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FIM-92 Stinger

The FIM-92 Stinger is an American man-portable air-defense system (MANPADS) that operates as an infrared homing surface-to-air missile (SAM). It can be adapted to fire from a wide variety of ground vehicles, and from helicopters as the Air-to-Air Stinger (ATAS). It entered service in 1981 and is used by the militaries of the United States and 29 other countries. It is principally manufactured by Raytheon Missiles & Defense and is produced under license by Airbus Defence and Space in Germany and by Roketsan in Turkey.

FIM-92 Stinger
FIM-92 Stinger launcher
TypeMan-portable surface-to-air missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1981–present
Used bySee Operators
WarsFalklands War
Soviet–Afghan War
Iran–Iraq War
Gulf War
Angolan Civil War
Sri Lankan Civil War
Chadian–Libyan conflict
Tajikistani Civil War
Kargil War
Yugoslav Wars
Invasion of Grenada
Second Chechen War
War in Afghanistan
Iraq War
Syrian Civil War
War in Iraq (2013–2017)
Russo-Ukrainian War
Production history
DesignerGeneral Dynamics
Designed1967
ManufacturerRaytheon Missiles & Defense
Unit costFIM-92A: U.S.$38,000 (missile only, 1980 FY)
($119,320 2020 FY[1])
Produced1978–present
VariantsFIM-92A, FIM-92B, FIM-92C, FIM-92D, FIM-92G
Specifications
Mass
  • Missile – 22 lb (10.1 kg)
  • System – 35 lb (15.7 kg)
Length
  • At launch – 5 ft (1.53 m)
  • In flight – 4 ft 6 in (1.37 m)
Diameter2.8 in (70 mm)
Wingspan6.3 in (160 mm)
Crew1

Effective firing range0.16–4.83 km (.1–3 mi)
WarheadHE-FRAG
Warhead weight6.6 lb (3 kg)
Detonation
mechanism
Impact

EngineSolid-fuel rocket motor
Maximum speed 745 m/s (Mach 2.2; 2,440 ft/s)
Guidance
system
Infrared homing
Launch
platform
MANPADS, M6 Linebacker, Multi-Mission Launcher, Eurocopter Tiger, AN/TWQ-1 Avenger, MQ-1 Predator, AH-64 Apache, T129 ATAK[2]
ReferencesJanes[3]

Description edit

The FIM-92 Stinger is a passive surface-to-air missile that can be shoulder-fired by a single operator (although standard military procedure calls for two operators, team chief and gunner).[4] The Stinger was intended to supplant the FIM-43 Redeye system, the principal difference being that, unlike the Redeye, the Stinger can acquire the target from head-on, giving much more time to acquire and destroy the target. The FIM-92B missile can also be fired from the M1097 Avenger and the M6 Linebacker. The missile is also capable of being deployed from a Humvee Stinger rack, and can be used by airborne troops. A helicopter launched version exists called Air-to-Air Stinger (ATAS).

The missile is 5.0 ft (1.52 m) long and 2.8 in (70 mm) in diameter with 3.9 in (100 mm) fins. The missile itself weighs 22 lb (10.1 kg), while the missile with its launch tube and integral sight, fitted with a gripstock and Identification friend or foe (IFF) antenna, weighs approximately 34 lb (15.2 kg). It has a targeting range of up to 4,800 m and can engage low altitude enemy threats at up to 3,800 m.

The Stinger is launched by a small ejection motor that pushes it a safe distance from the operator before engaging the main two-stage solid-fuel sustainer, which accelerates it to a maximum speed of Mach 2.54 (750 m/s). The warhead contains 1.02 kg (2.25 lb) of HTA-3[5] (a mix of HMX, TNT, and aluminium powder) explosive with an impact fuze and a self-destruct timer that functions 17 seconds after launch.

 
M134 Stinger Tracking Trainer with IFF antenna unfolded
 
A paratrooper with E Battery, 3rd Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment practices jumping from a 34-foot tower with the FIM-92 Stinger
 
Launcher with IFF antenna folded

To fire the missile, a BCU (Battery Coolant Unit) is inserted into the gripstock. This device consists of a supply of high-pressure gaseous argon which is injected into the seeker to cryogenically cool it to operating temperature, and a thermal battery which provides power for target acquisition: a single BCU provides power and coolant for roughly 45 seconds, after which another must be inserted if the missile has not been fired. The BCUs are somewhat sensitive to abuse, and have a limited shelf life due to argon leakage. The IFF system receives power from a rechargeable battery which is part of the IFF interrogator box which plugs into the base of the gripstock's pistol grip. Guidance to the target is initially through proportional navigation, then switches to another mode that directs the missile towards the target airframe instead of its exhaust plume.

There are three main variants in use: the Stinger Basic, Stinger-Passive Optical Seeker Technique (POST), and Stinger-Reprogrammable Microprocessor (RMP). These correspond to the FIM-92A, FIM-92B, and FIM-92C and later variants respectively.

The POST and RMP variants have a dual-detector seeker: IR and UV. This allows it to distinguish targets from countermeasures much better than the Redeye and FIM-92A, which have IR-only. While modern flares can have an IR signature that is closely matched to the launching aircraft's engine exhaust, there is a readily distinguishable difference in UV signature between flares and jet engines. The Stinger-RMP is so-called because of its ability to load a new set of software via ROM chip inserted in the grip at the depot. If this download to the missile fails during power-up, basic functionality runs off the onboard ROM. The four-processor RMP has 4 KB of RAM for each processor. Since the downloaded code runs from RAM, there is little space to spare, particularly for processors dedicated to seeker input processing and target analysis.

History edit

 
A U.S. Marine fires a FIM-92 Stinger missile during a July 2009 training exercise in California.
 
4 Stinger missiles on a Dutch Army Fennek reconnaissance vehicle.

The missile began as a program by General Dynamics to produce an improved variant of their 1967 FIM-43 Redeye. Production of the Redeye ran from 1969 to 1982, with a total production of around 85,000 missiles. The program was accepted for further development as Redeye II by the U.S. Army in 1971 and designated FIM-92; the Stinger appellation was chosen in 1972. Because of technical difficulties that dogged testing, the first shoulder launch was not until mid-1975. Production of the FIM-92A began in 1978. An improved Stinger with a new seeker, the FIM-92B, was produced from 1983 alongside the FIM-92A. Production of both the A and B types ended in 1987 with around 16,000 missiles produced.

The replacement FIM-92C began development in 1984, and production began in 1987. The first examples were delivered to front-line units in 1989. C-type missiles were fitted with a reprogrammable microprocessor, allowing for incremental firmware updates. Later missiles designated D received improvements to improve their ability to defeat countermeasures, and later upgrades to the D were designated G.

The FIM-92E or Stinger RMP Block I was developed from 1992 and delivered from 1995 (certain sources state that the FIM-92D is also part of the Block I development). The main changes were again in the sensor and the software, improving the missile's performance against low-signature targets. A software upgrade in 2001 was designated FIM-92F. The development of the Stinger RMP Block II began in 1996 using a new focal plane array sensor to improve the missile's effectiveness in "high clutter" environments and increase the engagement range to about 25,000 feet (7,600 m). Production was scheduled for 2004, but was cancelled due to budget cuts.[6]

Since 1984 the Stinger has been issued to many U.S. Navy warships for point defense, particularly in Middle Eastern waters, with a three-man team that can perform other duties when not conducting Stinger training or maintenance. Until it was decommissioned in September 1993, the U.S. Navy had at least one Stinger Gunnery Detachment attached to Beachmaster Unit Two in Little Creek Virginia. The sailors of this detachment would deploy to carrier battlegroups in teams of two to four sailors per ship as requested by Battle Group Commanders.

Replacement edit

The original Stinger's reprogrammable microprocessor has become obsolete in 2023, and a service life extension will keep the Block I in service until 2030. With the arsenal declining from obsolescence, on 10 November 2020 the U.S. Army issued a request for information for a replacement MANPADS. The new system will be compatible with the Stinger Vehicle Universal Launcher used on the IM-SHORAD and be able to defeat fixed and rotary-wing aircraft, as well as Group 2 and 3 UAS as well as or better than the Stinger. A contract for up to 8,000 missiles is planned to be awarded by 2026.[7][8] The request for information to interested firms only went out in April 2022,[9] and RTX and Lockheed Martin were selected to competitively develop the Stinger replacement in September 2023.[10]

According to Reuters the US government has signed a contract for 1,468 Stingers worth a total of $687 million. This may be to replace stock sent to Ukraine.

Raytheon Chief Executive Greg Hayes said on 26 April: "Some of the components are no longer commercially available, and so we’re going to have to go out and redesign some of the electronics in the missile of the seeker head. That’s going to take us a little bit of time".

According to the report this new contract has no timeline. Neither US officials or officials from Raytheon have commented.[11]

In January 2023, the U.S. Army said it expected to increase Stinger production to 60 missiles per month by 2025, an increase of 50% from the current rate. The Dual Detector Assembly (DDA) will be redesigned because a previous DDA part is no longer being made. The old DDA will continue to be used in production up until stocks are exhausted, which is expected by 2026 when deliveries of Stingers with the new component are expected to begin.[12]

Variants edit

  • Air-to-Air Stinger (ATAS): Used as short range air-to-air missile. The system is mainly designed for attack helicopters.
  • FIM-92A: Stinger Basic: The basic model.
  • FIM-92B: Stinger POST: In this version, the infrared seeker head was replaced by a combined IR/UV seeker that utilized rosette scanning. This resulted in achieving significantly higher resistance to enemy countermeasures (flares) and natural disturbances. Production ran from 1981 to 1987; a total of 600 missiles were produced.
  • FIM-92C: Stinger RMP: The resistance to interference was increased again by adding more powerful digital computer components. Moreover, the software of the missile could now be reconfigured in a short time in order to respond quickly and efficiently to new types of countermeasures. Until 1991, some 20,000 units were produced for the U.S. Army alone.
  • FIM-92D: Various modifications were continued with this version in order to increase the resistance to interference.
  • FIM-92E: Stinger—RMP Block I: By adding a new rollover sensor and revised control software, the flight behavior was significantly improved. Additionally, the performance against small targets such as drones, cruise missiles and light reconnaissance helicopters was improved. The first deliveries began in 1995. Almost the entire stock of U.S. Stinger missiles was replaced by this version.
  • FIM-92F: A further improvement of the E version and the current production version.
  • FIM-92G: An unspecified upgrade for the D variant.
  • FIM-92H: Indicates a D variant that has been upgraded to the E standard.
  • Stinger—RMP Block II: This variant was a planned developed based on the E version. The improvements included an imaging infrared seeker head from the AIM-9X. With this modification, the detection distance and the resistance to jamming was to be greatly increased. Changes to the airframe would furthermore enable a significant increase in range. Although the missile reached the testing phase, the program was dropped in 2002 for budgetary reasons.
  • FIM-92J: Block I missile upgrade to replace aging components to extend service life an additional 10 years. Upgrades include a proximity fuze warhead section, equipped with a target detection device to increase effectiveness against unmanned aerial vehicles,[13][14] a new flight motor and gas generator cartridge, as well as new designs for the o-rings and integral desiccant cartridge.[15]
  • FIM-92K: Variant of FIM-92J designed to use a vehicle datalink rather than the missile's own seeker for targeting.[16]
  • ADSM: Air Defense Suppression Missile: Cancelled experiment variant fitted with a passive radar seeker, designed to be used against radar wave transmitters.[citation needed] The program began in FY 1983[17] and a final report was issued 3 December 1986.[18]

Service edit

 
U.S. Army soldiers from the 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade stand next to a FIM-92 Stinger portable missile launcher during the Persian Gulf War.
 
A Stinger missile being launched from a U.S. Marine Corps AN/TWQ-1 Avenger in April 2000.

Falklands War edit

The Stinger's combat debut occurred during the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas) fought between the United Kingdom and Argentina. At the onset of the conflict soldiers of the British Army's Special Air Service (SAS) had been clandestinely equipped with six missiles, although they had received little instruction in their use. The sole SAS trooper who had received training on the system, and was due to train other troops, was killed in a helicopter crash on 19 May.[19]

Nonetheless, on 21 May 1982 an SAS soldier engaged and shot down an Argentine Pucará ground attack aircraft with a Stinger.[20] On 30 May, at about 11.00 a.m., an Aérospatiale SA 330 Puma helicopter was brought down by another missile, also fired by the SAS, in the vicinity of Mount Kent. Six Argentine National Gendarmerie Special Forces troops were killed and eight more wounded.[21]

The main MANPADS used by both sides during the Falklands War was the Blowpipe missile.[citation needed]

Soviet War in Afghanistan edit

In late 1985, several groups, such as Free the Eagle, began arguing the CIA was not doing enough to support the Mujahideen in the Soviet–Afghan War. Michael Pillsbury, Vincent Cannistraro, and others put enormous bureaucratic pressure on the CIA to provide the Stinger to the rebels. The idea was controversial because up to that point, the CIA had been operating with the pretense that the United States was not involved in the war directly, for various reasons. All weapons supplied up to that point were non-U.S. sourced weapons, including Kalashnikov style assault rifles made in China and Egypt.[22]

The final say-so came down to President General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq of Pakistan, through whom the CIA had to pass all of its funding and weapons to the Mujahideen. President Zia constantly had to gauge how much he could "make the pot boil" in Afghanistan without provoking a Soviet invasion of his own country. According to George Crile III, U.S. Representative Charlie Wilson's relationship with Zia was instrumental in the final go-ahead for the Stinger introduction.[22]

Wilson and his associates at first viewed the Stinger as "just adding another component to the lethal mix we were building."[22] Their increasingly successful Afghanistan strategy, formed largely by Michael G. Vickers, was based on a broad mix of weapons, tactics, and logistics, not a 'silver bullet solution' of a single weapon. Furthermore, the previous attempts to provide MANPADs to the Mujahideen, namely the SA-7 and Blowpipe, hadn't worked very well.[22]

Engineer Ghaffar, of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami, brought down the first Hind gunship with a Stinger on 25 September 1986 near Jalalabad.[22][23][24] As part of Operation Cyclone, the CIA eventually supplied nearly 500 Stingers (some sources claim 1,500–2,000) to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan,[25] and 250 launchers.[26]

The impact of the Stinger on the outcome of the war is contested, particularly in the translation between the impact on the tactical battlefield to the strategic level withdrawal, and the influence the first had on the second.[27] Dr. Robert F. Baumann (of the Staff College at Fort Leavenworth) described its impact on "Soviet tactical operations" as "unmistakable".[28] This opinion was shared by Yossef Bodansky.[29][27] Soviet, and later, Russian, accounts give little significance to the Stinger for strategically ending the war.[25][30][31]

According to the 1993 US Air Defense Artillery Yearbook, the Mujahideen gunners used the supplied Stingers to score approximately 269 total aircraft kills in about 340 engagements, a 79% kill probability.[32] If this report is accurate, Stingers would be responsible for over half of the 451 Soviet aircraft losses in Afghanistan.[27] But these statistics are based on Mujahideen self-reporting, which is of unknown reliability. Selig Harrison rejects such figures, quoting a Russian general who claims the United States "greatly exaggerated" Soviet and Afghan aircraft losses during the war. According to Soviet figures, in 1987–1988, only 35 aircraft and 63 helicopters were destroyed by all causes.[33] The Pakistan Army fired 28 Stingers at enemy aircraft with no kill.[27] According to Soviet figures, by 25 December 1987, only 38 aircraft (airplanes, helicopters) were lost and 14 more were damaged by MANPADS (Blowpipe or Stinger), or 10.2% kill probability.[34]

According to Crile, who includes information from Alexander Prokhanov, the Stinger was a "turning point".[22] Milt Bearden saw it as a "force multiplier" and morale booster.[22] Representative Charlie Wilson, the politician behind Operation Cyclone, described the first Stinger Mi-24 shootdowns in 1986 as one of the three crucial moments of his experience in the war, saying "we never really won a set-piece battle before September 26, and then we never lost one afterwards."[35][36] He was given the first spent Stinger tube as a gift and kept it on his office wall.[22][36] That launch tube is now on exhibit at the US Army Air Defense Artillery Museum, Fort Sill, OK.

Other military analysts tend to be dismissive of the impact to the Stinger. According to Alan J. Kuperman, the Stingers did make an impact at first but within a few months flares, beacons, and exhaust baffles were installed to disorient the missiles, along with night operation and terrain-hugging tactics to prevent the rebels from getting a clear shot. By 1988, Kuperman states, the Mujahideen had all but stopped firing them.[37] Another source (Jonathan Steele) states that Stingers forced Soviet helicopters and ground attack planes to bomb from higher altitudes with less accuracy, but did not bring down many more aircraft than Chinese heavy machine guns and other less sophisticated anti-aircraft weaponry.[38]

The last Stingers were supplied in 1988 after increasing reports of fighters selling them to Iran and thawing relations with Moscow.[24][39] After the 1989 Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, the U.S. attempted to buy back the Stinger missiles, with a $55 million program launched in 1990 to buy back around 300 missiles (US$183,300 each).[40] The U.S. government collected most of the Stingers it had delivered, but by 1996 around 600 were unaccounted for and some found their way into Croatia, Iran, Sri Lanka, Qatar, and North Korea.[41][42] According to the CIA, already in August 1988 the U.S. had demanded from Qatar the return of Stinger missiles.[43] Wilson later told CBS he "lived in terror" that a civilian airliner would be shot down by a Stinger, but he did not have misgivings about having provided Stingers to defeat the Soviets.[36]

The story of the Stingers in Afghanistan was popularly told in the media by Western sources primarily, notably in Charlie Wilson's War by George Crile, and Ghost Wars by Steve Coll.

Angolan civil war edit

The Reagan administration provided 310 Stingers to Jonas Savimbi's UNITA movement in Angola between 1986 and 1989.[44] As in Afghanistan, efforts to recover missiles after the end of hostilities proved incomplete. The battery of a Stinger lasts for four or five years, so any battery supplied in the 1980s would now be inoperative[45] but during the Syrian Civil War, insurgents showed how easily they switched to different batteries, including widespread car batteries, as power sources for several MANPADS models.[46]

Libyan invasion of Chad edit

The French army used 15 firing positions and 30 missiles purchased in 1983 for operations in Chad. The 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment made an unsuccessful fire during a Libyan bombardment on 10 September 1987 and shot down a Hercules transport aircraft on 7 July 1988.[47]

The Chadian government received Stinger missiles from the United States, when Libya invaded the northern part of the African country. On 8 October 1987, a Libyan Su-22MK was shot down by a FIM-92A fired by Chadian forces. The pilot, Capt. Diya al-Din, ejected and was captured. He was later granted political asylum by the French government. During the recovery operation, a Libyan MiG-23MS was shot down by a FIM-92A.[48]

Tajik civil war edit

Tajik Islamist opposition forces operating from Afghanistan during the 1992–97 Tajik civil war encountered a heavy air campaign launched by Russia and Uzbekistan to prop up the government in Dushanbe that included border and cross-border raids. During one of these operations, a Sukhoi Su-24M was shot down on 3 May 1993 with a Stinger fired by the opposition. Both Russian pilots were rescued.[49]

Chechen War edit

Russian officials claimed several times that the Chechen militia and insurgents possessed US-made Stinger missiles. They attributed a few of their aerial losses to the American MANPADS. The presence of such missiles was confirmed by photo evidence, and were said to originate from Afghan smuggling routes that passed through Georgia.[50] It is believed one Sukhoi Su-24 was shot down by a Stinger missile during the Second Chechen War.[51]

Sri Lankan civil war edit

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam also managed to acquire one or several Stingers, possibly from former Mujahideen stocks, and used at least one to down a Sri Lanka Air Force Mi-24 on 10 November 1997.[42][52]

United States edit

In 2000, the U.S. inventory contained 13,400 missiles. The total cost of the program is $7,281,000,000.[53] It is rumored that the United States Secret Service has Stinger missiles to defend the President, a notion that has never been dispelled; however, U.S. Secret Service plans favor moving the President to a safer place in the event of an attack rather than shooting down the plane, lest the missile (or the wreckage of the target aircraft) hit innocents.[54]

During the 1980s, the Stinger was used to support different US-aligned guerrilla forces, notably the Afghan Mujahidins, the Chad government against the Libyan invasion and the Angolan UNITA. The Nicaraguan contras were not provided with Stingers due to the lack of fixed wing aircraft of the Sandinista government, as such the previous generation FIM-43 Redeye was considered adequate.[30]

Syrian civil war edit

In the Syrian civil war, Turkey reportedly helped to transport a limited amount of FIM-92 Stingers to the Free Syrian Army.[55]

On 27 February 2020, during the northwestern offensive launched in December 2019 by the Syrian regime (backed by Russia, Iran and Hezbollah), Russian and Syrian aircraft (variously reportedly as Russian Su-34s and Syrian Su-22) attacked a Turkish military convoy near Idlib, killing 36 Turkish soldiers. That day, video footage emerged of alleged Turkish soldiers (backing Syrian opposition fighters) firing what apparently looks like a Roketsan-made Stinger against either Russian or Syrian aircraft (or possibly against both).[56]

Russo-Ukrainian War edit

 
Ukrainian soldier of the 30th Mechanized Brigade Anti-Air Battalion with a FIM-92 Stinger during the Russian invasion of Ukraine

In February 2022, several countries announced that they were providing Stinger missiles to Ukrainian forces defending against the Russian invasion. Germany announced that it would provide 500 missiles.[57] Denmark said that it will provide parts for 300 missiles, to be assembled in the United States.[58] The Netherlands stated they would supply 200 units.[59] Italy,[60] Latvia,[61] Lithuania,[62] and the United States[63] each stated that they would provide undisclosed amounts.

By 7 March, the U.S. reported that it and its NATO allies had together sent more than 2,000 Stinger missiles to Ukraine.[64] In late April 2022, Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Hayes told investors that the company was experiencing supply chain issues and would not be able to ramp up production of Stinger missiles until 2023. This delay was in part due to the fact the Stinger was scheduled to be replaced in the 2020s and thus contained obsolete components, which have to be redesigned for modern procurement. As of 11 May, the U.S. had sent a quarter of its aging Stinger missile stockpile to Ukraine.[65][66]

On 20 August 2022, Russia supplied a single Stinger to Iran, for them to attempt reverse engineering the modern version of it.[67]

Operators edit

 
Map with FIM-92 operators in blue[citation needed]
 
Taiwanese multiple Stinger missile launcher demonstration in Taipei's old Air Force base

Countries edit

Organizations edit

See also edit

  • 9K38 Igla – Russian man-portable surface-to-air missile (SA-18 Grouse)
  • 9K333 Verba – Russian man-portable surface-to-air missile
  • AIM-92 Stinger – American short ranged air-to-air missile
  • Anza (missile) – Pakistani man-portable air-defence system
  • FN-6 – Chinese man-portable surface-to-air missile
  • Grom (missile) – Polish man-portable air-defense system
  • Misagh-2 – Iranian man-portable surface-to-air missile
  • Mistral missile – French short range air defense system
  • Piorun (missile) – Polish man-portable air-defense system
  • Qaem – Iranian surface-to-air missile and glide bomb
  • QW-1 Vanguard – Chinese man portable surface-to-air missile
  • Type 91 surface-to-air missile – Japanese man-portable surface-to-air missile

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Further reading edit

  • O'Halloran, James C.; Christopher F. Foss, eds. (2005). Jane's Land-Based Air Defence 2005–2006. Couldson, Surrey, UK: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 0710626975.

External links edit

  • Raytheon (General Dynamics) FIM-92 Stinger – Designation Systems
  • Stinger missiles in Syrian Civil War on YouTube
  • FIM-92A Stinger Weapons System: RMP & Basic at the Federation of American Scientists Military Analysis Network

stinger, american, portable, defense, system, manpads, that, operates, infrared, homing, surface, missile, adapted, fire, from, wide, variety, ground, vehicles, from, helicopters, stinger, atas, entered, service, 1981, used, militaries, united, states, other, . The FIM 92 Stinger is an American man portable air defense system MANPADS that operates as an infrared homing surface to air missile SAM It can be adapted to fire from a wide variety of ground vehicles and from helicopters as the Air to Air Stinger ATAS It entered service in 1981 and is used by the militaries of the United States and 29 other countries It is principally manufactured by Raytheon Missiles amp Defense and is produced under license by Airbus Defence and Space in Germany and by Roketsan in Turkey FIM 92 StingerFIM 92 Stinger launcherTypeMan portable surface to air missilePlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1981 presentUsed bySee OperatorsWarsFalklands WarSoviet Afghan WarIran Iraq WarGulf WarAngolan Civil WarSri Lankan Civil WarChadian Libyan conflict Tajikistani Civil WarKargil WarYugoslav WarsInvasion of GrenadaSecond Chechen WarWar in AfghanistanIraq WarSyrian Civil WarWar in Iraq 2013 2017 Russo Ukrainian WarProduction historyDesignerGeneral DynamicsDesigned1967ManufacturerRaytheon Missiles amp DefenseUnit costFIM 92A U S 38 000 missile only 1980 FY 119 320 2020 FY 1 Produced1978 presentVariantsFIM 92A FIM 92B FIM 92C FIM 92D FIM 92GSpecificationsMassMissile 22 lb 10 1 kg System 35 lb 15 7 kg LengthAt launch 5 ft 1 53 m In flight 4 ft 6 in 1 37 m Diameter2 8 in 70 mm Wingspan6 3 in 160 mm Crew1Effective firing range0 16 4 83 km 1 3 mi WarheadHE FRAGWarhead weight6 6 lb 3 kg DetonationmechanismImpactEngineSolid fuel rocket motorMaximum speed745 m s Mach 2 2 2 440 ft s GuidancesystemInfrared homingLaunchplatformMANPADS M6 Linebacker Multi Mission Launcher Eurocopter Tiger AN TWQ 1 Avenger MQ 1 Predator AH 64 Apache T129 ATAK 2 ReferencesJanes 3 Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Replacement 3 Variants 4 Service 4 1 Falklands War 4 2 Soviet War in Afghanistan 4 3 Angolan civil war 4 4 Libyan invasion of Chad 4 5 Tajik civil war 4 6 Chechen War 4 7 Sri Lankan civil war 4 8 United States 4 9 Syrian civil war 4 10 Russo Ukrainian War 5 Operators 5 1 Countries 5 2 Organizations 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDescription editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources FIM 92 Stinger news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The FIM 92 Stinger is a passive surface to air missile that can be shoulder fired by a single operator although standard military procedure calls for two operators team chief and gunner 4 The Stinger was intended to supplant the FIM 43 Redeye system the principal difference being that unlike the Redeye the Stinger can acquire the target from head on giving much more time to acquire and destroy the target The FIM 92B missile can also be fired from the M1097 Avenger and the M6 Linebacker The missile is also capable of being deployed from a Humvee Stinger rack and can be used by airborne troops A helicopter launched version exists called Air to Air Stinger ATAS The missile is 5 0 ft 1 52 m long and 2 8 in 70 mm in diameter with 3 9 in 100 mm fins The missile itself weighs 22 lb 10 1 kg while the missile with its launch tube and integral sight fitted with a gripstock and Identification friend or foe IFF antenna weighs approximately 34 lb 15 2 kg It has a targeting range of up to 4 800 m and can engage low altitude enemy threats at up to 3 800 m The Stinger is launched by a small ejection motor that pushes it a safe distance from the operator before engaging the main two stage solid fuel sustainer which accelerates it to a maximum speed of Mach 2 54 750 m s The warhead contains 1 02 kg 2 25 lb of HTA 3 5 a mix of HMX TNT and aluminium powder explosive with an impact fuze and a self destruct timer that functions 17 seconds after launch nbsp M134 Stinger Tracking Trainer with IFF antenna unfolded nbsp A paratrooper with E Battery 3rd Battalion 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment practices jumping from a 34 foot tower with the FIM 92 Stinger nbsp Launcher with IFF antenna foldedTo fire the missile a BCU Battery Coolant Unit is inserted into the gripstock This device consists of a supply of high pressure gaseous argon which is injected into the seeker to cryogenically cool it to operating temperature and a thermal battery which provides power for target acquisition a single BCU provides power and coolant for roughly 45 seconds after which another must be inserted if the missile has not been fired The BCUs are somewhat sensitive to abuse and have a limited shelf life due to argon leakage The IFF system receives power from a rechargeable battery which is part of the IFF interrogator box which plugs into the base of the gripstock s pistol grip Guidance to the target is initially through proportional navigation then switches to another mode that directs the missile towards the target airframe instead of its exhaust plume There are three main variants in use the Stinger Basic Stinger Passive Optical Seeker Technique POST and Stinger Reprogrammable Microprocessor RMP These correspond to the FIM 92A FIM 92B and FIM 92C and later variants respectively The POST and RMP variants have a dual detector seeker IR and UV This allows it to distinguish targets from countermeasures much better than the Redeye and FIM 92A which have IR only While modern flares can have an IR signature that is closely matched to the launching aircraft s engine exhaust there is a readily distinguishable difference in UV signature between flares and jet engines The Stinger RMP is so called because of its ability to load a new set of software via ROM chip inserted in the grip at the depot If this download to the missile fails during power up basic functionality runs off the onboard ROM The four processor RMP has 4 KB of RAM for each processor Since the downloaded code runs from RAM there is little space to spare particularly for processors dedicated to seeker input processing and target analysis History editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A U S Marine fires a FIM 92 Stinger missile during a July 2009 training exercise in California nbsp 4 Stinger missiles on a Dutch Army Fennek reconnaissance vehicle The missile began as a program by General Dynamics to produce an improved variant of their 1967 FIM 43 Redeye Production of the Redeye ran from 1969 to 1982 with a total production of around 85 000 missiles The program was accepted for further development as Redeye II by the U S Army in 1971 and designated FIM 92 the Stinger appellation was chosen in 1972 Because of technical difficulties that dogged testing the first shoulder launch was not until mid 1975 Production of the FIM 92A began in 1978 An improved Stinger with a new seeker the FIM 92B was produced from 1983 alongside the FIM 92A Production of both the A and B types ended in 1987 with around 16 000 missiles produced The replacement FIM 92C began development in 1984 and production began in 1987 The first examples were delivered to front line units in 1989 C type missiles were fitted with a reprogrammable microprocessor allowing for incremental firmware updates Later missiles designated D received improvements to improve their ability to defeat countermeasures and later upgrades to the D were designated G The FIM 92E or Stinger RMP Block I was developed from 1992 and delivered from 1995 certain sources state that the FIM 92D is also part of the Block I development The main changes were again in the sensor and the software improving the missile s performance against low signature targets A software upgrade in 2001 was designated FIM 92F The development of the Stinger RMP Block II began in 1996 using a new focal plane array sensor to improve the missile s effectiveness in high clutter environments and increase the engagement range to about 25 000 feet 7 600 m Production was scheduled for 2004 but was cancelled due to budget cuts 6 Since 1984 the Stinger has been issued to many U S Navy warships for point defense particularly in Middle Eastern waters with a three man team that can perform other duties when not conducting Stinger training or maintenance Until it was decommissioned in September 1993 the U S Navy had at least one Stinger Gunnery Detachment attached to Beachmaster Unit Two in Little Creek Virginia The sailors of this detachment would deploy to carrier battlegroups in teams of two to four sailors per ship as requested by Battle Group Commanders Replacement edit The original Stinger s reprogrammable microprocessor has become obsolete in 2023 and a service life extension will keep the Block I in service until 2030 With the arsenal declining from obsolescence on 10 November 2020 the U S Army issued a request for information for a replacement MANPADS The new system will be compatible with the Stinger Vehicle Universal Launcher used on the IM SHORAD and be able to defeat fixed and rotary wing aircraft as well as Group 2 and 3 UAS as well as or better than the Stinger A contract for up to 8 000 missiles is planned to be awarded by 2026 7 8 The request for information to interested firms only went out in April 2022 9 and RTX and Lockheed Martin were selected to competitively develop the Stinger replacement in September 2023 10 According to Reuters the US government has signed a contract for 1 468 Stingers worth a total of 687 million This may be to replace stock sent to Ukraine Raytheon Chief Executive Greg Hayes said on 26 April Some of the components are no longer commercially available and so we re going to have to go out and redesign some of the electronics in the missile of the seeker head That s going to take us a little bit of time According to the report this new contract has no timeline Neither US officials or officials from Raytheon have commented 11 In January 2023 the U S Army said it expected to increase Stinger production to 60 missiles per month by 2025 an increase of 50 from the current rate The Dual Detector Assembly DDA will be redesigned because a previous DDA part is no longer being made The old DDA will continue to be used in production up until stocks are exhausted which is expected by 2026 when deliveries of Stingers with the new component are expected to begin 12 Variants editAir to Air Stinger ATAS Used as short range air to air missile The system is mainly designed for attack helicopters FIM 92A Stinger Basic The basic model FIM 92B Stinger POST In this version the infrared seeker head was replaced by a combined IR UV seeker that utilized rosette scanning This resulted in achieving significantly higher resistance to enemy countermeasures flares and natural disturbances Production ran from 1981 to 1987 a total of 600 missiles were produced FIM 92C Stinger RMP The resistance to interference was increased again by adding more powerful digital computer components Moreover the software of the missile could now be reconfigured in a short time in order to respond quickly and efficiently to new types of countermeasures Until 1991 some 20 000 units were produced for the U S Army alone FIM 92D Various modifications were continued with this version in order to increase the resistance to interference FIM 92E Stinger RMP Block I By adding a new rollover sensor and revised control software the flight behavior was significantly improved Additionally the performance against small targets such as drones cruise missiles and light reconnaissance helicopters was improved The first deliveries began in 1995 Almost the entire stock of U S Stinger missiles was replaced by this version FIM 92F A further improvement of the E version and the current production version FIM 92G An unspecified upgrade for the D variant FIM 92H Indicates a D variant that has been upgraded to the E standard Stinger RMP Block II This variant was a planned developed based on the E version The improvements included an imaging infrared seeker head from the AIM 9X With this modification the detection distance and the resistance to jamming was to be greatly increased Changes to the airframe would furthermore enable a significant increase in range Although the missile reached the testing phase the program was dropped in 2002 for budgetary reasons FIM 92J Block I missile upgrade to replace aging components to extend service life an additional 10 years Upgrades include a proximity fuze warhead section equipped with a target detection device to increase effectiveness against unmanned aerial vehicles 13 14 a new flight motor and gas generator cartridge as well as new designs for the o rings and integral desiccant cartridge 15 FIM 92K Variant of FIM 92J designed to use a vehicle datalink rather than the missile s own seeker for targeting 16 ADSM Air Defense Suppression Missile Cancelled experiment variant fitted with a passive radar seeker designed to be used against radar wave transmitters citation needed The program began in FY 1983 17 and a final report was issued 3 December 1986 18 Service edit nbsp U S Army soldiers from the 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade stand next to a FIM 92 Stinger portable missile launcher during the Persian Gulf War nbsp A Stinger missile being launched from a U S Marine Corps AN TWQ 1 Avenger in April 2000 Falklands War edit The Stinger s combat debut occurred during the Falklands War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas fought between the United Kingdom and Argentina At the onset of the conflict soldiers of the British Army s Special Air Service SAS had been clandestinely equipped with six missiles although they had received little instruction in their use The sole SAS trooper who had received training on the system and was due to train other troops was killed in a helicopter crash on 19 May 19 Nonetheless on 21 May 1982 an SAS soldier engaged and shot down an Argentine Pucara ground attack aircraft with a Stinger 20 On 30 May at about 11 00 a m an Aerospatiale SA 330 Puma helicopter was brought down by another missile also fired by the SAS in the vicinity of Mount Kent Six Argentine National Gendarmerie Special Forces troops were killed and eight more wounded 21 The main MANPADS used by both sides during the Falklands War was the Blowpipe missile citation needed Soviet War in Afghanistan edit See also List of Soviet aircraft losses during the Soviet Afghan War In late 1985 several groups such as Free the Eagle began arguing the CIA was not doing enough to support the Mujahideen in the Soviet Afghan War Michael Pillsbury Vincent Cannistraro and others put enormous bureaucratic pressure on the CIA to provide the Stinger to the rebels The idea was controversial because up to that point the CIA had been operating with the pretense that the United States was not involved in the war directly for various reasons All weapons supplied up to that point were non U S sourced weapons including Kalashnikov style assault rifles made in China and Egypt 22 The final say so came down to President General Muhammad Zia ul Haq of Pakistan through whom the CIA had to pass all of its funding and weapons to the Mujahideen President Zia constantly had to gauge how much he could make the pot boil in Afghanistan without provoking a Soviet invasion of his own country According to George Crile III U S Representative Charlie Wilson s relationship with Zia was instrumental in the final go ahead for the Stinger introduction 22 Wilson and his associates at first viewed the Stinger as just adding another component to the lethal mix we were building 22 Their increasingly successful Afghanistan strategy formed largely by Michael G Vickers was based on a broad mix of weapons tactics and logistics not a silver bullet solution of a single weapon Furthermore the previous attempts to provide MANPADs to the Mujahideen namely the SA 7 and Blowpipe hadn t worked very well 22 Engineer Ghaffar of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar s Hezb i Islami brought down the first Hind gunship with a Stinger on 25 September 1986 near Jalalabad 22 23 24 As part of Operation Cyclone the CIA eventually supplied nearly 500 Stingers some sources claim 1 500 2 000 to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan 25 and 250 launchers 26 The impact of the Stinger on the outcome of the war is contested particularly in the translation between the impact on the tactical battlefield to the strategic level withdrawal and the influence the first had on the second 27 Dr Robert F Baumann of the Staff College at Fort Leavenworth described its impact on Soviet tactical operations as unmistakable 28 This opinion was shared by Yossef Bodansky 29 27 Soviet and later Russian accounts give little significance to the Stinger for strategically ending the war 25 30 31 According to the 1993 US Air Defense Artillery Yearbook the Mujahideen gunners used the supplied Stingers to score approximately 269 total aircraft kills in about 340 engagements a 79 kill probability 32 If this report is accurate Stingers would be responsible for over half of the 451 Soviet aircraft losses in Afghanistan 27 But these statistics are based on Mujahideen self reporting which is of unknown reliability Selig Harrison rejects such figures quoting a Russian general who claims the United States greatly exaggerated Soviet and Afghan aircraft losses during the war According to Soviet figures in 1987 1988 only 35 aircraft and 63 helicopters were destroyed by all causes 33 The Pakistan Army fired 28 Stingers at enemy aircraft with no kill 27 According to Soviet figures by 25 December 1987 only 38 aircraft airplanes helicopters were lost and 14 more were damaged by MANPADS Blowpipe or Stinger or 10 2 kill probability 34 According to Crile who includes information from Alexander Prokhanov the Stinger was a turning point 22 Milt Bearden saw it as a force multiplier and morale booster 22 Representative Charlie Wilson the politician behind Operation Cyclone described the first Stinger Mi 24 shootdowns in 1986 as one of the three crucial moments of his experience in the war saying we never really won a set piece battle before September 26 and then we never lost one afterwards 35 36 He was given the first spent Stinger tube as a gift and kept it on his office wall 22 36 That launch tube is now on exhibit at the US Army Air Defense Artillery Museum Fort Sill OK Other military analysts tend to be dismissive of the impact to the Stinger According to Alan J Kuperman the Stingers did make an impact at first but within a few months flares beacons and exhaust baffles were installed to disorient the missiles along with night operation and terrain hugging tactics to prevent the rebels from getting a clear shot By 1988 Kuperman states the Mujahideen had all but stopped firing them 37 Another source Jonathan Steele states that Stingers forced Soviet helicopters and ground attack planes to bomb from higher altitudes with less accuracy but did not bring down many more aircraft than Chinese heavy machine guns and other less sophisticated anti aircraft weaponry 38 The last Stingers were supplied in 1988 after increasing reports of fighters selling them to Iran and thawing relations with Moscow 24 39 After the 1989 Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan the U S attempted to buy back the Stinger missiles with a 55 million program launched in 1990 to buy back around 300 missiles US 183 300 each 40 The U S government collected most of the Stingers it had delivered but by 1996 around 600 were unaccounted for and some found their way into Croatia Iran Sri Lanka Qatar and North Korea 41 42 According to the CIA already in August 1988 the U S had demanded from Qatar the return of Stinger missiles 43 Wilson later told CBS he lived in terror that a civilian airliner would be shot down by a Stinger but he did not have misgivings about having provided Stingers to defeat the Soviets 36 The story of the Stingers in Afghanistan was popularly told in the media by Western sources primarily notably in Charlie Wilson s War by George Crile and Ghost Wars by Steve Coll Angolan civil war edit The Reagan administration provided 310 Stingers to Jonas Savimbi s UNITA movement in Angola between 1986 and 1989 44 As in Afghanistan efforts to recover missiles after the end of hostilities proved incomplete The battery of a Stinger lasts for four or five years so any battery supplied in the 1980s would now be inoperative 45 but during the Syrian Civil War insurgents showed how easily they switched to different batteries including widespread car batteries as power sources for several MANPADS models 46 Libyan invasion of Chad edit The French army used 15 firing positions and 30 missiles purchased in 1983 for operations in Chad The 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment made an unsuccessful fire during a Libyan bombardment on 10 September 1987 and shot down a Hercules transport aircraft on 7 July 1988 47 The Chadian government received Stinger missiles from the United States when Libya invaded the northern part of the African country On 8 October 1987 a Libyan Su 22MK was shot down by a FIM 92A fired by Chadian forces The pilot Capt Diya al Din ejected and was captured He was later granted political asylum by the French government During the recovery operation a Libyan MiG 23MS was shot down by a FIM 92A 48 Tajik civil war edit Tajik Islamist opposition forces operating from Afghanistan during the 1992 97 Tajik civil war encountered a heavy air campaign launched by Russia and Uzbekistan to prop up the government in Dushanbe that included border and cross border raids During one of these operations a Sukhoi Su 24M was shot down on 3 May 1993 with a Stinger fired by the opposition Both Russian pilots were rescued 49 Chechen War edit Russian officials claimed several times that the Chechen militia and insurgents possessed US made Stinger missiles They attributed a few of their aerial losses to the American MANPADS The presence of such missiles was confirmed by photo evidence and were said to originate from Afghan smuggling routes that passed through Georgia 50 It is believed one Sukhoi Su 24 was shot down by a Stinger missile during the Second Chechen War 51 Sri Lankan civil war edit The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam also managed to acquire one or several Stingers possibly from former Mujahideen stocks and used at least one to down a Sri Lanka Air Force Mi 24 on 10 November 1997 42 52 United States edit In 2000 the U S inventory contained 13 400 missiles The total cost of the program is 7 281 000 000 53 It is rumored that the United States Secret Service has Stinger missiles to defend the President a notion that has never been dispelled however U S Secret Service plans favor moving the President to a safer place in the event of an attack rather than shooting down the plane lest the missile or the wreckage of the target aircraft hit innocents 54 During the 1980s the Stinger was used to support different US aligned guerrilla forces notably the Afghan Mujahidins the Chad government against the Libyan invasion and the Angolan UNITA The Nicaraguan contras were not provided with Stingers due to the lack of fixed wing aircraft of the Sandinista government as such the previous generation FIM 43 Redeye was considered adequate 30 Syrian civil war edit In the Syrian civil war Turkey reportedly helped to transport a limited amount of FIM 92 Stingers to the Free Syrian Army 55 On 27 February 2020 during the northwestern offensive launched in December 2019 by the Syrian regime backed by Russia Iran and Hezbollah Russian and Syrian aircraft variously reportedly as Russian Su 34s and Syrian Su 22 attacked a Turkish military convoy near Idlib killing 36 Turkish soldiers That day video footage emerged of alleged Turkish soldiers backing Syrian opposition fighters firing what apparently looks like a Roketsan made Stinger against either Russian or Syrian aircraft or possibly against both 56 Russo Ukrainian War edit nbsp Ukrainian soldier of the 30th Mechanized Brigade Anti Air Battalion with a FIM 92 Stinger during the Russian invasion of UkraineIn February 2022 several countries announced that they were providing Stinger missiles to Ukrainian forces defending against the Russian invasion Germany announced that it would provide 500 missiles 57 Denmark said that it will provide parts for 300 missiles to be assembled in the United States 58 The Netherlands stated they would supply 200 units 59 Italy 60 Latvia 61 Lithuania 62 and the United States 63 each stated that they would provide undisclosed amounts By 7 March the U S reported that it and its NATO allies had together sent more than 2 000 Stinger missiles to Ukraine 64 In late April 2022 Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Hayes told investors that the company was experiencing supply chain issues and would not be able to ramp up production of Stinger missiles until 2023 This delay was in part due to the fact the Stinger was scheduled to be replaced in the 2020s and thus contained obsolete components which have to be redesigned for modern procurement As of 11 May the U S had sent a quarter of its aging Stinger missile stockpile to Ukraine 65 66 On 20 August 2022 Russia supplied a single Stinger to Iran for them to attempt reverse engineering the modern version of it 67 Operators edit nbsp Map with FIM 92 operators in blue citation needed nbsp Taiwanese multiple Stinger missile launcher demonstration in Taipei s old Air Force baseCountries edit nbsp Afghanistan used by Afghan Mujahideen 68 nbsp Angola nbsp Australia formerly used by SASR in Afghanistan 69 nbsp Bahrain 70 318 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Chad limited use 68 nbsp Chile nbsp Colombia 71 nbsp Croatia 72 nbsp Denmark 70 85 nbsp Egypt 70 321 nbsp Finland 73 nbsp France 47 nbsp Georgia nbsp Germany 70 96 nbsp Greece 70 98 nbsp India nbsp Iran 74 75 76 nbsp Iraq nbsp Israel 70 332 nbsp Italy Used by the Army and Marines 70 105 106 nbsp Japan nbsp Kuwait 70 336 nbsp Latvia Used by the Air Force 70 108 nbsp Lithuania Used by the Air Force 70 111 nbsp Morocco Part of a 4 25 billion AH 64E deal 77 nbsp Netherlands Used by the Army and Marines 70 117 nbsp North Korea 78 79 nbsp Norway nbsp Pakistan 350 in service with the Pakistan Army 80 81 nbsp Portugal In 2021 Portuguese Army acquired new missiles and sights 82 nbsp Qatar Used by the Air Force 70 350 nbsp Saudi Arabia 70 352 nbsp Slovenia nbsp South Korea 83 nbsp Switzerland 70 140 nbsp Taiwan Republic of China Navy Republic of China Marine Corps Republic of China Army 84 nbsp Turkey Stingers made under license by ROKETSAN 85 4 800 Stinger missiles were supplied under Stinger Air Defense Guided Missile System European Common Production Program Additional 1 000 Stinger needs were identified in July 2000 and the deliveries were completed in 2003 86 nbsp Ukraine Lithuania and Latvia have transferred unknown quantities of Stinger missiles from their inventory to Ukraine after receiving an approval from the US State Department 87 The Netherlands will supply Ukraine with 200 Stinger missiles 88 Germany will supply 500 Stingers 89 On 16 March 2022 the US announced that an additional 800 Stinger missiles would be transferred following an earlier transfer of over 600 missiles 90 Italy sent an undisclosed number of Stinger missiles since spring 2022 91 92 nbsp United Kingdom 68 nbsp United States 93 Organizations edit nbsp UNITA 44 See also edit9K38 Igla Russian man portable surface to air missile SA 18 Grouse 9K333 Verba Russian man portable surface to air missile AIM 92 Stinger American short ranged air to air missilePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Anza missile Pakistani man portable air defence system FN 6 Chinese man portable surface to air missile Grom missile Polish man portable air defense system Misagh 2 Iranian man portable surface to air missile Mistral missile French short range air defense systemPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Piorun missile Polish man portable air defense system Qaem Iranian surface to air missile and glide bomb QW 1 Vanguard Chinese man portable surface to air missilePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Type 91 surface to air missile Japanese man portable surface to air missileReferences edit 1 in 1980 2020 in2013dollars com T129 ATAK PDF Turkish Aerospace Archived PDF from the original on 14 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Janes 14 June 2022 Stinger family of MANPADS Janes Land Warfare Platforms Artillery amp Air Defence Coulsdon Surrey Jane s Group UK Limited retrieved 17 September 2022 FM 44 18 1 STINGER TEAM OPERATIONS U S Army 31 December 1984 FM 3 04 140 Helicopter Gunnery Raytheon FIM 92 Stinger www designation systems net Retrieved 10 November 2023 U S Army Opens 5 Year Search For Stinger Missile Replacement Aviation Week 11 November 2020 The Army is hunting for a replacement for its man portable Stinger missile Task amp Purpose 14 November 2020 Saballa Joe 8 April 2022 US Army Seeks Aging Stinger Missiles Replacement The Defense Post Retrieved 16 April 2022 US Army pursues faster more survivable Stinger missile replacement Defense News 9 October 2023 US buys more Stingers to refill stock sent to Ukraine Report Al Jazeera 27 May 2022 Retrieved 27 May 2022 Stinger missile production to rise 50 by 2025 US Army says Janes Information Services 25 January 2023 Archived from the original on 25 January 2023 US Army starts upgrade of FIM 92E Stinger Block I missiles Army Technology 2 November 2014 Archived from the original on 18 March 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Osborn Kris 6 November 2014 Army Upgrades Stinger Missiles Military com Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Stinger upgrade to increase service life capabilities Archived 2017 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Army 29 October 2014 This Stinger Missile Is Back Archived 2018 05 24 at the Wayback Machine The National Interest 18 May 2018 Department of Defense Authorization for Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1981 Hearings Before the Committee on Armed Services United States Senate Ninety sixth Congress Second Session on S 2294 United States Congress Senate Committee on Armed Services U S Government Printing Office 10 April 1980 via Google Books Technical Reports Awareness Circular TRAC Defense Technical Information Center 10 March 1989 via Google Books Britain s Small Wars Archived from the original on 7 November 2009 via Facebook San Carlos Air Battles Falklands War 1982 naval history net Archived from the original on 3 June 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2006 Argentine Puma shot down by american Stinger missile MercoPress MercoPress Archived from the original on 28 March 2012 Retrieved 7 November 2009 a b c d e f g h Charlie Wilson s War The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History George Crile 2003 Grove Atlantic Military engineer recounts role in Soviet Afghan war Archived 2012 07 10 at the Wayback Machine By Michael Gisick Stars and Stripes Published 11 September 2008 a b Successful surface to air missile attack shows threat to airliners HomeLand1 Archived from the original on 18 January 2013 Retrieved 28 December 2012 a b Malley William 2002 The Afghanistan wars Palgrave Macmillan p 80 ISBN 0 333 80290 X Hilali A Z 2005 US Pakistan relationship Soviet invasion of Afghanistan p 169 ISBN 0 7546 4220 8 a b c d Alan J Kuperman 1999 The Stinger missile and U S intervention in Afghanistan PDF Political Science Quarterly 114 Summer 1999 219 263 doi 10 2307 2657738 JSTOR 2657738 Archived PDF from the original on 21 October 2014 Retrieved 21 October 2014 Robert F Baumann Compound War Case Study The Soviets in Afghanistan In Compound warfare That fatal knot Archived 2015 09 23 at the Wayback Machine Thomas M Huber ed U S Army Command and General Staff College Press Fort Leavenworth Kansas pg 296 Yossef Bodansky SAMs in Afghanistan assessing the impact Archived 2016 12 06 at the Wayback Machine Jane s Defence Weekly vol 8 no 03 1987 pp 153 154 a b Cushman John H Jr 17 January 1988 The World The Stinger Missile Helping to Change the Course of a War The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 December 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2017 Scott Peter 2003 Drugs oil and war the United States in Afghanistan Colombia and Indochina Rowman amp Littlefield p 5 ISBN 0 7425 2522 8 Blair Case Lisa B Henry Air Defense Artillery Yearbook 1993 PDF US Army Air Defense Artillery Branch p 20 Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2013 Hammerich Helmut 2010 Die Grenzen des Militarischen Berlin Hartmann Miles Verl p 195 ISBN 9783937885308 The Limits of Soviet Air Power The Bear versus Mujahideen in Afghanistan by Edward Westermann www allworldwars com A conversation with Charlie Wilson Archived 2012 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Charlie Rose PBS 24 April 2008 via charlierose com a b c Charlie Did It Archived 2012 10 03 at the Wayback Machine CBS News 60 minutes 19 December 2007 9 51 AM From 13 March 2001 Former Rep Charlie Wilson looks back on his efforts to arm the Mujahedeen against the Soviet Union back in the 1980s Mike Wallace reports Kuperman Alan J January February 2002 Stinging Rebukes Foreign Affairs 81 1 230 231 doi 10 2307 20033070 JSTOR 20033070 Archived from the original on 20 July 2015 Retrieved 16 July 2015 Steele Jonathan 2010 Afghan Ghosts American Myths World Affairs Journal Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Retrieved 16 July 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Afghanistan PSYOP Leaflet psywarrior com Archived from the original on 2 September 2013 Retrieved 7 July 2013 Weiner Tim 24 July 1993 U S Increases Fund To Outbid Terrorists For Afghan Missiles The New York Times Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 1 January 2008 Stinger missile system Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 a b Matthew Schroeder 28 July 2010 Stop Panicking About the Stingers Foreign Policy Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Middle East brief deleted for 2 August 1988 In brief x Qatar PDF Central Intelligence Agency 2 August 1988 p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 23 March 2012 Retrieved 14 November 2010 a b Trade Registers Armstrade sipri org Archived from the original on 13 May 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2013 Silverstein Ken 3 October 2001 Stingers Stingers Who s Got the Stingers Slate Archived from the original on 31 January 2011 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Improvised MANPADS batteries employed in Syria Armament Research Services armamentresearch com 22 July 2014 Archived from the original on 25 July 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2016 a b Arnaud Delalande The Ghost Plane of Faya Largeau Archived 2018 01 10 at the Wayback Machine 9 January 2018 Welcome to the Air Combat Information Group Archived from the original on 21 August 2013 Retrieved 5 November 2011 Human Rights in Tajikistan In the Wake of Civil War By Escrito por Rachel Denber Barnett R Rubin Jeri Laber Google Books Exotic species of the North Caucasus Pt 1 Problematic MANPADS Calibre Obscura 19 December 2021 Archived from the original on 24 January 2022 The first reports about the receipt of MANPADS from the American special services by the Ichkerians appeared in the media in October November 1999 and they were quickly picked up by Russian officials soon the then Minister of Defense Marshal Igor Sergeev declared that the militants had no less than 70 Stingers Of course such statements had little to do with the real state of affairs but despite this a certain number of Stinger MANPADS really did fall into the hands of the militants and to this day information about their real origins basically hasn t been available More precisely their origins and quantities were entirely opaque until now In fact the history of the Chechen Stingers began long before 1999 the first FIM 92 fell into the hands of the separatists back in 1995 1996 Oddly enough it arrived in Chechnya from Georgia In Chechnya it was in service with one of the units of the Armed Forces of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria called the Shatoi Regiment It is noteworthy that this MANPADS was initially in a malfunctioning state The problem was said to be battery related but Musa Bamatgiriev who was in charge of the regiment s air defense managed to bring it into a combat ready position But how did the American Stinger end up in Georgia in the mid 90s The answer to this question may surprise some while others on the contrary will be disappointed with its banality The source of these famous systems was Afghanistan where the CIA as part of Operation Cyclone supplied MANPADS to the forces of the Afghan Opposition represented by the Mujahideen The purpose of the deliveries is very prosaic to counter the Soviet military aviation sic Pashin Alexander Russian Army Operations and 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2022 At a secret airfield in Eastern Europe a multinational effort to send weapons to Ukraine proceeds at high speed CNN Retrieved 7 March 2022 McLeary Paul 26 April 2022 Raytheon chief warns of delays in replenishing Stinger missile stocks Politico Gould Joe Judson Jen 11 May 2022 Stinger shortcut US Army seeks special funding for missile supply chain Defense News Deborah Haynes 9 November 2022 Russia flew 140m in cash and captured Western weapons to Iran in return for deadly drones source claims Sky News Archived from the original on 20 April 2023 Retrieved 10 November 2022 a b c Cullen Tony Foss C F 1 March 1992 Jane s Land based Air Defence 1992 93 5 ed Jane s Information Group pp 52 56 ISBN 978 0710609793 Bonner Stuart Macklin Robert 2014 Redback One Explosive Action in East Timor Iraq and Afghanistan The True Story of an Australian SAS Hero Sydney New South Wales Hachette Australia p 253 ISBN 9780733630606 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n International Institute for Strategic Studies 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The Story and Involvement of the ISI Afghan Jihad Taliban Al Qaeda 9 11 Osama Bin Laden 26 11 and the Future of Al Qaeda Vij Books India Pvt Ltd ISBN 9789382652595 Archived from the original on 9 April 2018 Retrieved 5 December 2017 via Google Books US State Dept Approves 4 25 billion Apache helo sale to Morocco 20 November 2019 US Department of Defense Stinger PDF North Korea Country Handbook 1997 Appendix A Equipment Recognition p A 70 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 21 August 2018 Retrieved 17 September 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Singh R S N 2005 Asian Strategic And Military Perspective Lancer Publishers p 238 ISBN 9788170622451 Sumit Ganguly amp S Paul Kapur 2008 Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia Crisis Behaviour and the Bomb Routledge p 174 ISBN 978 0 203 89286 2 Transfers of major weapons Deals with deliveries or orders made for 1960 to 2020 SIPRI Arms Transfers Database 2021 Stingers for South Korea AH 64E Apaches Archived from the original on 12 August 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2016 US Stinger missiles delivered report Taipei Times 27 May 2023 Retrieved 27 May 2023 Official Roketsan Stinger Page Archived 2009 01 01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 23 October 2008 Sunnetci Ibrahim 2020 Turkey amp Stinger MANPADS Missile Procurement Defence Turkey Magazine 15 101 GDC 23 January 2022 The U S And Allies Supply Lethal Military Aid TO Ukraine Global Defense Corp Retrieved 10 February 2022 Zaken Ministerie van Buitenlandse 26 February 2022 Kamerbrief stand van zaken ontwikkelingen in en rondom Oekraine Kamerstuk Rijksoverheid nl rijksoverheid nl in Dutch Retrieved 26 February 2022 Live updates Germany to send anti tank weapons to Ukraine Associated Press News 26 February 2022 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Fact Sheet on U S Security Assistance for Ukraine 16 March 2022 Guns Not Gnocchi Italian Military Aid to Ukraine Italy preps new Ukraine arms shipment Is SAMP T air defense included 10 November 2022 GDC 13 July 2021 Raytheon Awarded 321 Million Stinger Missiles Contract For U S Army Global Defense Corp Retrieved 10 February 2022 Further reading editO Halloran James C Christopher F Foss eds 2005 Jane s Land Based Air Defence 2005 2006 Couldson Surrey UK Jane s Information Group ISBN 0710626975 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FIM 92 Stinger category Raytheon General Dynamics FIM 92 Stinger Designation Systems Defense Update Stinger VSHORAD Missile Stinger missiles in Syrian Civil War on YouTube FIM 92A Stinger Weapons System RMP amp Basic at the Federation of American Scientists Military Analysis Network Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FIM 92 Stinger amp oldid 1184445358, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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