fbpx
Wikipedia

Man-portable air-defense system

Man-portable air-defense systems (MANPADS or MPADS) are portable surface-to-air missiles. They are guided weapons and are a threat to low-flying aircraft, especially helicopters.

A Soviet 9K32 Strela-2 in use.

Overview Edit

MANPADS were developed in the 1950s to provide military ground forces with protection from jet aircraft. They have received a great deal of attention, partly because armed groups have used them against commercial airliners. These missiles, affordable and widely available through a variety of sources, have been used successfully over the past three decades both in military conflicts and by terrorist organizations.[1]

Twenty-five countries, including the United Kingdom, the United States, Poland, Sweden, Russia, and Iran produce man-portable air defense systems.[2][3] Possession, export, and trafficking of such weapons is officially tightly controlled, due to the threat they pose to civil aviation, although such efforts have not always been successful.[4][5]

The missiles are about 1.5 to 1.8 m (5 to 6 ft) in length and weigh about 17 to 18 kg (37 to 40 lb), depending on the model. MANPADS generally have a target detection range of about 10 km (6 mi) and an engagement range of about 6 km (4 mi), so aircraft flying at 6,100 metres (20,000 ft) or higher are relatively safe.[6]

Missile types Edit

 
An FIM-43C Redeye missile just after launch, before the sustainer motor ignites
 
An SA-18 (Igla) missile with launch tube and gripstock (top) and an SA-16 (Igla-1) missile and launch tube (bottom)
 
Japanese airmen aiming a Type 91 Kai MANPADS at a mock airborne target in the Pacific Alaskan Range Complex as part of Red Flag – Alaska in 2008.
 
A Starstreak SAM fired from a M1097 AN/TWQ-1 Avenger Air Defense platform.

Infrared Edit

Infrared homing missiles are designed to home-in on a heat source on an aircraft, typically the engine exhaust plume, and detonate a warhead in or near the heat source to disable the aircraft. These missiles use passive guidance, meaning that they do not emit signals to detect a heat source, which makes them difficult to detect by targeted aircraft employing countermeasure systems.[7]

First generation Edit

The first missiles deployed in the 1960s were infrared missiles. First generation MANPADS, such as the US Redeye, early versions of the Soviet 9K32 Strela-2, and the Chinese HN-5 (copy of Soviet Strela-2), are considered "tail-chase weapons" as their uncooled spin-scan seekers can only discern the superheated interior of the target's jet engine from background noise. This means they are only capable of accurately tracking the aircraft from the rear when the engines are fully exposed to the missile's seeker and provide a sufficient thermal signature for engagement. First generation IR missiles are also highly susceptible to interfering thermal signatures from background sources, including the sun, which many experts feel makes them somewhat unreliable, and they are prone to erratic behaviour in the terminal phase of engagement.[8] While less effective than more modern weapons, they remain common in irregular forces as they are not limited by the short shelf-life of gas coolant cartridges used by later systems.

Second generation Edit

Second generation infrared missiles, such as early versions of the U.S. Stinger, the Soviet Strela-3, and the Chinese FN-6, use gas-cooled seeker heads and a conical scanning technique, which enables the seeker to filter out most interfering background IR sources as well as permitting head-on and side engagement profiles. Later versions of the Redeye MANPADS are regarded as straddling the first and second generations as they are gas-cooled but still use a spin-scan seeker.[citation needed]

Third generation Edit

Third generation infrared MANPADS, such as the French Mistral, the Soviet 9K38 Igla, and the US Stinger B, use rosette scanning detectors to produce a quasi-image of the target. Their seeker compares input from multiple detections bands, either two widely separated IR bands or IR and UV, giving them much greater ability to discern and reject countermeasures deployed by the target aircraft.[6][8]

Fourth generation Edit

Fourth generation missiles, such as the canceled American FIM-92 Stinger Block 2, Russian Verba, Chinese QW-4, and Japanese Type 91 surface-to-air missile use imaging infrared focal plane array guidance systems and other advanced sensor systems, which permit engagement at greater ranges.[9]

Command line-of-sight Edit

Command guidance (CLOS) missiles do not home in on a particular aspect (heat source or radio or radar transmissions) of the targeted aircraft. Instead, the missile operator or gunner visually acquires the target using a magnified optical sight and then uses radio controls to "fly" the missile into the aircraft. One of the benefits of such a missile is that it is virtually immune to flares and other basic countermeasure systems that are designed primarily to defeat IR missiles. The major drawback of CLOS missiles is that they require highly trained and skilled operators. Numerous reports from the Soviet–Afghan War in the 1980s cite Afghan mujahedin as being disappointed with the British-supplied Blowpipe CLOS missile because it was too difficult to learn to use and highly inaccurate, particularly when employed against fast-moving jet aircraft.[10] Given these considerations, many experts believe that CLOS missiles are not as ideally suited for untrained personnel use as IR missiles, which sometimes are referred to as "fire and forget" missiles.[11]

Later versions of CLOS missiles, such as the British Javelin, use a solid-state television camera in lieu of the optical tracker to make the gunner's task easier. The Javelin's manufacturer, Thales Air Defence, claims that their missile is virtually impervious to countermeasures.[12]

Laser guided Edit

Laser guided MANPADS use beam-riding guidance where a sensor in the missile's tail detects the emissions from a laser on the launcher and attempts to steer the missile to fly at the exact middle of the beam, or between two beams. Missiles such as Sweden's RBS-70 and Britain's Starstreak can engage aircraft from all angles and only require the operator to continuously track the target using a joystick to keep the laser aim point on the target: the latest version of RBS 70 features a tracking engagement mode where fine aim adjustments of the laser emitter are handled by the launcher itself, with the user only having to make coarse aim corrections. Because there are no radio data links from the ground to the missile, the missile cannot be effectively jammed after it is launched. Even though beam-riding missiles require relatively extensive training and skill to operate, many experts consider these missiles particularly menacing due to the missiles' resistance to most conventional countermeasures in use today.[13][14]

Notable uses Edit

Against military aircraft Edit

Against cruise missiles Edit

On 10 October 2022, during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian forces were recorded allegedly shooting down a Russian cruise missile using MANPADS.[21] Since then, other instances have been videoed and shared on social media platforms.[22]

Against civilian aircraft Edit

Countermeasures Edit

 
A 9K38 Igla (NATO reporting name: SA-18) dual missile launch platform mounted on a Mercedes-Benz Unimog of the Mexican Navy in a Mexican military parade.

Man-portable air defense systems are a popular black market item for insurgent forces.[24] Their proliferation became the subject of the Wassenaar Arrangement's (WA)22 Elements for Export Controls of MANPADS, the G8 Action Plan of 2 June 2003,[25] the October 2003 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit, Bangkok Declaration on Partnership for the Future and in July 2003 the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), Forum for Security Co-operation, Decision No. 7/03: Man-portable Air Defense Systems.[26]

Understanding the problem in 2003, Colin Powell remarked that there was "no threat more serious to aviation" than the missiles,[27] which can be used to shoot down helicopters and commercial airliners, and are sold illegally for as little as a few hundred dollars. The U.S. has led a global effort to dismantle these weapons, with over 30,000 voluntarily destroyed since 2003, but probably thousands are still in the hands of insurgents, especially in Iraq, where they were looted from the military arsenals of the former dictator Saddam Hussein,[28][29] and in Afghanistan as well. In August 2010, a report by the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) confirmed that "only a handful" of illicit MANPADS were recovered from national resistance caches in Iraq in 2009, according to media reports and interviews with military sources.[30]

Military Edit

With the growing number of MANPADS attacks on civilian airliners, a number of different countermeasure systems have been developed specifically to protect aircraft against the missiles.[citation needed]

Civilian Edit

Weapons by country Edit

 
Practice shooting from MANPADS
 
Departure of a rocket from MANPADS
 
HS M09 hybrid air-defense system on BOV-3 vehicle with 8 × Strela 2

Black market Edit

Although most MANPADS are owned and accounted for by governments, political upheavals and corruption have allowed thousands of them to enter the black market. In the years 1998–2018, at least 72 non-state groups have fielded MANPADS.[37] Civilians in the United States cannot legally own MANPADS.[38]

See also Edit

References Edit

Portions of this article were taken from Homeland Security: Protecting Airliners from Terrorist Missiles Archived 5 June 2008 at the Stanford Web Archive, CRS Report for Congress RL31741, February 16, 2006 by the Congressional Research Service, division of The Library of Congress which as a work of the Federal Government exists in the public domain.

  1. ^ Footnote 1 in original source (CRS RL31741): "Shoulder-fired SAMs have been used effectively in a variety of conflicts ranging from the Arab-Israeli Wars, Vietnam, the Iran-Iraq War, to the Falklands Conflict, as well as conflicts in Nicaragua, Yemen, Angola, and Uganda, the Chad-Libya Conflict, and the Balkans Conflict in the 1990s. Some analysts claim that Afghan mujahedin downed 269 Soviet aircraft using 340 shoulder-fired SAMs during the Soviet-Afghan War and that 12 of 29 Allied aircraft shot down during the 1991 Gulf War were downed by MANPADS."
  2. ^ CRS RL31741 page 1
  3. ^ Wade Bose, "Wassenaar Agreement Agrees on MANPADS Export Criteria", Arms Control Today, January/February 2001, p. 1., quoted in CRS RL31741
  4. ^ "MANPADS Proliferation - FAS". Fas.org. from the original on 31 August 2006. Retrieved 4 September 2006.
  5. ^ "Defence & Security Intelligence & Analysis - Jane's 360". Janes.com. from the original on 5 April 2006. Retrieved 4 September 2006.
  6. ^ a b Marvin B. Schaffer, "Concerns About Terrorists With Manportable SAMS", RAND Corporation Reports, October 1993, quoted in CRS RL31741
  7. ^ CRS RL31741 page 1-2
  8. ^ a b CRS RL31741 page 2
  9. ^ "Raytheon Electronic Systems FIM-92 Stinger Low-Altitude Surface-to-Air Missile System Family", Jane's Defence, October 13, 2000, quoted in CRS RL31741
  10. ^ Timothy Gusinov, "Portable Weapons May Become the Next Weapon of Choice for Terrorists", Washington Diplomat, January 2003, p. 2., quoted in CRS RL31741
  11. ^ CRS RL31741 page 2-3
  12. ^ "Land-Based Air Defence 2003-2004", Jane's, 2003, p. 37., quoted in CRS RL31741
  13. ^ CRS RL31741 page 3
  14. ^ Richardson, Mark, and Al-Jaberi, Mubarak, "The vulnerability of laser warning systems against guided weapons based on low power lasers", Cranfield University, April 28, 2006
  15. ^ "Airframe Details for F-16 #84-1390". F-16.net. from the original on 26 December 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  16. ^ "UK: Igla missile's potent force". BBC News. 13 August 2003. from the original on 8 February 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  17. ^ Cohen, Roger (11 December 1995). "French Deadline Passes With No Word From Serbs on Pilots". The New York Times. from the original on 12 May 2016. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
  18. ^ John Pike (21 March 1999). "SA-7 Grail". FAS. from the original on 3 February 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2009.
  19. ^ "Russian fighter jet shot down in Syria's Idlib province". BBC. 3 February 2018. from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 21 July 2018.
  20. ^ de Larrinaga, Nicholas (3 May 2014). "Two Ukrainian Mi-24s shot down by MANPADS". IHS Jane's Defence Weekly. from the original on 13 November 2014. Retrieved 4 May 2014.
  21. ^ Mazurenko, Alona (10 October 2022). "Ukrainian soldier shoots down missile using portable anti-aircraft missile system". Ukrainska Pravda. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  22. ^ "Reddit post of MANPADS shooting down a cruise missile". 28 December 2022. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  23. ^ Northrop Grumman fact sheet 2007-10-30 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ "MANPADS at a Glance", Arms control.
  25. ^ G-8 to Take Further Steps to Enhance Transportation Security, Federation of American Scientists.
  26. ^ Man-Portable Air Defense System (MANPADS) Proliferation, FAS.
  27. ^ "Countering the MANPADS threat: strategies for success (man-portable air defense systems)", Access my library.
  28. ^ Jehl, Douglas; Sanger, David E. (6 November 2004). "U.S. Expands List of Lost Missiles". The New York Times. from the original on 31 July 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  29. ^ "Iraq's Looted Arms Depots: What the GAO Didn't Mention". Fas.org. from the original on 9 November 2010. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  30. ^ Drummond, Katie. "Where Have All the MANPADS Gone?". Wired. from the original on 29 December 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  31. ^ "DRDO conducts successful test flight of VSHORADS missile". Times of India. PTI. 28 September 2022. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  32. ^ "Iranian TOW Missile Knockoffs Spread to War Zones". Warisboring.com. 18 June 2016. from the original on 5 January 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  33. ^ "How Iran's Revived Weapons Exports Could Boost Its Proxies". Washingtoninstitute.org. from the original on 4 January 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  34. ^ "SeaFuture 2023 - First public appearance of MBDA Italy Next Generation V-SHORAD concept mock-up". 5 June 2023.
  35. ^ Kolukısa, Hasan (30 August 2020). "SUNGUR'da PorSav hava savunma füzeleri görüldü". DefenceTurk (in Turkish). Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  36. ^ "Delivery of PorSav Very Low Altitude Air Defense Missile Starts". RayHaber | RaillyNews. 8 May 2020. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  37. ^ . The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  38. ^ Short Range SAM Division, Missile and Space Intelligence Center, Defense Intelligence Agency. Undated (published 2002). https://fas.org/irp/dia/manpads_components.pdf.

External links Edit

  • MANPADS Proliferation 31 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine—links to hundreds of documents on MANPADS, their proliferation, and control efforts
  • Small Arms Survey Research Note
  • —Analysis of MANPADS effectiveness.
  • MANPADS: Combating the Threat to Global Aviation from Man-Portable Air Defense Systems

portable, defense, system, manpads, mpads, portable, surface, missiles, they, guided, weapons, threat, flying, aircraft, especially, helicopters, soviet, 9k32, strela, contents, overview, missile, types, infrared, first, generation, second, generation, third, . Man portable air defense systems MANPADS or MPADS are portable surface to air missiles They are guided weapons and are a threat to low flying aircraft especially helicopters A Soviet 9K32 Strela 2 in use Contents 1 Overview 2 Missile types 2 1 Infrared 2 1 1 First generation 2 1 2 Second generation 2 1 3 Third generation 2 1 4 Fourth generation 2 2 Command line of sight 2 3 Laser guided 3 Notable uses 3 1 Against military aircraft 3 2 Against cruise missiles 3 3 Against civilian aircraft 4 Countermeasures 4 1 Military 4 2 Civilian 5 Weapons by country 5 1 Black market 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOverview EditMANPADS were developed in the 1950s to provide military ground forces with protection from jet aircraft They have received a great deal of attention partly because armed groups have used them against commercial airliners These missiles affordable and widely available through a variety of sources have been used successfully over the past three decades both in military conflicts and by terrorist organizations 1 Twenty five countries including the United Kingdom the United States Poland Sweden Russia and Iran produce man portable air defense systems 2 3 Possession export and trafficking of such weapons is officially tightly controlled due to the threat they pose to civil aviation although such efforts have not always been successful 4 5 The missiles are about 1 5 to 1 8 m 5 to 6 ft in length and weigh about 17 to 18 kg 37 to 40 lb depending on the model MANPADS generally have a target detection range of about 10 km 6 mi and an engagement range of about 6 km 4 mi so aircraft flying at 6 100 metres 20 000 ft or higher are relatively safe 6 Missile types Edit nbsp An FIM 43C Redeye missile just after launch before the sustainer motor ignites nbsp An SA 18 Igla missile with launch tube and gripstock top and an SA 16 Igla 1 missile and launch tube bottom nbsp Japanese airmen aiming a Type 91 Kai MANPADS at a mock airborne target in the Pacific Alaskan Range Complex as part of Red Flag Alaska in 2008 nbsp A Starstreak SAM fired from a M1097 AN TWQ 1 Avenger Air Defense platform Infrared Edit Main article Infrared homing Infrared homing missiles are designed to home in on a heat source on an aircraft typically the engine exhaust plume and detonate a warhead in or near the heat source to disable the aircraft These missiles use passive guidance meaning that they do not emit signals to detect a heat source which makes them difficult to detect by targeted aircraft employing countermeasure systems 7 First generation Edit The first missiles deployed in the 1960s were infrared missiles First generation MANPADS such as the US Redeye early versions of the Soviet 9K32 Strela 2 and the Chinese HN 5 copy of Soviet Strela 2 are considered tail chase weapons as their uncooled spin scan seekers can only discern the superheated interior of the target s jet engine from background noise This means they are only capable of accurately tracking the aircraft from the rear when the engines are fully exposed to the missile s seeker and provide a sufficient thermal signature for engagement First generation IR missiles are also highly susceptible to interfering thermal signatures from background sources including the sun which many experts feel makes them somewhat unreliable and they are prone to erratic behaviour in the terminal phase of engagement 8 While less effective than more modern weapons they remain common in irregular forces as they are not limited by the short shelf life of gas coolant cartridges used by later systems Second generation Edit Second generation infrared missiles such as early versions of the U S Stinger the Soviet Strela 3 and the Chinese FN 6 use gas cooled seeker heads and a conical scanning technique which enables the seeker to filter out most interfering background IR sources as well as permitting head on and side engagement profiles Later versions of the Redeye MANPADS are regarded as straddling the first and second generations as they are gas cooled but still use a spin scan seeker citation needed Third generation Edit Third generation infrared MANPADS such as the French Mistral the Soviet 9K38 Igla and the US Stinger B use rosette scanning detectors to produce a quasi image of the target Their seeker compares input from multiple detections bands either two widely separated IR bands or IR and UV giving them much greater ability to discern and reject countermeasures deployed by the target aircraft 6 8 Fourth generation Edit Fourth generation missiles such as the canceled American FIM 92 Stinger Block 2 Russian Verba Chinese QW 4 and Japanese Type 91 surface to air missile use imaging infrared focal plane array guidance systems and other advanced sensor systems which permit engagement at greater ranges 9 Command line of sight Edit Main article Command line of sight Command guidance CLOS missiles do not home in on a particular aspect heat source or radio or radar transmissions of the targeted aircraft Instead the missile operator or gunner visually acquires the target using a magnified optical sight and then uses radio controls to fly the missile into the aircraft One of the benefits of such a missile is that it is virtually immune to flares and other basic countermeasure systems that are designed primarily to defeat IR missiles The major drawback of CLOS missiles is that they require highly trained and skilled operators Numerous reports from the Soviet Afghan War in the 1980s cite Afghan mujahedin as being disappointed with the British supplied Blowpipe CLOS missile because it was too difficult to learn to use and highly inaccurate particularly when employed against fast moving jet aircraft 10 Given these considerations many experts believe that CLOS missiles are not as ideally suited for untrained personnel use as IR missiles which sometimes are referred to as fire and forget missiles 11 Later versions of CLOS missiles such as the British Javelin use a solid state television camera in lieu of the optical tracker to make the gunner s task easier The Javelin s manufacturer Thales Air Defence claims that their missile is virtually impervious to countermeasures 12 Laser guided Edit Main articles Laser guidance and beam riding Laser guided MANPADS use beam riding guidance where a sensor in the missile s tail detects the emissions from a laser on the launcher and attempts to steer the missile to fly at the exact middle of the beam or between two beams Missiles such as Sweden s RBS 70 and Britain s Starstreak can engage aircraft from all angles and only require the operator to continuously track the target using a joystick to keep the laser aim point on the target the latest version of RBS 70 features a tracking engagement mode where fine aim adjustments of the laser emitter are handled by the launcher itself with the user only having to make coarse aim corrections Because there are no radio data links from the ground to the missile the missile cannot be effectively jammed after it is launched Even though beam riding missiles require relatively extensive training and skill to operate many experts consider these missiles particularly menacing due to the missiles resistance to most conventional countermeasures in use today 13 14 Notable uses EditAgainst military aircraft Edit List of Soviet aircraft losses in Afghanistan Argentine air forces in the Falklands War British air services in the Falklands War On 27 February 1991 during Operation Desert Storm an USAF F 16 was shot down by an Igla 1 15 On 16 April 1994 during Operation Deny Flight a Sea Harrier of the 801 Naval Air Squadron of the Royal Navy operating from the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal was brought down by an Igla 1 16 On 30 August 1995 during Operation Deliberate Force a French Air Force Mirage 2000D was shot down over Bosnia by a heat seeking 9K38 Igla missile fired by air defense units of Army of Republika Srpska prompting efforts to obtain improved defensive systems 17 On 27 May 1999 the Anza Mk II was used to attack Indian aircraft during the Kargil conflict with India A MiG 27 of the Indian Air Force was shot down by Pakistan Army Air Defence forces 18 List of Russian aircraft losses in the Second Chechen War List of Coalition aircraft crashes in Afghanistan List of aviation shootdowns and accidents during the Iraq War 2002 Khankala Mi 26 crash On 19 August 2002 a Russian made Igla shoulder fired surface to air missile hit an overloaded Mil Mi 26 helicopter causing it to crash into a minefield at the main military base at Khankala near the capital city of Grozny Chechnya 127 Russian troops and crew were killed In the 2008 South Ossetia War Polish made Grom MANPADS were used by Georgia Syrian Civil War On 3 February 2018 a Russian Sukhoi Su 25 piloted by Major Roman Filipov was shot down by a MANPADS over rebel held territory while conducting airstrikes over Syria s northwestern city of Saraqib 19 War in Donbas 20 2022 Russian invasion of UkraineAgainst cruise missiles Edit On 10 October 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Ukrainian forces were recorded allegedly shooting down a Russian cruise missile using MANPADS 21 Since then other instances have been videoed and shared on social media platforms 22 Against civilian aircraft Edit The 1978 Air Rhodesia Viscount shootdown is the first example of a civilian airliner shot down by a man portable surface to air missile The pilot of the aircraft managed to make a controlled crash landing Air Rhodesia Flight 827 was also shot down in February 1979 by the Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army armed with a Strela 2 missile All 59 passengers and crew were killed The 1993 Sukhumi airliner attacks involved 5 civilian aircraft shot down within a total of 4 days in Sukhumi Abkhazia Georgia killing 108 people 23 On 6 April 1994 a surface to air missile struck one of the wings of the Dassault Falcon 50 carrying three French crew and nine passengers including Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundian president Cyprien Ntaryamira as it prepared to land in Kigali Rwanda before a second missile hit its tail The plane erupted into flames in mid air before crashing into the garden of the presidential palace exploding on impact This incident was the ignition spark of the Rwandan genocide 1998 Lionair Flight LN 602 shootdown On 7 October 1998 the Tamil Tigers shot down an aircraft off the coast of Sri Lanka 2002 Mombasa airliner attack On 28 November 2002 two shoulder launched Strela 2 SA 7 surface to air missiles were fired at a chartered Boeing 757 airliner as it took off from Moi International Airport The missiles missed the aircraft which continued safely to Tel Aviv carrying 271 vacationers from Mombasa back to Israel In the photos the missile systems were painted in light blue the color used in the Soviet military for training material a training SA 7 round would not have the guidance system 2003 Baghdad DHL attempted shootdown incident On 22 November 2003 an Airbus A300B4 203F cargo plane operating on behalf of DHL was hit by an SA 14 missile which resulted in the loss of its hydraulic systems The crew later landed the crippled aircraft safely by using only differential engine thrust by adjusting the individual throttle controls of each engine 2007 Mogadishu TransAVIAexport Airlines Il 76 crash On 23 March 2007 a TransAVIAexport Airlines Ilyushin Il 76 airplane crashed in outskirts of Mogadishu Somalia during the 2007 Battle of Mogadishu Witnesses claim that a surface to air missile was fired immediately prior to the accident However Somali officials deny that the aircraft was shot down Countermeasures Edit nbsp A 9K38 Igla NATO reporting name SA 18 dual missile launch platform mounted on a Mercedes Benz Unimog of the Mexican Navy in a Mexican military parade Man portable air defense systems are a popular black market item for insurgent forces 24 Their proliferation became the subject of the Wassenaar Arrangement s WA 22 Elements for Export Controls of MANPADS the G8 Action Plan of 2 June 2003 25 the October 2003 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation APEC Summit Bangkok Declaration on Partnership for the Future and in July 2003 the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE Forum for Security Co operation Decision No 7 03 Man portable Air Defense Systems 26 Understanding the problem in 2003 Colin Powell remarked that there was no threat more serious to aviation than the missiles 27 which can be used to shoot down helicopters and commercial airliners and are sold illegally for as little as a few hundred dollars The U S has led a global effort to dismantle these weapons with over 30 000 voluntarily destroyed since 2003 but probably thousands are still in the hands of insurgents especially in Iraq where they were looted from the military arsenals of the former dictator Saddam Hussein 28 29 and in Afghanistan as well In August 2010 a report by the Federation of American Scientists FAS confirmed that only a handful of illicit MANPADS were recovered from national resistance caches in Iraq in 2009 according to media reports and interviews with military sources 30 Military Edit With the growing number of MANPADS attacks on civilian airliners a number of different countermeasure systems have been developed specifically to protect aircraft against the missiles citation needed AN ALQ 144 AN ALQ 147 and AN ALQ 157 are U S produced systems developed by Sanders Associates in the 1970s AN ALQ 212 ATIRCM AN AAQ 24 Nemesis are NATO systems developed by BAE Systems and Northrop Grumman respectively Civilian Edit Civil Aircraft Missile Protection System CAMPS Developed by Saab Avitronics Chemring Countermeasures and Naturelink Aviation using non pyrotechnic infrared decoyWeapons by country Edit nbsp Practice shooting from MANPADS nbsp Departure of a rocket from MANPADS nbsp HS M09 hybrid air defense system on BOV 3 vehicle with 8 Strela 2China HN 5 HN 6 QW 1 QW 11 QW 11G QW 1A QW 1M QW 2 QW 3 FN 6 QW 1 Vanguard TB 1 France Mistral 1 Mistral 2 Mistral 3 United Kingdom Blowpipe Javelin Starburst Starstreak India MPDMS VSHORAD 31 Iran Misagh 1 Misagh 2 Misagh 3 Qaem 32 33 Italy New VSHORAD 34 Japan Type 91 SAM 2 SAM 2B Pakistan Anza Anza Mk I Anza Mk II Anza Mk III Poland Grom Piorun Romania CA 94 CA 94M Soviet Union Russian Federation 9K32M Strela 2 SA 7 9K36 Strela 3 SA 14 9K310 Igla M SA 16 9K38 Igla SA 18 9K338 Igla S SA 24 9K333 Verba SA 25 Sweden RBS 70 RBS 70 NG United States FIM 43 Redeye FIM 92 Stinger South Korea Chiron North Korea HT 16PGJ citation needed Turkey Sungur PorSav 35 36 Black market Edit Although most MANPADS are owned and accounted for by governments political upheavals and corruption have allowed thousands of them to enter the black market In the years 1998 2018 at least 72 non state groups have fielded MANPADS 37 Civilians in the United States cannot legally own MANPADS 38 See also EditAnti aircraft warfare Infrared countermeasure Aerial countermeasures Civil Aircraft Missile Protection System Flight Guard Northrop Grumman Guardian Man portable anti tank systemsReferences EditPortions of this article were taken fromHomeland Security Protecting Airliners from Terrorist MissilesArchived 5 June 2008 at the Stanford Web Archive CRS Report for Congress RL31741 February 16 2006 by the Congressional Research Service division of The Library of Congress which as a work of the Federal Government exists in the public domain Footnote 1 in original source CRS RL31741 Shoulder fired SAMs have been used effectively in a variety of conflicts ranging from the Arab Israeli Wars Vietnam the Iran Iraq War to the Falklands Conflict as well as conflicts in Nicaragua Yemen Angola and Uganda the Chad Libya Conflict and the Balkans Conflict in the 1990s Some analysts claim that Afghan mujahedin downed 269 Soviet aircraft using 340 shoulder fired SAMs during the Soviet Afghan War and that 12 of 29 Allied aircraft shot down during the 1991 Gulf War were downed by MANPADS CRS RL31741 page 1 Wade Bose Wassenaar Agreement Agrees on MANPADS Export Criteria Arms Control Today January February 2001 p 1 quoted in CRS RL31741 MANPADS Proliferation FAS Fas org Archived from the original on 31 August 2006 Retrieved 4 September 2006 Defence amp Security Intelligence amp Analysis Jane s 360 Janes com Archived from the original on 5 April 2006 Retrieved 4 September 2006 a b Marvin B Schaffer Concerns About Terrorists With Manportable SAMS RAND Corporation Reports October 1993 quoted in CRS RL31741 CRS RL31741 page 1 2 a b CRS RL31741 page 2 Raytheon Electronic Systems FIM 92 Stinger Low Altitude Surface to Air Missile System Family Jane s Defence October 13 2000 quoted in CRS RL31741 Timothy Gusinov Portable Weapons May Become the Next Weapon of Choice for Terrorists Washington Diplomat January 2003 p 2 quoted in CRS RL31741 CRS RL31741 page 2 3 Land Based Air Defence 2003 2004 Jane s 2003 p 37 quoted in CRS RL31741 CRS RL31741 page 3 Richardson Mark and Al Jaberi Mubarak The vulnerability of laser warning systems against guided weapons based on low power lasers Cranfield University April 28 2006 Airframe Details for F 16 84 1390 F 16 net Archived from the original on 26 December 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2017 UK Igla missile s potent force BBC News 13 August 2003 Archived from the original on 8 February 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Cohen Roger 11 December 1995 French Deadline Passes With No Word From Serbs on Pilots The New York Times Archived from the original on 12 May 2016 Retrieved 17 February 2017 John Pike 21 March 1999 SA 7 Grail FAS Archived from the original on 3 February 2009 Retrieved 9 February 2009 Russian fighter jet shot down in Syria s Idlib province BBC 3 February 2018 Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 21 July 2018 de Larrinaga Nicholas 3 May 2014 Two Ukrainian Mi 24s shot down by MANPADS IHS Jane s Defence Weekly Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 4 May 2014 Mazurenko Alona 10 October 2022 Ukrainian soldier shoots down missile using portable anti aircraft missile system Ukrainska Pravda Retrieved 23 October 2022 Reddit post of MANPADS shooting down a cruise missile 28 December 2022 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Northrop Grumman fact sheet Archived 2007 10 30 at the Wayback Machine MANPADS at a Glance Arms control G 8 to Take Further Steps to Enhance Transportation Security Federation of American Scientists Man Portable Air Defense System MANPADS Proliferation FAS Countering the MANPADS threat strategies for success man portable air defense systems Access my library Jehl Douglas Sanger David E 6 November 2004 U S Expands List of Lost Missiles The New York Times Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Iraq s Looted Arms Depots What the GAO Didn t Mention Fas org Archived from the original on 9 November 2010 Retrieved 14 August 2010 Drummond Katie Where Have All the MANPADS Gone Wired Archived from the original on 29 December 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2017 DRDO conducts successful test flight of VSHORADS missile Times of India PTI 28 September 2022 Retrieved 27 September 2022 Iranian TOW Missile Knockoffs Spread to War Zones Warisboring com 18 June 2016 Archived from the original on 5 January 2018 Retrieved 4 January 2018 How Iran s Revived Weapons Exports Could Boost Its Proxies Washingtoninstitute org Archived from the original on 4 January 2018 Retrieved 4 January 2018 SeaFuture 2023 First public appearance of MBDA Italy Next Generation V SHORAD concept mock up 5 June 2023 Kolukisa Hasan 30 August 2020 SUNGUR da PorSav hava savunma fuzeleri goruldu DefenceTurk in Turkish Retrieved 25 January 2021 Delivery of PorSav Very Low Altitude Air Defense Missile Starts RayHaber RaillyNews 8 May 2020 Retrieved 25 January 2021 The Loose Shoot and Scoot Missiles and the Threat to Aviation the New Yorker The New Yorker Archived from the original on 14 December 2018 Retrieved 14 December 2018 Short Range SAM Division Missile and Space Intelligence Center Defense Intelligence Agency Undated published 2002 https fas org irp dia manpads components pdf External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Man portable air defense systems MANPADS Proliferation Archived 31 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine links to hundreds of documents on MANPADS their proliferation and control efforts Man Portable Air Defence Systems MANPADS Small Arms Survey Research Note Man Portable Missiles vs Airliners Are Helicopters Vulnerable Analysis of MANPADS effectiveness MANPADS Combating the Threat to Global Aviation from Man Portable Air Defense Systems Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Man portable air defense system amp oldid 1176337764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.