists of a smoothbore fiberglass tube, breech/gas generator, tracker, bipod, battery, sling, and forward and aft shock absorbers. To fire the weapon, non-integrated day or night sights must be attached. While the launcher itself is expendable, the sights can be removed and reused.

SU-36/P Day Sight edit

The SU-36/P, properly "Infrared Tracker, Guided Missile, SU-36/P", provides the user with control over the missile. The sight slots onto the missile tube and The SU-36/P has a 6x magnification capability and a viewing angle of 6°. The simple crosshair reticle has a pair of stadia lines To the right of the gunner's monocular is an infrared receiver, consisting of a large lens fitted with a filter used to capture the infrared signal emitted by the missile during its flight.

Night Sight AN/TAS-5 edit

The Dragon night tracker (AN/TAS-5) increases the gunner's ability to engage targets during limited visibility. Targets can be engaged during daylight and also during limited visibility such as smoke, fog, or darkness.

Operators edit

 
A map with M47 Dragon operators in blue with former operators in red
 
A Swiss Army M47 Dragon on display in October 2006.

Current operators edit

Former operators edit

Non-State Actors edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Katz, Sam; Russell, Lee E. (25 July 1985). Armies in Lebanon 1982–84. Men-at-Arms 165. Osprey Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9780850456028.
  2. ^ "Le Front Polisario revendique une nouvelle attaque contre les troupes marocaines". Le Monde (in French). 16 July 1987.
  3. ^ "- YouTube". YouTube.
  4. ^ a b c "M-47 Dragon Anti-Tank Guided Missile". Federation of American Scientists. from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  5. ^ (PDF). www.flightglobal.com. Flight International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b c . Middle East Newsline. 3 December 2002. Archived from the original on 8 May 2003. Retrieved 17 November 2009.
  7. ^ M47 Dragon Medium Anti-tank Weapon System. Inetres.com.
  8. ^ "USMC Introduction the M-47 Dragon".
  9. ^ Figueroa, Jose (21 November 2000). "School of Infantry students shoot the works, herald new antitank era". Marines. Archived from the original on 19 February 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  10. ^ "ADMC destroys Army's last DRAGON missiles | Article | The United States Army". 16 September 2009.
  11. ^ "FM 7-8 (1980) Rifle Platoon and Squad".
  12. ^ "FM 7-7J (1993) Bradley Platoon".
  13. ^ https://www.marines.mil/Portals/1/Publications/FM%207-8%20W%20CH%201.pdf#page=377 [bare URL PDF]
  14. ^ "FMFM 6-3 Marine Infantry Battalion".
  15. ^ "FM 23-24 M47 Dragon".
  16. ^ https://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-us-archive/fm_90-10%2879%29.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  17. ^ http://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-us-archive/FM90-10-1C1%2895%29.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  18. ^ "Department of Defense Authorization for Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1991: Hearings Before the Committee on Armed Services, United States Senate, One Hundred First Congress, Second Session, on S. 2884". 1990.
  19. ^ "Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1989: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 4781". 1988.
  20. ^ "Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1989: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 4781". 1988.
  21. ^ "Department of Defense Appropriations for 1990: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, One Hundred First Congress, First Session". 1989.
  22. ^ https://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5QafD97rfz47WvmzgtW0blFY3HGyjAs88VcZTIrgoR7cflZiVdVXveYWZU-ef_VbsuSbkqQWKJExVGaW0xQR6FkmRXPoAPb0cKN3qIGdZKAEXiinXqVRPcxf-kbFViApaUca_llC__VH9r60kqkvvC58-GKmT5sNn8UyTZPNnF2Z591aslAtEOGWiO5UMExtmYTYyWqqz5drGxzuZd6e9ctIB2mHturZESK22wktfUnv_ECuvl8ztgeAIBOAwdbebL6MCRgnRXKsfNnWZ7BOf5rR0XRYn6z13yExye8hHgqjh3FmJOrI [dead link]
  23. ^ Riad Kahwaji (20 August 2006). . Ocus.net. Archived from the original on 27 February 2009. Retrieved 10 January 2009.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Jones, Richard D. Jane's Infantry Weapons 2009/2010. Jane's Information Group; 35 edition (January 27, 2009). ISBN 978-0-7106-2869-5.
  25. ^ "Iraq is Flooded with Iranian Weapons". 18 January 2024.
  26. ^ https://ptsm.edu.pl/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/jaroslaw-jarzabek.pdf
  27. ^ "Javelin Block 0". www.deagel.com.
  28. ^ (PDF). Defense Security Cooperation Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  29. ^ a b "Spike Anti-Armour Missile Systems, Israel". Army Technology. from the original on 27 January 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  30. ^ "PAL-System wird nach dreissig Jahren Einsatz liquidiert". Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports. 23 October 2007. from the original on 21 January 2016. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  31. ^ "Trade Registers". armstrade.sipri.org. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  32. ^ "From Worst to First: How the Javelin Saved America's Anti-Tank Arsenal". 8 October 2021.
  33. ^ Mitzer, Stijn; Oliemans, Joost (25 September 2019). "List of Iranian Arms and Equipment Supplied to Houthi Militants in Yemen since 2015". Oryx Blog.

External links edit

  • McDonnell-Douglas FGM-77 Dragon – Designation Systems

dragon, known, during, development, american, shoulder, fired, portable, anti, tank, guided, missile, system, phased, military, service, 2001, favor, newer, javelin, system, shown, here, with, daytime, tracker, attached, typeanti, tank, missileplace, originuni. The M47 Dragon known as the FGM 77 during development is an American shoulder fired man portable anti tank guided missile system It was phased out of U S military service in 2001 in favor of the newer FGM 148 Javelin system 9 M47 DragonAn M47 Dragon shown here with its daytime tracker attached TypeAnti tank missilePlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1975 1990s US Army 1975 2001 US Marine Corps 1979 present other countries Used bySee OperatorsWars1982 Lebanon War 1 Invasion of GrenadaIran Iraq WarWestern Sahara War 2 Gulf WarYemeni Civil War 2015 present citation needed Conflict in Najran Jizan and Asir 3 Production historyDesignerRaytheonDesigned3 March 1966 citation needed ManufacturerMcDonnell Douglas RaytheonProduced1975No built7 000 launchers 33 000 missiles U S Army 4 17 000 missiles U S Marine Corps 4 250 000 missiles total 5 VariantsDragon II Dragon III Saeghe 1 2 3 and 4 6 Specifications FGM 77 Mass32 1 lb 14 57 kg w day sight 7 46 9 lb 21 29 kg w night sight Length1 154 mm 45 4 in Diameter140 mmCrew1Effective firing range65 1 000 metersMaximum firing range1 000 meters1 500 meters Dragon III WarheadHollow chargeWarhead weight3 5 lb 1 6 kg Octol 8 Maximum speedDragon Dragon II 100 m s 330 ft s Dragon II 200 m s 660 ft s GuidancesystemSACLOSThe M47 Dragon uses a wire guidance system in concert with a high explosive anti tank warhead and was capable of defeating armored vehicles fortified bunkers main battle tanks and other hardened targets While it was primarily created to defeat the Soviet Union s T 55 T 62 and T 72 tanks it saw use well into the 1990s seeing action in the Persian Gulf War The U S military officially retired the weapon in 2001 The United States destroyed the last of its stocks of the missile in 2009 10 The weapon system remains in active service with other militaries around the world Contents 1 History 2 Guidance system 3 Variants 3 1 Dragon 3 2 Dragon II 3 3 Dragon III 3 4 Saeghe 4 Components 4 1 SU 36 P Day Sight 4 2 Night Sight AN TAS 5 5 Operators 5 1 Current operators 5 2 Former operators 5 3 Non State Actors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp A U S Army soldier firing M47 Dragon nbsp U S Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division armed with the M47 Dragon during the 1983 Invasion of GrenadaIn 1959 the US Army Ordnance Missile Command suggested the development of a heavy medium range assault weapon In 1960 the United States Army launched the MAW Medium Anti tank Weapon program on a proposal from Douglas In 1966 Douglas was awarded the contract to develop the XM47 In 1967 the XM47 was redesignated FGM 77 and FTM 77 the FTM 77 being the training version The first missile test took place in December 1967 followed by the first shot in real conditions firing set guidance and launcher on 5 July 1968 Used by the U S Army the U S Marine Corps as well as many foreign militaries the M47 Dragon was first fielded in January 1975 to U S Army soldiers stationed in mainland Europe In April 1981 the deployment of the base version of the Dragon in the Army was complete The Army initially deployed the Dragon as a squad weapon with every rifle squad containing an antiarmor specialist who carried the weapon 11 Reorganization in the 1990s saw Dragons moved with mechanized infantry received two launchers per squad 12 Infantry Airborne and Air Assault units received a pair of two man ATGM teams in the platoon s weapons squad while Light Infantry six teams and Ranger three teams units held their Dragons at the company level 13 In USMC service the Dragon was concentrated at the battalion level in a dedicated missile platoon with 32 Dragon teams The platoon was organized with four sections each with four squads of two 2 man teams 14 Guidance system editThe M47 Dragon uses a so called tracking control assembly TCA guidance system previously used on the TOW and Shillelagh missiles With this system all that is required of the infantryman is to look through an amplifying optical sight and keep it exactly aligned with the objective During this time a second electro optical system mounted parallel to the sight visually receives thermal radiation generally infrared from a pyrotechnic system located on the tail of the missile and focuses it on a sensitive receiver locator This continuously measures via a computer the position of the heat source the missile in relation to the line of sight fixed on the objective any deviation automatically causing the desired correction signal which is in turn transmitted along wires connecting the missile to the launcher and that without any intervention by the operator Variants editDragon edit The basic missile the M222 missile weighs 11 5 kilograms and is 744mm long in a 1154mm long launch tube 15 The fairly basic warhead can penetrate 330 mm of armor plate 16 17 Dragon II edit Dragon II is a simple warhead upgrade originally called Dragon PIP and officially known as MK1 MOD0 The Dragon II received a new warhead that offers an 85 increase in penetration to about 600mm 18 Weight increased to 12 3 kilograms and length to 846mm Dragon II entered service in 1988 Dragon III edit A further improved Dragon II the Dragon III received an even more powerful tandem shaped charge 19 warhead reportedly a Dragon II head with additional precursor charge 20 Exact penetration remains unknown though it is claimed by whom to be several hundred millimeters better than the SMAW s 600 mm pen HEAA rocket Additionally the motor is improved allowing the missile to reach a range of 1 000 meters in 6 5 seconds much faster than the original missile s 11 second flight time The improved motor increases the range as well propelling Dragon III to 1 500 meters The second final improvement is a new combined day night tracker with laser guidance 21 Only the United States Marine Corps bought this variant beginning in 1991 22 while the Army opted to wait for Javelin to enter service Saeghe edit Iran has reverse engineered a version of the Dragon the Saeghe They displayed it in 2002 at the Defendory exhibition in Athens when it was in mass production 6 Hezbollah has acquired Saeghes for anti tank and anti armor uses 23 Known versions include Saeghe 1 a copy of Dragon II and Saeghe 2 a copy of Dragon III Saeghe 3 is not confirmed to exist and Saeghe 4 is believed to use a thermobaric warhead It is mostly produced for export only issued to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Iranian National Guard Saeghe also transliterated as Saegheh Saeqeh and several other variations is a very common name for Iranian weapon systems Other things with the name include a recon drone a target drone a fighter jet an air to air missile and an RPG 7 warhead 6 Components editThe launcher system of the M47 Dragon consists of a smoothbore fiberglass tube breech gas generator tracker bipod battery sling and forward and aft shock absorbers To fire the weapon non integrated day or night sights must be attached While the launcher itself is expendable the sights can be removed and reused SU 36 P Day Sight edit The SU 36 P properly Infrared Tracker Guided Missile SU 36 P provides the user with control over the missile The sight slots onto the missile tube and The SU 36 P has a 6x magnification capability and a viewing angle of 6 The simple crosshair reticle has a pair of stadia lines To the right of the gunner s monocular is an infrared receiver consisting of a large lens fitted with a filter used to capture the infrared signal emitted by the missile during its flight Night Sight AN TAS 5 edit The Dragon night tracker AN TAS 5 increases the gunner s ability to engage targets during limited visibility Targets can be engaged during daylight and also during limited visibility such as smoke fog or darkness Operators edit nbsp A map with M47 Dragon operators in blue with former operators in red nbsp A Swiss Army M47 Dragon on display in October 2006 Current operators edit nbsp Iran 24 nbsp Iraq Saeghe used by PMF militias 25 nbsp Morocco 24 nbsp Saudi Arabia 26 nbsp Thailand 24 Former operators edit nbsp Israel 24 nbsp Iraq Acquired M47 Dragons captured from Iran 4 Not operational and not in use nbsp Jordan Replaced by the FGM 148 Javelin 27 28 nbsp Netherlands 24 Was replaced by the Spike in August 2001 29 nbsp Spain 24 Phased out of service being replaced by the Spike 29 nbsp Switzerland 30 Phased out not directly replaced 6 200 ordered in 1979 5 600 ordered in 1981 31 nbsp United States 24 Replaced by the FGM 148 Javelin 32 Non State Actors edit nbsp Houthis Iranian Saeghe version 33 See also editFGM 148 Javelin successor to the FGM 77 Dragon Shoulder Launched Multipurpose Assault Weapon SMAW SRAW EryxReferences edit Katz Sam Russell Lee E 25 July 1985 Armies in Lebanon 1982 84 Men at Arms 165 Osprey Publishing p 7 ISBN 9780850456028 Le Front Polisario revendique une nouvelle attaque contre les troupes marocaines Le Monde in French 16 July 1987 YouTube YouTube a b c M 47 Dragon Anti Tank Guided Missile Federation of American Scientists Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 11 January 2009 McDonnell Douglas Raytheon FGM 77A M 47 Dragon PDF www flightglobal com Flight International Archived from the original PDF on 26 August 2018 a b c Iran Presents Version of U S Anti Tank Missile Middle East Newsline 3 December 2002 Archived from the original on 8 May 2003 Retrieved 17 November 2009 M47 Dragon Medium Anti tank Weapon System Inetres com USMC Introduction the M 47 Dragon Figueroa Jose 21 November 2000 School of Infantry students shoot the works herald new antitank era Marines Archived from the original on 19 February 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2012 ADMC destroys Army s last DRAGON missiles Article The United States Army 16 September 2009 FM 7 8 1980 Rifle Platoon and Squad FM 7 7J 1993 Bradley Platoon https www marines mil Portals 1 Publications FM 207 8 20W 20CH 201 pdf page 377 bare URL PDF FMFM 6 3 Marine Infantry Battalion FM 23 24 M47 Dragon https www bits de NRANEU others amd us archive fm 90 10 2879 29 pdf bare URL PDF http www bits de NRANEU others amd us archive FM90 10 1C1 2895 29 pdf bare URL PDF Department of Defense Authorization for Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1991 Hearings Before the Committee on Armed Services United States Senate One Hundred First Congress Second Session on S 2884 1990 Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1989 Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations United States Senate One Hundredth Congress Second Session on H R 4781 1988 Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1989 Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations United States Senate One Hundredth Congress Second Session on H R 4781 1988 Department of Defense Appropriations for 1990 Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations House of Representatives One Hundred First Congress First Session 1989 https books googleusercontent com books content req AKW5QafD97rfz47WvmzgtW0blFY3HGyjAs88VcZTIrgoR7cflZiVdVXveYWZU ef VbsuSbkqQWKJExVGaW0xQR6FkmRXPoAPb0cKN3qIGdZKAEXiinXqVRPcxf kbFViApaUca llC VH9r60kqkvvC58 GKmT5sNn8UyTZPNnF2Z591aslAtEOGWiO5UMExtmYTYyWqqz5drGxzuZd6e9ctIB2mHturZESK22wktfUnv ECuvl8ztgeAIBOAwdbebL6MCRgnRXKsfNnWZ7BOf5rR0XRYn6z13yExye8hHgqjh3FmJOrI dead link Riad Kahwaji 20 August 2006 Arab States Eye Better Spec Ops Missiles Ocus net Archived from the original on 27 February 2009 Retrieved 10 January 2009 a b c d e f g Jones Richard D Jane s Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 Jane s Information Group 35 edition January 27 2009 ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 Iraq is Flooded with Iranian Weapons 18 January 2024 https ptsm edu pl wp content uploads 2018 01 jaroslaw jarzabek pdf Javelin Block 0 www deagel com Jordan Javelin Guided Missile Systems PDF Defense Security Cooperation Agency Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2013 a b Spike Anti Armour Missile Systems Israel Army Technology Archived from the original on 27 January 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2009 PAL System wird nach dreissig Jahren Einsatz liquidiert Federal Department of Defence Civil Protection and Sports 23 October 2007 Archived from the original on 21 January 2016 Retrieved 9 July 2016 Trade Registers armstrade sipri org Retrieved 16 November 2023 From Worst to First How the Javelin Saved America s Anti Tank Arsenal 8 October 2021 Mitzer Stijn Oliemans Joost 25 September 2019 List of Iranian Arms and Equipment Supplied to Houthi Militants in Yemen since 2015 Oryx Blog External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to M47 Dragon McDonnell Douglas FGM 77 Dragon Designation Systems Comal citizen finds M47 Dragon missile launcher in the wood Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M47 Dragon amp oldid 1217851432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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