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Mil Mi-24

The Mil Mi-24 (Russian: Миль Ми-24; NATO reporting name: Hind) is a large helicopter gunship, attack helicopter and low-capacity troop transport with room for eight passengers.[1] It is produced by Mil Moscow Helicopter Plant and has been operated since 1972 by the Soviet Air Force and its successors, along with 48 other nations.

Mi-24 / Mi-25 / Mi-35
A Mi-24W of the Polish Land Forces
Role Attack helicopter with transport capabilities, helicopter gunship
National origin Soviet Union/Russia
Manufacturer Mil
First flight 19 September 1969
Introduction 1972
Status In service
Primary users Russian Air Force
58 other users (see Operators section below)
Produced 1969–present[citation needed]
Number built 2,648
Developed from Mil Mi-8

In NATO circles, the export versions, Mi-25 and Mi-35, are denoted with a letter suffix as "Hind D" and "Hind E". Soviet pilots called the Mi-24 the "flying tank" (Russian: летающий танк, romanized: letayushchiy tank), a term used historically with the famous World War II Soviet Il-2 Shturmovik armored ground attack aircraft. More common unofficial nicknames were "Galina" (or "Galya"), "Crocodile" (Russian: Крокодил, romanized: Krokodil), due to the helicopter's camouflage scheme, and "Drinking Glass" (Russian: Стакан, romanized: Stakan), because of the flat glass plates that surround earlier Mi-24 variants' cockpits.[2]

Development

During the early 1960s, it became apparent to Soviet designer Mikhail Mil that the trend towards ever-increasing battlefield mobility would result in the creation of flying infantry fighting vehicles, which could be used to perform both fire support and infantry transport missions. The first expression of this concept was a mock-up unveiled in 1966 in the experimental shop of the Ministry of Aircraft's factory number 329, where Mil was head designer. The mock-up designated V-24 was based on another project, the V-22 utility helicopter, which never flew. The V-24 had a central infantry compartment that could hold eight troops sitting back to back, and a set of small wings positioned to the top rear of the passenger cabin, capable of holding up to six missiles or rockets and a twin-barreled GSh-23L cannon fixed to the landing skid.

 
Mil Mi-24A

Mil proposed the design to the heads of the Soviet armed forces. While he had the support of a number of strategists, he was opposed by several more senior members of the armed forces, who believed that conventional weapons were a better use of resources. Despite the opposition, Mil managed to persuade the defence minister's first deputy, Marshal Andrey A. Grechko, to convene an expert panel to look into the matter. While the panel's opinions were mixed, supporters of the project eventually held sway and a request for design proposals for a battlefield support helicopter was issued. The development and use of gunships and attack helicopters by the US Army during the Vietnam War convinced the Soviets of the advantages of armed helicopter ground support, and fostered support for the development of the Mi-24.[3]

Mil engineers prepared two basic designs: a 7-ton single-engine design and a 10.5-ton twin-engine design, both based on the 1,700 hp Izotov TV3-177A turboshaft. Later, three complete mock-ups were produced, along with five cockpit mock-ups to allow the pilot and weapon station operator positions to be fine-tuned.

The Kamov design bureau suggested an army version of their Ka-25 ASW helicopter as a low-cost option. This was considered but later dropped in favor of the new Mil twin-engine design. A number of changes were made at the insistence of the military, including the replacement of the 23 mm cannon with a rapid-fire heavy machine gun mounted in a chin turret, and the use of the 9K114 Shturm (AT-6 Spiral) anti-tank missile.

A directive was issued on 6 May 1968 to proceed with the development of the twin-engine design. Work proceeded under Mil until his death in 1970. Detailed design work began in August 1968 under the codename Yellow 24. A full-scale mock-up of the design was reviewed and approved in February 1969. Flight tests with a prototype began on 15 September 1969 with a tethered hover, and four days later the first free flight was conducted. A second prototype was built, followed by a test batch of ten helicopters.

 
Russian Air Force Mil Mi-24P

Acceptance testing for the design began in June 1970, continuing for 18 months. Changes made in the design addressed structural strength, fatigue problems and vibration levels. Also, a 12-degree anhedral was introduced to the wings to address the aircraft's tendency to Dutch roll at speeds in excess of 200 km/h (124 mph), and the Falanga missile pylons were moved from the fuselage to the wingtips. The tail rotor was moved from the right to the left side of the tail, and the rotation direction reversed. The tail rotor now rotated up on the side towards the front of the aircraft, into the downwash of the rotor, which increased its efficiency. A number of other design changes were made until the production version Mi-24A (izdeliye 245) entered production in 1970, obtaining its initial operating capability in 1971 and was officially accepted into the state arsenal in 1972.[4]

In 1972, following completion of the Mi-24, development began on a unique attack helicopter with transport capability. The new design had a reduced transport capability (three troops instead of eight) and was called the Mi-28, and that of the Ka-50 attack helicopter, which is smaller and more maneuverable and does not have the large cabin for carrying troops. In October 2007, the Russian Air Force announced it would replace its Mi-24 fleet with Mi-28Ns and Ka-52s by 2015.[5][6] However, after the successful operation of the type in Syria it was decided to keep it in service and upgrade it with new electronics, sights, arms and night vision goggles.[7]

Design

Overview

The core of the aircraft was derived from the Mil Mi-8 (NATO reporting name "Hip") with two top-mounted turboshaft engines driving a mid-mounted 17.3 m five-blade main rotor and a three-blade tail rotor. The engine configuration gave the aircraft its distinctive double air intake. Original versions have an angular greenhouse-style cockpit; Model D and later have a characteristic tandem cockpit with a "double bubble" canopy. Other airframe components came from the Mi-14 "Haze". Two mid-mounted stub wings provide weapon hardpoints, each offering three stations, in addition to providing lift. The loadout mix is mission dependent; Mi-24s can be tasked with close air support, anti-tank operations, or aerial combat.

The Mi-24's titanium rotor blades are resistant to 12.7 mm rounds.[citation needed] The cockpit is protected by ballistic-resistant windscreens and a titanium-armored tub.[8] The cockpit and crew compartment are overpressurized to protect the crew in NBC conditions.[9]

Flight characteristics

 
Mi-24D cockpit
 
Mi-35M with the OPS-24N survey and sighting system together with the gyrostabilized OLS GOES-324

Considerable attention was given to making the Mi-24 fast. The airframe was streamlined, and fitted with retractable tricycle undercarriage landing gear to reduce drag. At high speed, the wings provide considerable lift (up to a quarter of total lift). The main rotor was tilted 2.5° to the right from the fuselage to compensate for translating tendency at a hover. The landing gear was also tilted to the left so that the rotor would still be level when the aircraft was on the ground, making the rest of the airframe tilt to the left. The tail was also asymmetrical to give a side force at speed, thus unloading the tail rotor.[10]

A modified Mi-24B, named A-10, was used in several speed and time-to-climb world record attempts. The helicopter had been modified to reduce weight as much as possible—one measure was the removal of the stub wings.[4] The previous official speed record was set on 13 August 1975 over a closed 1000 km course of 332.65 km/h (206.7 mph); many of the female-specific records were set by the all-female crew of Galina Rastorguyeva and Lyudmila Polyanskaya.[11] On 21 September 1978, the A-10 set the absolute speed record for helicopters with 368.4 km/h (228.9 mph) over a 15/25 km course. The record stood until 1986, when it was broken by the current official record holder, a modified British Westland Lynx.[12]

Comparison to Western helicopters

 
U.S. operated Mi-24P Hind-F
 
Mi-24 SuperHind, a modernized Hind by the South African firm ATE. At the Ysterplaat Airshow 2006.

As a combination of armoured gunship and troop transport, the Mi-24 has no direct NATO counterpart. While the UH-1 ("Huey") helicopters were used by the US in the Vietnam War either to ferry troops, or as gunships, they were not able to do both at the same time. Converting a UH-1 into a gunship meant stripping the entire passenger area to accommodate extra fuel and ammunition, and removing its troop transport capability. The Mi-24 was designed to do both, and this was greatly exploited by airborne units of the Soviet Army during the 1980–89 Soviet–Afghan War. The closest Western equivalent was the American Sikorsky S-67 Blackhawk, which used many of the same design principles and was also built as a high-speed, high-agility attack helicopter with limited troop transport capability using many components from the existing Sikorsky S-61. The S-67, however, was never adopted for service.[1] Other Western equivalents are the Romanian Army's IAR 330, which is a licence-built armed version of the Aérospatiale SA 330 Puma, and the MH-60 Direct Action Penetrator, a special purpose armed variant of the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk.

Operational history

Ogaden War (1977–1978)

The first combat use of the Mi-24 was with the Ethiopian forces during the Ogaden War against Somalia. The helicopters formed part of a massive airlift of military equipment from the Soviet Union, after the Soviets switched sides towards the end of 1977. The helicopters were instrumental in the combined air and ground assault that allowed the Ethiopians to retake the Ogaden by the beginning of 1978.[13]

Chadian–Libyan conflict (1978–1987)

The Libyan air force used Mi-24A and Mi-25 units during their numerous interventions in Chad's civil war.[10] The Mi-24s were first used in October 1980 in the battle of N'Djamena, where they helped the People's Armed Forces seize the capital.

In March 1987, the Armed Forces of the North, which were backed by the US and France, captured a Libyan air force base at Ouadi-Doum in Northern Chad. Among the aircraft captured during this raid were three Mi-25s. These were supplied to France, which in turn sent one to the United Kingdom and one to the US.[4]

Soviet war in Afghanistan (1979–1989)

 
Front view of a Soviet Mi-24 HIND E ground-attack helicopter

The aircraft was operated extensively during the Soviet–Afghan War, mainly for bombing Mujahideen fighters. When the U.S. supplied heat-seeking Stinger missiles to the Mujahideen, the Soviet Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters proved to be favorite targets of the rebels.

It is difficult to find the total number of Mi-24s used in Afghanistan.[14] At the end of 1990, the whole Soviet Army had 1,420 Mi-24s.[15] During the Afghan war, sources estimated the helicopter strength to be as much as 600 units, with up to 250 being Mi-24s.[16] Whereas a (formerly secret) 1987 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) report says that the number of Mi-24s in theatre increased from 85 in 1980 to 120 in 1985.[17]

First deployment and combat

In April 1979, Mi-24s were supplied to the Afghan government to deal with Mujahideen guerrillas.[18] The Afghan pilots were well-trained and made effective use of their machines, but the Mujahideen were not easy targets. The first Mi-24 to be lost in action was shot down by guerrillas on 18 July 1979.[19][20]

 
Soviet "Helicopter-tank" operation in Afghanistan

Despite facing strong resistance from Afghan rebels, the Mi-24 proved to be very destructive. The rebels called the Mi-24 "Shaitan-Arba" (Satan's Chariot)".[18] In one case, an Mi-24 pilot who was out of ammunition managed to rescue a company of infantry by maneuvering aggressively towards Mujahideen guerrillas and scaring them off. The Mi-24 was popular with ground troops, since it could stay on the battlefield and provide fire as needed, while "fast mover" strike jets could only stay for a short time before heading back to base to refuel.

The Mi-24's favoured munition was the 80-millimetre (3.1 in) S-8 rocket, the 57 mm (2.2 in) S-5 having proven too light to be effective. The 23 mm (0.91 in) gun pod was also popular. Extra rounds of rocket ammunition were often carried internally so that the crew could land and self-reload in the field. The Mi-24 could carry ten 100-kilogram (220 lb) iron bombs for attacks on camps or strongpoints, while harder targets could be dealt with a load of four 250-kilogram (550 lb) or two 500-kilogram (1,100 lb) iron bombs.[21] Some Mi-24 crews became experts at dropping bombs precisely on targets. Fuel-air explosive bombs were also used in a few instances, though crews initially underestimated the sheer blast force of such weapons and were caught by the shock waves. The 9K114 Shturm was used infrequently, largely due to a lack of targets early in the war that required the precision and range the missile offered and a need to keep to stocks of anti tank missiles in Europe. After the Mujahideen got access to more advanced anti aircraft weapons later in the war the Shturm was used more often by Mi-24 units.[22]

Combat experience quickly demonstrated the disadvantages of having an Mi-24 carrying troops. Gunship crews found the soldiers a concern and a distraction while being shot at, and preferred to fly lightly loaded anyway, especially given their operations from high ground altitudes in Afghanistan. Mi-24 troop compartment armour was often removed to reduce weight. Troops would be carried in Mi-8 helicopters while the Mi-24s provided fire support.

 
Mil Mi-24/25

It proved useful to carry a technician in the Mi-24's crew compartment to handle a light machine gun in a window port. This gave the Mi-24 some ability to "watch its back" while leaving a target area. In some cases, a light machine gun was fitted on both sides to allow the technician to move from one side to the other without having to take the machine gun with him.

This weapon configuration still left the gunship blind to the direct rear, and Mil experimented with fitting a machine gun in the back of the fuselage, accessible to the gunner through a narrow crawl-way. The experiment was highly unsuccessful, as the space was cramped, full of engine exhaust fumes, and otherwise unbearable. During a demonstration, an overweight Soviet Air Force general got stuck in the crawl-way.[4] Operational Mi-24s were retrofitted with rear-view mirrors to help the pilot spot threats and take evasive action.

Besides protecting helicopter troop assaults and supporting ground actions, the Mi-24 also protected convoys, using rockets with flechette warheads to drive off ambushes; performed strikes on predesignated targets; and engaged in "hunter-killer" sweeps. Hunter-killer Mi-24s operated at a minimum in pairs, but were more often in groups of four or eight, to provide mutual fire support. The Mujahideen learned to move mostly at night to avoid the gunships, and in response the Soviets trained their Mi-24 crews in night-fighting, dropping parachute flares to illuminate potential targets for attack. The Mujahideen quickly caught on and scattered as quickly as possible when Soviet target designation flares were lit nearby.

Attrition in Afghanistan

The war in Afghanistan brought with it losses by attrition.[18] The environment itself, dusty and often hot, was rough on the machines; dusty conditions led to the development of the twin PZU ('PyleZashchitnoe Ustroystvo') air intake filters. The rebels' primary air-defence weapons early in the war were heavy machine guns and anti-aircraft cannons, though anything smaller than a 23 millimetre shell generally did not do much damage to an Mi-24. The cockpit glass panels were resistant to 12.7 mm (.50 in calibre) rounds.[citation needed]

The rebels also quickly began to use Soviet-made and US shoulder-launched, man-portable air-defense system (MANPADS) missiles such as the Strela and Redeye which had either been captured from the Soviets or their Afghan allies or were supplied from Western sources. Many of them came from stocks that the Israelis had captured during wars with Soviet backed states in the Middle East. Owing to a combination of the limited capabilities of these early types of missiles, poor training and poor material condition of the missiles, they were not particularly effective. Instead, the RPG-7, originally developed as an antitank weapon, was the first effective countermeasure to the Hind. The RPG-7, not designed for air defence, had inherent shortcomings in this role. When fired at the angles needed to hit aerial targets, the back-blast could easily wound the shooter, and the inevitable cloud of smoke and dust made it easy for gunners to spot the shooter's position.[citation needed]

From 1986,[21] the CIA began supplying the Afghan rebels with newer Stinger shoulder-launched, heat-seeking SAMs.[23] These were a marked improvement over earlier weapons. Unlike the Redeye and SA-7, which locked on to only infrared emissions, the Stinger could lock onto both infrared and ultraviolet emissions. This enabled the operator to engage an aircraft from all angles rather than just the tail and made it significantly more resistant to countermeasures like flares. In addition the Mil helicopters, particularly the Mi-24, suffered from a design flaw in the configuration of their engines that made them highly vulnerable to the Stinger. The Mi-24, along with the related Mi-8 and Mi-17 helicopters, had its engines placed in an inline configuration in an attempt to streamline the helicopter to increase speed and minimize the aircraft's overall frontal profile to incoming fire in a head on attack. However this had the opposite effect of leaking all the exhaust gasses from the Mi-24's engines directly out the side of the aircraft and away from the helicopter's rotor wash, creating two massive sources of heat and ultraviolet radiation for the Stinger to lock onto.[24] The inline placement of the engines was seen as so problematic in this regard that Mil designers abandoned the configuration on the planned successor to the Mi-24, the Mil Mi-28, in favour of an engine placement more akin to Western attack helicopters which vents the exhaust gasses into the helicopter's main rotor wash to dissipate heat.[citation needed]

Initially, the attack doctrine of the Mi-24 was to approach its target from high altitude and dive downwards. After the introduction of the Stinger, doctrine changed to "nap of the earth" flying, where they approached very low to the ground and engaged more laterally, popping up to only about 200 ft (61 m) in order to aim rockets or cannons.[25] Countermeasure flares and missile warning systems would be installed in all Soviet Mil Mi-2, Mi-8, and Mi-24 helicopters, giving pilots a chance to evade missiles fired at them. Heat dissipation devices were also fitted to exhausts to decrease the Mi-24's heat signature. Tactical and doctrinal changes were introduced to make it harder for the enemy to deploy these weapons effectively. These reduced the Stinger threat, but did not eliminate it.

Mi-24s were also used to shield jet transports flying in and out of Kabul from Stingers. The gunships carried flares to blind the heat-seeking missiles. The crews called themselves "Mandatory Matrosovs", after a Soviet hero of World War II who threw himself across a German machine gun to let his comrades break through.[citation needed]

According to Russian sources, 74 helicopters were lost, including 27 shot down by Stinger and two by Redeye.[21] In many cases, the helicopters with their armour and durable construction could withstand significant damage and able to return to base.[citation needed]

Mi-24 crews and end of Soviet involvement

Mi-24 crews carried AK-74 assault rifles and other hand-held weapons to give them a better chance of survival if forced down.[18] Early in the war, Marat Tischenko, head of the Mil design bureau visited Afghanistan to see what the troops thought of his helicopters, and gunship crews put on several displays for him. They even demonstrated manoeuvres, such as barrel rolls, which design engineers considered impossible. An astounded Tischenko commented, "I thought I knew what my helicopters could do, now I'm not so sure!"[18]

The last Soviet Mi-24 shot down was during the night of 2 February 1989, with both crewmen killed. It was also the last Soviet helicopter lost during nearly 10 years of warfare.[21]

Mi-24s in Afghanistan after Soviet withdrawal

 
Two Mil Mi-35 Hind helicopters during a training sortie over southern Afghanistan, 4 October 2009. U.S. Airmen with the 438th Air Expeditionary Training Group.

Mi-24s passed on to Soviet-backed Afghan forces during the war remained in dwindling service in the grinding civil war that continued after the Soviet withdrawal.[18]

Afghan Air Force Mi-24s in the hands of the ascendant Taliban gradually became inoperable, but a few flown by the Northern Alliance, which had Russian assistance and access to spares, remained operational up to the US invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001. In 2008, the Afghan Air Force took delivery of six refurbished Mi-35 helicopters, purchased from the Czech Republic. The Afghan pilots were trained by India and began live firing exercises in May 2009 in order to escort Mi-17 transport helicopters on operations in restive parts of the country.

Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988)

The Mi-25 saw considerable use by the Iraqi Army during the long war against Iran.[26] Its heavy armament caused severe losses to Iranian ground forces during the war. However, the Mi-25 lacked an effective anti-tank capability, as it was only armed with obsolete 9M17 Skorpion missiles.[27] This led the Iraqis to develop new gunship tactics, with help from East German advisors. The Mi-25s would form "hunter-killer" teams with French-built Aérospatiale Gazelles, with the Mi-25s leading the attack and using their massive firepower to suppress Iranian air defences, and the Gazelles using their HOT missiles to engage armoured fighting vehicles. These tactics proved effective in halting Iranian offensives, such as Operation Ramadan in July 1982.[27]

 
An Iraqi Mil Mi-25, brought down during the Iran–Iraq War, on display at a military museum in Tehran.

This war also saw the only confirmed air-to-air helicopter battles in history with the Iraqi Mi-25s flying against Iranian AH-1J SeaCobras (supplied by the United States before the Iranian Revolution) on several separate occasions. In November 1980, not long after Iraq's initial invasion of Iran, two Iranian SeaCobras engaged two Mi-25s with TOW wire-guided antitank missiles. One Mi-25 went down immediately, the other was badly damaged and crashed before reaching base.[21][28] The Iranians repeated this accomplishment on 24 April 1981, destroying two Mi-25s without incurring losses to themselves.[21] One Mi-25 was also downed by an IRIAF F-14A.[29]

The Iraqis hit back, claiming the destruction of a SeaCobra on 14 September 1983 (with YaKB machine gun), then three SeaCobras on 5 February 1984[28] and three more on 25 February 1984 (two with Falanga missiles, one with S-5 rockets).[21] A 1982 news article published on the Iraqi Observer claimed an Iraqi Mi-24D shot down an Iranian F-4 Phantom II using its armaments, either antitank missiles, guns or S-5 unguided rockets.[30] This claim was later debunked.[31]

After a lull in helicopter losses, each side lost a gunship on 13 February 1986.[21] Later, a Mi-25 claimed a SeaCobra shot down with YaKB gun on 16 February, and a SeaCobra claimed a Mi-25 shot down with rockets on 18 February.[21] The last engagement between the two types was on 22 May 1986, when Mi-25s shot down a SeaCobra. The final claim tally was 10 SeaCobras and 6 Mi-25s destroyed. The relatively small numbers and the inevitable disputes over actual kill numbers makes it unclear if one gunship had a real technical superiority over the other. Iraqi Mi-25s also claimed 43 kills against other Iranian helicopters, such as Agusta-Bell UH-1 Hueys.[28]

In general, the Iraqi pilots liked the Mi-25, in particular for its high speed, long range, high versatility and large weapon load, but disliked the relatively ineffectual anti-tank guided weapons and lack of agility.[27] The Mi-25 was also used by Iraq in chemical warfare against Iranians and Kurdish civilians in Halabja.[28]

Nicaraguan civil war (1980–1988)

Mi-25s were also used by the Nicaraguan Army during the civil war of the 1980s.[32][33] Nicaragua received 12 Mi-25s (some sources claim 18) in the mid-1980s to deal with "Contra" insurgents.[28] The Mi-25s performed ground attacks on the Contras and were also fast enough to intercept light aircraft being used by the insurgents. The U.S. Reagan Administration regarded introduction of the Mi-25s as a major escalation of tensions in Central America.

Two Mi-25s were shot down by Stingers fired by the Contras. A third Mi-25 was damaged while pursuing Contras near the Honduran border, when it was intercepted by Honduran F-86 Sabres and A-37 Dragonflies. A fourth was flown to Honduras by a defecting Sandinista pilot in December 1988.

Sri Lankan Civil War (1987–2009)

The Indian Peace Keeping Force (1987–90) in Sri Lanka used Mi-24s when an Indian Air Force detachment was deployed there in support of the Indian and Sri Lankan armed forces in their fight against various Tamil militant groups such as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). It is believed that Indian losses were considerably reduced by the heavy fire support from their Mi-24s. The Indians lost no Mi-24s in the operation, as the Tigers had no weapons capable of downing the gunship at the time.[28][34]

Since 14 November 1995, the Mi-24 has been used by the Sri Lanka Air Force in the war against the LTTE liberation group and has proved highly effective at providing close air support for ground forces. The Sri Lanka Air Force operates a mix of Mi-24/-35P and Mi-24V/-35 versions attached to its No. 9 Attack Helicopter Squadron. They have recently been upgraded with modern Israeli FLIR and electronic warfare systems. Five were upgraded to intercept aircraft by adding radar, fully functional helmet mounted target tracking systems, and AAMs. More than five Mi-24s have been lost to LTTE MANPADS, and another two lost in attacks on air bases, with one heavily damaged but later returned to service.[34]

Peruvian operations (1989–1995)

The Peruvian Air Force received 12 Mi-25Ds and 2 Mi-25DU from the Soviets in 1983, 1984, and 1985 after ordering them in the aftermath of 1981 Paquisha conflict with Ecuador. Seven more second hand units (4 Mi-24D and 3 Mi-25D) were obtained from Nicaragua in 1992. These have been permanently based at the Vitor airbase near La Joya ever since, operated by the 2nd Air Group of the 211th Air Squadron. Their first deployment occurred in June 1989 during the war against Communist guerrillas in the Peruvian highlands, mainly against Shining Path. Despite the conflict continuing, it has decreased in scale and is now limited to the jungle areas of Valley of Rivers Apurímac, Ene and Mantaro (VRAEM).[35][36][37][38]

Gulf War (1991)

 
An Iraqi Mi-25 Hind-D, captured during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

The Mi-24 was also heavily employed by the Iraqi Army during their invasion of Kuwait, although most were withdrawn by Saddam Hussein when it became apparent that they would be needed to help retain his grip on power in the aftermath of the war. In the ensuing 1991 uprisings in Iraq, these helicopters were used against dissidents as well as fleeing civilian refugees.[39][40]

Sierra Leone Civil War (1991–2002)

Three Mi-24Vs owned by Sierra Leone and flown by South African military contractors, including Neall Ellis, were used against RUF rebels.[41] In 1995, they helped drive the RUF from the capital, Freetown.[42] Neall Ellis also piloted a Mi-24 during the British-led Operation Barras against West Side Boys.[43] Guinea also used its Mi-24s against the RUF on both sides of the border and was alleged to have provided air support to the LURD insurgency in northern Liberia in 2001–03.

Croatian War of Independence (1990s)

Twelve Mi-24s were delivered to Croatia in 1993, and were used effectively in 1995 by the Croatian Army in Operation Storm against the Army of Krajina. The Mi-24 was used to strike deep into enemy territory and disrupt Krajina army communications. One Croatian Mi-24 crashed near the city of Drvar, Bosnia and Herzegovina due to strong winds. Both the pilot and the operator survived. The Mi-24s used by Croatia were obtained from Ukraine. One Mi-24 was modified to carry Mark 46 torpedoes. The helicopters were withdrawn from service in 2004.[44]

First and Second Wars in Chechnya (1990s–2000s)

During the First and Second Chechen Wars, beginning in 1994 and 1999 respectively, Mi-24s were employed by the Russian armed forces.

In the first year of the Second Chechen War, 11 Mi-24s were lost by Russian forces, about half of which were lost as a result of enemy action.[45]

Cenepa War (1995)

Peru employed Mi-25s against Ecuadorian forces during the short Cenepa conflict in early 1995. The only loss occurred on 7 February, when a FAP Mi-25 was downed after being hit in quick succession by at least two, probably three, 9K38 Igla shoulder-fired missiles during a low-altitude mission over the Cenepa valley. The three crewmen were killed.[46]

By 2011 two Mi-35P were purchased from Russia to reinforce the 211th Air Squadron.[47]

Sudanese Civil War (1995–2005)

In 1995, the Sudanese Air Force acquired six Mi-24s for use in Southern Sudan and the Nuba mountains to engage the SPLA. At least two aircraft were lost in non-combat situations within the first year of operation. A further twelve were bought in 2001,[48] and used extensively in the oil fields of Southern Sudan. Mi-24s were also deployed to Darfur in 2004–5.

First and Second Congo Wars (1996–2003)

Three Mi-24s were used by Mobutu's army and were later acquired by the new Air Force of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[49] These were supplied to Zaire in 1997 as part of a French-Serbian contract. At least one was flown by Serbian mercenaries. One hit a power line and crashed on 27 March 1997, killing the three crew and four passengers.[50] Zimbabwean Mi-24s were also operated in coordination with the Congolese Army.

The United Nations peacekeeping mission employed Indian Air Force Mi-24/-35 helicopters to provide support during the Second Congo War. The IAF has been operating in the region since 2003.[51]

Kosovo War (1998–1999)

Two second-hand Mi-24Vs procured from Ukraine earlier in the 1990s were used by the Yugoslav Special Operation Unit (JSO) against Kosovo Albanian rebels during the Kosovo War.[52]

Insurgency in Macedonia (2001)

 
North Macedonia Mi-24V

The North Macedonian military acquired used Ukrainian Mi-24Vs, which were then used frequently against Albanian insurgents during the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia (now North Macedonia). The main areas of action were in Tetovo, Radusha and Aracinovo.[53]

Ivorian Civil War (2002–2004)

During the Ivorian Civil War, five Mil Mi-24s piloted by mercenaries were used in support of government forces. They were later destroyed by the French Army in retaliation for an air attack on a French base that killed nine soldiers.[54]

War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

 
An Afghan Air Force Mi-35 over Kandahar, 2009

In 2008 and 2009, the Czech Republic donated six Mi-24s under the ANA Equipment Donation Programme. As a result, the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) gained the ability to escort its own helicopters with heavily armed attack helicopters. ANAAC operates nine Mi-35s. Major Caleb Nimmo, a United States Air Force Pilot, was the first American to fly the Mi-35 Hind, or any Russian helicopter, in combat.[55][56] On 13 September 2011, a Mi-35 of the Afghan Air Force was used to hold back an attack on ISAF and police buildings.[57]

The Polish Helicopter Detachment contributed Mi-24s to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). The Polish pilots trained in Germany before deploying to Afghanistan and train with U.S. service personnel. On 26 January 2011, one Mi-24 caught on fire during take-off from its base in Ghazni. One American and four Polish soldiers evacuated unharmed.[58]

India has also donated Mi-35s to Afghanistan. Four helicopters were to be supplied, with three already transferred in January 2016.[59] The three Mi-35s made a big difference in the offensive against militants, according to General John Campbell, commander of US forces in Afghanistan.[60]

Iraq War (2003–2011)

The Polish contingent in Iraq used six Mi-24Ds after December 2004. One of them crashed on 18 July 2006 in an air base in Al Diwaniyah.[61] Polish Mi-24Ds used in Iraq were not returned to Poland due to their age, condition, low combat value of the Mi-24D variant, and high shipping costs; depending on their condition, they were transferred to the new Iraqi Army or scrapped.

War in Somalia (2006–2009)

The Ethiopian Air Force operated about three Mil Mi-35 and ten Mil Mi-24D helicopter gunships in the Somali theatre. One was shot down near Mogadishu International Airport on 30 March 2007 by Somali insurgents.[62]

2008 Russo-Georgian War

Mil Mi-24s were used by both sides during the fighting in South Ossetia.[63] During the war Georgian Air Force Mi-24s attacked their first targets on an early morning hour of 8 August, targeting the Ossetian presidential palace. The second target was a cement factory near Tskhinval, where major enemy forces and ammunition were located.[63] The last combat mission of the GAF Mi-24s was on 11 August, when a large Russian convoy, consisting of light trucks and BMP IFVs which were heading to the Georgian village of Avnevi was targeted by Mi-24s, completely destroying the convoy.[63] The Georgian Air Force lost 2 Mi-24s on Senaki air base. They were destroyed by Russian troops on the ground. Both helicopters were in-operational.[64] The Russian army heavily used Mi-24s in the conflict. Russian upgraded Mi-24PNs were credited for destroying 2 Georgian T-72SIM1 tanks, using guided missiles at night time, though some sources attribute those kills to Mil Mi-28.[63] The Russian army did not lose any Mi-24s throughout the conflict, mainly because those helicopters were deployed to areas where Georgian air defence was not active,[63] though some were damaged by small arms fire and at least one Mi-24 was lost due to technical reasons.

War in Chad (2008)

On returning to Abeche, one of the Chadian Mi-35s made a forced landing at the airport. It was claimed that it was shot down by rebels.[65][66]

Libyan civil war (2011)

The Libyan Air Force Mi-24s were used by both sides to attack enemy positions during the 2011 Libyan civil war.[67] A number were captured by the rebels, who formed the Free Libyan Air Force together with other captured air assets. During the battle for Benina airport, one Mi-35 (serial number 853), was destroyed on the ground on 23 February 2011. In the same action, serial number 854 was captured by the rebels together with an Mi-14 (serial number 1406).[citation needed] Two Mi-35s operating for the pro-Gaddafi Libyan Air Force were destroyed on the ground on 26 March 2011 by French aircraft enforcing the no-fly zone.[68] One Free Libyan Air Force Mi-25D (serial number 854, captured at the beginning of the revolt) violated the no-fly-zone on 9 April 2011 to strike loyalist positions in Ajdabiya. It was shot down by Libyan ground forces during the action. The pilot, Captain Hussein Al-Warfali, died in the crash.[citation needed] The rebels claimed that a number of other Mi-25s were shot down.

2010–2011 Ivorian crisis

Ukrainian army Mi-24P helicopters as part of the United Nations peacekeeping force fired four missiles at a pro-Gbagbo military camp in Ivory Coast's main city of Abidjan.[69]

Syrian Civil War (2011–present)

The Syrian Air Force have used Mi-24s to attack rebels throughout Syria, including many of the nation's major cities.[70] Controversy has surrounded an alleged delivery of Mi-25s to the Syrian military, due to Turkey and other NATO members disallowing such arms shipments through their territory.[71]

On 3 November 2016, a Russian Mi-35 made an emergency landing near Syria's Palmyra city, and was hit and destroyed, most likely by an unguided recoilless weapon after it touched down. The crew returned safely to the Khmeimim air base.[72]

Second Kachin conflict (2011–present)

The Myanmar Air Force used the Mi-24 in the Kachin conflict against the Kachin Independence Army.[73] Two Mi-35 helicopters were shot down by the Kachin Independence Army during the heavy fighting in the mountains of northern Burma in 2012 and early 2013.[74] On 3 May 2021, in the morning, a Myanmar Air Force Mi-35 was shot down by the Kachin Independence Army, hit by a MANPADS during air raids involving attack helicopters and fighter jets. A video emerged showing the helicopter being hit while flying over a village.[75][76]

Post-U.S. Iraqi insurgency

Iraq ordered a total of 34 Mi-35Ms in 2013, as part of an arms deal with Russia that also included Mi-28 attack helicopters.[77] The delivery of the first four was announced by then-Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in November 2013.[78][79]

Their first deployment began in late December against camps of the al-Qaeda linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and several Islamist militants in the al-Anbar province that had taken control of several areas of Fallujah and Ramadi.[80] FLIR footage of the strikes has been released by the military.[81]

On 3 October 2014, ISIL militants reportedly used a FN-6 shoulder-launched missile in Baiji to shoot down an Iraqi Army Mi-35M attack helicopter.[82] Video footage released by ISIL militants shows at least another two Iraqi Mi-35s brought down by light anti-aircraft artillery.[83]

Balochistan Insurgency (2012-present)

In 2018, Pakistan received 4 Mi-35M Hind-E Gunships from Russia under the $153 million deal.[84][85] They are now stationed at the Army Aviation Corps base at Quetta Cantonment. The gunships have since been used in several counter insurgency operations against various militant groups in the Balochistan province of Pakistan. In early 2022, a base in Nushki and a check-post in Panjgur belonging to the Frontier Corps Balochistan Paramilitary were attacked by BLA terrorists. The attack in Nushki was swiftly repulsed but the situation in Panjgaur was not good to which Mi-35 Hind and AH-1F Cobra gunships were called in for support. It provided much needed ground support and reconnaissance in the counter offensive which led to success.[86][87]

Crimean crisis (2014)

During the annexation of the Crimean Peninsula, Russia deployed 13 Mi-24s to support their infantry as they advanced through the region. However these aircraft saw no combat during their deployment.[88]

War in Donbas (2014)

During the Siege of Sloviansk, on 2 May 2014, two Ukrainian Mi-24s were shot down by pro-Russian insurgents. The Ukrainian armed forces claim that they were downed by MANPADS while on patrol close to Slavyansk.[89] The Ukrainian government confirmed that both aircraft were shot down, along with an Mi-8 damaged by small arms fire. Initial reports mentioned two dead and others wounded; later, five crew members were confirmed dead and one taken prisoner until being released on 5 May.[90][91][92]

On 5 May 2014, another Ukrainian Mi-24 was forced to make an emergency landing after being hit by machine gun fire while on patrol close to Slavyansk. The Ukrainian forces recovered the two pilots and destroyed the helicopter with a rocket strike by an Su-25 aircraft to prevent its capture by pro-Russian insurgents.[93]

Ukrainian Sukhoi Su-25 attack aircraft, with MiG-29 fighters providing top cover, supported Mi-24s during the battle for Donetsk Airport.[94]

On 13 October 2018, a Ukrainian Mi-24 shot down an Orlan-10 UAV using cannon fire near Lysychansk.[95]

Chadian offensive against Boko Haram (2015)

Chadian Mi-24s were used during the 2015 West African offensive against Boko Haram.[96]

Azerbaijan-Karabakh (2014–2016, 2020)

On 12 November 2014, Azerbaijani forces shot down an Armenian forces Mi-24 from a formation of two which were flying along the disputed border, close to the frontline between Azerbaijani and Armenian troops in the disputed Karabakh territory. The helicopter was hit by an Igla-S shoulder-launched missile fired by Azerbaijani soldiers while flying at low altitude and crashed, killing all three on board.[97][98][99]

On 2 April 2016, during a clash between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces, an Azerbaijani Mi-24 helicopter was shot down by "Nagorno-Karabakh" forces. The downing was confirmed by the Azerbaijani defence ministry.[100][101][102][103]

On 9 November 2020, during the Nagorno-Karabakh war a Russian Mi-24 was shot down by Azerbaijani forces with a MANPADS.[104] The Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry stated that the downing was an accident. Two crew members were killed and one sustained moderate injuries. The Russian defence ministry confirmed the downing in a press release the same day.[105]

Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022-present)

During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, on 1 March, Ukrainian forces shot down a Russian Mi-35M helicopter with MANPADS, in the Kyiv Reservoir (see also Battle of Kyiv). On 5 May 2022, the helicopter was retrieved by Ukrainian engineers in Vyshgorod.[106] Two Russian Mi-35 were shot down by a MANPADS on 5 March 2022.[107][108] On 6 March, one Mi-24P with registration number RF-94966 was shot down by Ukrainian MANPADS in Kyiv Oblast.[109][110] On 8 March 2022 one Ukrainian Mil Mi-24 from the Ukrainian 16th Army Aviation Brigade [uk] was lost over Brovary, Kyiv. Pilots Col. Oleksandr Maryniak and Cptn. Ivan Bezzub were killed.[111][112] On 17 March a Russian Mi-35M was reportedly destroyed by Ukrainian Ministry of Defence, unknown location.[113] On 1 April 2022, two Ukrainian Mi-24s reportedly entered Russia and attacked an oil storage facility in Belgorod.[114]

Variants

Operators

 
Map with Mil Mi-24 operators in blue and former operators in red
  Afghanistan
  Algeria
  Angola
  Armenia
  Azerbaijan
  Belarus
 
Brazilian Air Force Mi-35M
 
A Bulgarian Air Force Mi-24 in flight
  Bulgaria
  Burkina Faso
  Burundi
  Chad
  Congo, Republic of the
  Democratic Republic of the Congo
  Cuba
  Cyprus
 
A Czech Air Force Mi-24
  Czech Republic
  Djibouti
 
MI-35P of the Djibouti Air Force
  Egypt
  Equatorial Guinea
  Eritrea
  Ethiopia
 
Georgian Air Force Mi-24
  Georgia
  Guinea
 
Hungarian Mi-24
  Hungary
  India
 
  Indonesia
  Iraq
  Kazakhstan
  Kyrgyzstan
  Libya
  Mali
  Mozambique
  Myanmar
  Namibia
  Nicaragua
  Niger
  Nigeria
  North Korea
  North Macedonia
  Pakistan
 
Peruvian Air Force Mi-25D
  Peru
  Poland
 
A Russian Air Force Mil Mi-35P
  Russia
  Rwanda
 
Serbian Mil Mi-35M during Sadejstvo 2020 military exercise
  Serbia
  Senegal
  Sierra Leone
  Sri Lanka
  Sudan
  Syria
  Tajikistan
  Turkmenistan
  Uganda
 
A Ukrainian Mi-24
  Ukraine
  United States
  Uzbekistan
  Venezuela
 
Vietnam People's Air Force Mi-24
  Yemen
  Zimbabwe

Former operators

  Brazil
  Croatia
  Czechoslovakia

Czechoslovakian Air Force[126][127]

  East Germany
  Germany
  Kampuchea
  Nicaragua
  Slovakia
  South Yemen
  Soviet Union
  Yugoslavia
  Transnistria
  Vietnam

Aircraft on display

Mi-24 helicopters can be seen in the following museums:

Russia Central Air Force Museum, Monino – Mi-24A, Mi-25
Belgium Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History, Brussel – Mi-24
Brazil Museu Aeroespacial, Rio de Janeiro - Mi-35M
Bulgaria Muzei na aviatsiyata, Plovdiv – Mi-24
Czech Republic Prague Aviation Museum, Kbely – Mi-24D tactical number 0220
China Chinese Aviation Museum, Beijing – Mi-24
Ethiopia Martyrs Memorial Monument, Bahir Dar - Mi 24A[139]
Germany
Hungary
Iran Sa'ad Abad Museum in Tehran
Latvia Riga Aviation Museum, Riga – Mi-24A tactical number 20
Nicaragua Airforce Base Augusto C. Sandino International Airport, Managua, Mi-25 tactical number 361
Poland
South Africa South African Air Force Museum, Swartkops Air Force Base – One Mi-24A of the Algerian Air Force on display.
Slovakia Military History Museum, Piešťany – Mi-24D tactical number 0100[140]
Sri Lanka
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States
Vietnam

Specifications (Mi-24)

 
 
Cabin door to the rear troop-utility compartment
 
Possible armament configuration on Mi-24W
 
Yakushev-Borzov YakB-12.7 machine gun
 
Mi-24 during "Centre 2019" exercise

Data from Indian-Military.org[145][unreliable source?]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2-3 pilot, weapons system officer and technician (optional)
  • Capacity: 8 troops / 4 stretchers / 2,400 kg (5,291 lb) cargo on an external sling
  • Length: 17.5 m (57 ft 5 in) fuselage only
19.79 m (65 ft) including rotors
  • Wingspan: 6.5 m (21 ft 4 in) stub wings
  • Height: 6.5 m (21 ft 4 in)
  • Empty weight: 8,500 kg (18,739 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 12,000 kg (26,455 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Isotov TV3-117 turboshaft engines, 1,600 kW (2,200 shp) each
  • Main rotor diameter: 17.3 m (56 ft 9 in)
  • Main rotor area: 235.1 m2 (2,531 sq ft) NACA 23012[146]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 335 km/h (208 mph, 181 kn)
  • Range: 450 km (280 mi, 240 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 4,900 m (16,100 ft)

Armament

Internal guns
  • flexible 12.7 mm Yakushev-Borzov Yak-B Gatling gun on most variants. Maximum of 1,470 rounds of ammunition.
  • fixed twin-barrel GSh-30K autocannon on the Mi-24P. 250 rounds of ammunition.
  • flexible twin-barrel GSh-23L autocannon on the Mi-24VP and Mi-24VM. 450 rounds of ammunition.
  • flexible GIAT dual feed 20mm (M693) autocannon on Mi-24 SuperHind Mk.II/III/IV/V. 320 rounds of ammunition.
  • PKB passenger compartment window mounted machine guns
External stores
  • Total payload is 1,500 kg of external stores.
  • Inner hardpoints can carry at least 500 kg
  • Outer hardpoints can carry up to 250 kg
  • Wing-tip pylons can only carry the 9M17 Phalanga (in the Mi-24A-D) or the 9K114 Shturm complex (in the Mi-24V-F).
Bomb-load
  • Bombs within weight range (presumably ZAB, FAB, RBK, ODAB etc.), up to 500 kg.
  • MBD multiple ejector racks (presumably MBD-4 with 4 × FAB-100)
  • KGMU2V submunition/mine dispenser pods
First-generation armament (standard production Mi-24D)
Second-generation armament (Mi-24V, Mi-24P and most upgraded Mi-24D)
  • UPK-23-250 gunpod carrying the GSh-23L
  • B-8V20 a lightweight long tubed helicopter version of the S-8 rocket launcher
  • 9K114 Shturm in pairs on the outer and wingtip pylons

Popular culture

The Mi-24 has appeared in several films and has been a common feature in many video games.

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

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Further reading

  • Eden, Paul (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London, UK: Amber Books, 2004. ISBN 978-1-904687-84-9.

External links

  • CzechAirSpotters gallery of Mi-24
  • Mi-24 service, tactics and variants
  • Mi-24 Hind from modeller`s view

russian, Миль, Ми, nato, reporting, name, hind, large, helicopter, gunship, attack, helicopter, capacity, troop, transport, with, room, eight, passengers, produced, moscow, helicopter, plant, been, operated, since, 1972, soviet, force, successors, along, with,. The Mil Mi 24 Russian Mil Mi 24 NATO reporting name Hind is a large helicopter gunship attack helicopter and low capacity troop transport with room for eight passengers 1 It is produced by Mil Moscow Helicopter Plant and has been operated since 1972 by the Soviet Air Force and its successors along with 48 other nations Mi 24 Mi 25 Mi 35A Mi 24W of the Polish Land ForcesRole Attack helicopter with transport capabilities helicopter gunshipNational origin Soviet Union RussiaManufacturer MilFirst flight 19 September 1969Introduction 1972Status In servicePrimary users Russian Air Force58 other users see Operators section below Produced 1969 present citation needed Number built 2 648Developed from Mil Mi 8In NATO circles the export versions Mi 25 and Mi 35 are denoted with a letter suffix as Hind D and Hind E Soviet pilots called the Mi 24 the flying tank Russian letayushij tank romanized letayushchiy tank a term used historically with the famous World War II Soviet Il 2 Shturmovik armored ground attack aircraft More common unofficial nicknames were Galina or Galya Crocodile Russian Krokodil romanized Krokodil due to the helicopter s camouflage scheme and Drinking Glass Russian Stakan romanized Stakan because of the flat glass plates that surround earlier Mi 24 variants cockpits 2 Contents 1 Development 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Flight characteristics 2 3 Comparison to Western helicopters 3 Operational history 3 1 Ogaden War 1977 1978 3 2 Chadian Libyan conflict 1978 1987 3 3 Soviet war in Afghanistan 1979 1989 3 3 1 First deployment and combat 3 3 2 Attrition in Afghanistan 3 3 3 Mi 24 crews and end of Soviet involvement 3 3 4 Mi 24s in Afghanistan after Soviet withdrawal 3 4 Iran Iraq War 1980 1988 3 5 Nicaraguan civil war 1980 1988 3 6 Sri Lankan Civil War 1987 2009 3 7 Peruvian operations 1989 1995 3 8 Gulf War 1991 3 9 Sierra Leone Civil War 1991 2002 3 10 Croatian War of Independence 1990s 3 11 First and Second Wars in Chechnya 1990s 2000s 3 12 Cenepa War 1995 3 13 Sudanese Civil War 1995 2005 3 14 First and Second Congo Wars 1996 2003 3 15 Kosovo War 1998 1999 3 16 Insurgency in Macedonia 2001 3 17 Ivorian Civil War 2002 2004 3 18 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 3 19 Iraq War 2003 2011 3 20 War in Somalia 2006 2009 3 21 2008 Russo Georgian War 3 22 War in Chad 2008 3 23 Libyan civil war 2011 3 24 2010 2011 Ivorian crisis 3 25 Syrian Civil War 2011 present 3 26 Second Kachin conflict 2011 present 3 27 Post U S Iraqi insurgency 3 28 Balochistan Insurgency 2012 present 3 29 Crimean crisis 2014 3 30 War in Donbas 2014 3 31 Chadian offensive against Boko Haram 2015 3 32 Azerbaijan Karabakh 2014 2016 2020 3 33 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 present 4 Variants 5 Operators 5 1 Former operators 6 Aircraft on display 7 Specifications Mi 24 8 Popular culture 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDevelopment EditDuring the early 1960s it became apparent to Soviet designer Mikhail Mil that the trend towards ever increasing battlefield mobility would result in the creation of flying infantry fighting vehicles which could be used to perform both fire support and infantry transport missions The first expression of this concept was a mock up unveiled in 1966 in the experimental shop of the Ministry of Aircraft s factory number 329 where Mil was head designer The mock up designated V 24 was based on another project the V 22 utility helicopter which never flew The V 24 had a central infantry compartment that could hold eight troops sitting back to back and a set of small wings positioned to the top rear of the passenger cabin capable of holding up to six missiles or rockets and a twin barreled GSh 23L cannon fixed to the landing skid Mil Mi 24A Mil proposed the design to the heads of the Soviet armed forces While he had the support of a number of strategists he was opposed by several more senior members of the armed forces who believed that conventional weapons were a better use of resources Despite the opposition Mil managed to persuade the defence minister s first deputy Marshal Andrey A Grechko to convene an expert panel to look into the matter While the panel s opinions were mixed supporters of the project eventually held sway and a request for design proposals for a battlefield support helicopter was issued The development and use of gunships and attack helicopters by the US Army during the Vietnam War convinced the Soviets of the advantages of armed helicopter ground support and fostered support for the development of the Mi 24 3 Mil engineers prepared two basic designs a 7 ton single engine design and a 10 5 ton twin engine design both based on the 1 700 hp Izotov TV3 177A turboshaft Later three complete mock ups were produced along with five cockpit mock ups to allow the pilot and weapon station operator positions to be fine tuned The Kamov design bureau suggested an army version of their Ka 25 ASW helicopter as a low cost option This was considered but later dropped in favor of the new Mil twin engine design A number of changes were made at the insistence of the military including the replacement of the 23 mm cannon with a rapid fire heavy machine gun mounted in a chin turret and the use of the 9K114 Shturm AT 6 Spiral anti tank missile A directive was issued on 6 May 1968 to proceed with the development of the twin engine design Work proceeded under Mil until his death in 1970 Detailed design work began in August 1968 under the codename Yellow 24 A full scale mock up of the design was reviewed and approved in February 1969 Flight tests with a prototype began on 15 September 1969 with a tethered hover and four days later the first free flight was conducted A second prototype was built followed by a test batch of ten helicopters Russian Air Force Mil Mi 24P Acceptance testing for the design began in June 1970 continuing for 18 months Changes made in the design addressed structural strength fatigue problems and vibration levels Also a 12 degree anhedral was introduced to the wings to address the aircraft s tendency to Dutch roll at speeds in excess of 200 km h 124 mph and the Falanga missile pylons were moved from the fuselage to the wingtips The tail rotor was moved from the right to the left side of the tail and the rotation direction reversed The tail rotor now rotated up on the side towards the front of the aircraft into the downwash of the rotor which increased its efficiency A number of other design changes were made until the production version Mi 24A izdeliye 245 entered production in 1970 obtaining its initial operating capability in 1971 and was officially accepted into the state arsenal in 1972 4 In 1972 following completion of the Mi 24 development began on a unique attack helicopter with transport capability The new design had a reduced transport capability three troops instead of eight and was called the Mi 28 and that of the Ka 50 attack helicopter which is smaller and more maneuverable and does not have the large cabin for carrying troops In October 2007 the Russian Air Force announced it would replace its Mi 24 fleet with Mi 28Ns and Ka 52s by 2015 5 6 However after the successful operation of the type in Syria it was decided to keep it in service and upgrade it with new electronics sights arms and night vision goggles 7 Design EditOverview Edit Russian Air Force Mi 35M The core of the aircraft was derived from the Mil Mi 8 NATO reporting name Hip with two top mounted turboshaft engines driving a mid mounted 17 3 m five blade main rotor and a three blade tail rotor The engine configuration gave the aircraft its distinctive double air intake Original versions have an angular greenhouse style cockpit Model D and later have a characteristic tandem cockpit with a double bubble canopy Other airframe components came from the Mi 14 Haze Two mid mounted stub wings provide weapon hardpoints each offering three stations in addition to providing lift The loadout mix is mission dependent Mi 24s can be tasked with close air support anti tank operations or aerial combat The Mi 24 s titanium rotor blades are resistant to 12 7 mm rounds citation needed The cockpit is protected by ballistic resistant windscreens and a titanium armored tub 8 The cockpit and crew compartment are overpressurized to protect the crew in NBC conditions 9 Flight characteristics Edit Mi 24D cockpit Mi 35M with the OPS 24N survey and sighting system together with the gyrostabilized OLS GOES 324 Considerable attention was given to making the Mi 24 fast The airframe was streamlined and fitted with retractable tricycle undercarriage landing gear to reduce drag At high speed the wings provide considerable lift up to a quarter of total lift The main rotor was tilted 2 5 to the right from the fuselage to compensate for translating tendency at a hover The landing gear was also tilted to the left so that the rotor would still be level when the aircraft was on the ground making the rest of the airframe tilt to the left The tail was also asymmetrical to give a side force at speed thus unloading the tail rotor 10 A modified Mi 24B named A 10 was used in several speed and time to climb world record attempts The helicopter had been modified to reduce weight as much as possible one measure was the removal of the stub wings 4 The previous official speed record was set on 13 August 1975 over a closed 1000 km course of 332 65 km h 206 7 mph many of the female specific records were set by the all female crew of Galina Rastorguyeva and Lyudmila Polyanskaya 11 On 21 September 1978 the A 10 set the absolute speed record for helicopters with 368 4 km h 228 9 mph over a 15 25 km course The record stood until 1986 when it was broken by the current official record holder a modified British Westland Lynx 12 Comparison to Western helicopters Edit U S operated Mi 24P Hind F Mi 24 SuperHind a modernized Hind by the South African firm ATE At the Ysterplaat Airshow 2006 As a combination of armoured gunship and troop transport the Mi 24 has no direct NATO counterpart While the UH 1 Huey helicopters were used by the US in the Vietnam War either to ferry troops or as gunships they were not able to do both at the same time Converting a UH 1 into a gunship meant stripping the entire passenger area to accommodate extra fuel and ammunition and removing its troop transport capability The Mi 24 was designed to do both and this was greatly exploited by airborne units of the Soviet Army during the 1980 89 Soviet Afghan War The closest Western equivalent was the American Sikorsky S 67 Blackhawk which used many of the same design principles and was also built as a high speed high agility attack helicopter with limited troop transport capability using many components from the existing Sikorsky S 61 The S 67 however was never adopted for service 1 Other Western equivalents are the Romanian Army s IAR 330 which is a licence built armed version of the Aerospatiale SA 330 Puma and the MH 60 Direct Action Penetrator a special purpose armed variant of the Sikorsky UH 60 Black Hawk Operational history EditOgaden War 1977 1978 Edit The first combat use of the Mi 24 was with the Ethiopian forces during the Ogaden War against Somalia The helicopters formed part of a massive airlift of military equipment from the Soviet Union after the Soviets switched sides towards the end of 1977 The helicopters were instrumental in the combined air and ground assault that allowed the Ethiopians to retake the Ogaden by the beginning of 1978 13 Chadian Libyan conflict 1978 1987 Edit See also Toyota War and Operation Mount Hope III The Libyan air force used Mi 24A and Mi 25 units during their numerous interventions in Chad s civil war 10 The Mi 24s were first used in October 1980 in the battle of N Djamena where they helped the People s Armed Forces seize the capital In March 1987 the Armed Forces of the North which were backed by the US and France captured a Libyan air force base at Ouadi Doum in Northern Chad Among the aircraft captured during this raid were three Mi 25s These were supplied to France which in turn sent one to the United Kingdom and one to the US 4 Soviet war in Afghanistan 1979 1989 Edit Front view of a Soviet Mi 24 HIND E ground attack helicopter The aircraft was operated extensively during the Soviet Afghan War mainly for bombing Mujahideen fighters When the U S supplied heat seeking Stinger missiles to the Mujahideen the Soviet Mi 8 and Mi 24 helicopters proved to be favorite targets of the rebels It is difficult to find the total number of Mi 24s used in Afghanistan 14 At the end of 1990 the whole Soviet Army had 1 420 Mi 24s 15 During the Afghan war sources estimated the helicopter strength to be as much as 600 units with up to 250 being Mi 24s 16 Whereas a formerly secret 1987 Central Intelligence Agency CIA report says that the number of Mi 24s in theatre increased from 85 in 1980 to 120 in 1985 17 First deployment and combat Edit In April 1979 Mi 24s were supplied to the Afghan government to deal with Mujahideen guerrillas 18 The Afghan pilots were well trained and made effective use of their machines but the Mujahideen were not easy targets The first Mi 24 to be lost in action was shot down by guerrillas on 18 July 1979 19 20 Soviet Helicopter tank operation in Afghanistan Despite facing strong resistance from Afghan rebels the Mi 24 proved to be very destructive The rebels called the Mi 24 Shaitan Arba Satan s Chariot 18 In one case an Mi 24 pilot who was out of ammunition managed to rescue a company of infantry by maneuvering aggressively towards Mujahideen guerrillas and scaring them off The Mi 24 was popular with ground troops since it could stay on the battlefield and provide fire as needed while fast mover strike jets could only stay for a short time before heading back to base to refuel The Mi 24 s favoured munition was the 80 millimetre 3 1 in S 8 rocket the 57 mm 2 2 in S 5 having proven too light to be effective The 23 mm 0 91 in gun pod was also popular Extra rounds of rocket ammunition were often carried internally so that the crew could land and self reload in the field The Mi 24 could carry ten 100 kilogram 220 lb iron bombs for attacks on camps or strongpoints while harder targets could be dealt with a load of four 250 kilogram 550 lb or two 500 kilogram 1 100 lb iron bombs 21 Some Mi 24 crews became experts at dropping bombs precisely on targets Fuel air explosive bombs were also used in a few instances though crews initially underestimated the sheer blast force of such weapons and were caught by the shock waves The 9K114 Shturm was used infrequently largely due to a lack of targets early in the war that required the precision and range the missile offered and a need to keep to stocks of anti tank missiles in Europe After the Mujahideen got access to more advanced anti aircraft weapons later in the war the Shturm was used more often by Mi 24 units 22 Combat experience quickly demonstrated the disadvantages of having an Mi 24 carrying troops Gunship crews found the soldiers a concern and a distraction while being shot at and preferred to fly lightly loaded anyway especially given their operations from high ground altitudes in Afghanistan Mi 24 troop compartment armour was often removed to reduce weight Troops would be carried in Mi 8 helicopters while the Mi 24s provided fire support Mil Mi 24 25 It proved useful to carry a technician in the Mi 24 s crew compartment to handle a light machine gun in a window port This gave the Mi 24 some ability to watch its back while leaving a target area In some cases a light machine gun was fitted on both sides to allow the technician to move from one side to the other without having to take the machine gun with him This weapon configuration still left the gunship blind to the direct rear and Mil experimented with fitting a machine gun in the back of the fuselage accessible to the gunner through a narrow crawl way The experiment was highly unsuccessful as the space was cramped full of engine exhaust fumes and otherwise unbearable During a demonstration an overweight Soviet Air Force general got stuck in the crawl way 4 Operational Mi 24s were retrofitted with rear view mirrors to help the pilot spot threats and take evasive action Besides protecting helicopter troop assaults and supporting ground actions the Mi 24 also protected convoys using rockets with flechette warheads to drive off ambushes performed strikes on predesignated targets and engaged in hunter killer sweeps Hunter killer Mi 24s operated at a minimum in pairs but were more often in groups of four or eight to provide mutual fire support The Mujahideen learned to move mostly at night to avoid the gunships and in response the Soviets trained their Mi 24 crews in night fighting dropping parachute flares to illuminate potential targets for attack The Mujahideen quickly caught on and scattered as quickly as possible when Soviet target designation flares were lit nearby Attrition in Afghanistan Edit The war in Afghanistan brought with it losses by attrition 18 The environment itself dusty and often hot was rough on the machines dusty conditions led to the development of the twin PZU PyleZashchitnoe Ustroystvo air intake filters The rebels primary air defence weapons early in the war were heavy machine guns and anti aircraft cannons though anything smaller than a 23 millimetre shell generally did not do much damage to an Mi 24 The cockpit glass panels were resistant to 12 7 mm 50 in calibre rounds citation needed The rebels also quickly began to use Soviet made and US shoulder launched man portable air defense system MANPADS missiles such as the Strela and Redeye which had either been captured from the Soviets or their Afghan allies or were supplied from Western sources Many of them came from stocks that the Israelis had captured during wars with Soviet backed states in the Middle East Owing to a combination of the limited capabilities of these early types of missiles poor training and poor material condition of the missiles they were not particularly effective Instead the RPG 7 originally developed as an antitank weapon was the first effective countermeasure to the Hind The RPG 7 not designed for air defence had inherent shortcomings in this role When fired at the angles needed to hit aerial targets the back blast could easily wound the shooter and the inevitable cloud of smoke and dust made it easy for gunners to spot the shooter s position citation needed From 1986 21 the CIA began supplying the Afghan rebels with newer Stinger shoulder launched heat seeking SAMs 23 These were a marked improvement over earlier weapons Unlike the Redeye and SA 7 which locked on to only infrared emissions the Stinger could lock onto both infrared and ultraviolet emissions This enabled the operator to engage an aircraft from all angles rather than just the tail and made it significantly more resistant to countermeasures like flares In addition the Mil helicopters particularly the Mi 24 suffered from a design flaw in the configuration of their engines that made them highly vulnerable to the Stinger The Mi 24 along with the related Mi 8 and Mi 17 helicopters had its engines placed in an inline configuration in an attempt to streamline the helicopter to increase speed and minimize the aircraft s overall frontal profile to incoming fire in a head on attack However this had the opposite effect of leaking all the exhaust gasses from the Mi 24 s engines directly out the side of the aircraft and away from the helicopter s rotor wash creating two massive sources of heat and ultraviolet radiation for the Stinger to lock onto 24 The inline placement of the engines was seen as so problematic in this regard that Mil designers abandoned the configuration on the planned successor to the Mi 24 the Mil Mi 28 in favour of an engine placement more akin to Western attack helicopters which vents the exhaust gasses into the helicopter s main rotor wash to dissipate heat citation needed Initially the attack doctrine of the Mi 24 was to approach its target from high altitude and dive downwards After the introduction of the Stinger doctrine changed to nap of the earth flying where they approached very low to the ground and engaged more laterally popping up to only about 200 ft 61 m in order to aim rockets or cannons 25 Countermeasure flares and missile warning systems would be installed in all Soviet Mil Mi 2 Mi 8 and Mi 24 helicopters giving pilots a chance to evade missiles fired at them Heat dissipation devices were also fitted to exhausts to decrease the Mi 24 s heat signature Tactical and doctrinal changes were introduced to make it harder for the enemy to deploy these weapons effectively These reduced the Stinger threat but did not eliminate it Mi 24s were also used to shield jet transports flying in and out of Kabul from Stingers The gunships carried flares to blind the heat seeking missiles The crews called themselves Mandatory Matrosovs after a Soviet hero of World War II who threw himself across a German machine gun to let his comrades break through citation needed According to Russian sources 74 helicopters were lost including 27 shot down by Stinger and two by Redeye 21 In many cases the helicopters with their armour and durable construction could withstand significant damage and able to return to base citation needed Mi 24 crews and end of Soviet involvement Edit Mi 24 crews carried AK 74 assault rifles and other hand held weapons to give them a better chance of survival if forced down 18 Early in the war Marat Tischenko head of the Mil design bureau visited Afghanistan to see what the troops thought of his helicopters and gunship crews put on several displays for him They even demonstrated manoeuvres such as barrel rolls which design engineers considered impossible An astounded Tischenko commented I thought I knew what my helicopters could do now I m not so sure 18 The last Soviet Mi 24 shot down was during the night of 2 February 1989 with both crewmen killed It was also the last Soviet helicopter lost during nearly 10 years of warfare 21 Mi 24s in Afghanistan after Soviet withdrawal Edit Two Mil Mi 35 Hind helicopters during a training sortie over southern Afghanistan 4 October 2009 U S Airmen with the 438th Air Expeditionary Training Group Mi 24s passed on to Soviet backed Afghan forces during the war remained in dwindling service in the grinding civil war that continued after the Soviet withdrawal 18 Afghan Air Force Mi 24s in the hands of the ascendant Taliban gradually became inoperable but a few flown by the Northern Alliance which had Russian assistance and access to spares remained operational up to the US invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001 In 2008 the Afghan Air Force took delivery of six refurbished Mi 35 helicopters purchased from the Czech Republic The Afghan pilots were trained by India and began live firing exercises in May 2009 in order to escort Mi 17 transport helicopters on operations in restive parts of the country Iran Iraq War 1980 1988 Edit The Mi 25 saw considerable use by the Iraqi Army during the long war against Iran 26 Its heavy armament caused severe losses to Iranian ground forces during the war However the Mi 25 lacked an effective anti tank capability as it was only armed with obsolete 9M17 Skorpion missiles 27 This led the Iraqis to develop new gunship tactics with help from East German advisors The Mi 25s would form hunter killer teams with French built Aerospatiale Gazelles with the Mi 25s leading the attack and using their massive firepower to suppress Iranian air defences and the Gazelles using their HOT missiles to engage armoured fighting vehicles These tactics proved effective in halting Iranian offensives such as Operation Ramadan in July 1982 27 An Iraqi Mil Mi 25 brought down during the Iran Iraq War on display at a military museum in Tehran This war also saw the only confirmed air to air helicopter battles in history with the Iraqi Mi 25s flying against Iranian AH 1J SeaCobras supplied by the United States before the Iranian Revolution on several separate occasions In November 1980 not long after Iraq s initial invasion of Iran two Iranian SeaCobras engaged two Mi 25s with TOW wire guided antitank missiles One Mi 25 went down immediately the other was badly damaged and crashed before reaching base 21 28 The Iranians repeated this accomplishment on 24 April 1981 destroying two Mi 25s without incurring losses to themselves 21 One Mi 25 was also downed by an IRIAF F 14A 29 The Iraqis hit back claiming the destruction of a SeaCobra on 14 September 1983 with YaKB machine gun then three SeaCobras on 5 February 1984 28 and three more on 25 February 1984 two with Falanga missiles one with S 5 rockets 21 A 1982 news article published on the Iraqi Observer claimed an Iraqi Mi 24D shot down an Iranian F 4 Phantom II using its armaments either antitank missiles guns or S 5 unguided rockets 30 This claim was later debunked 31 After a lull in helicopter losses each side lost a gunship on 13 February 1986 21 Later a Mi 25 claimed a SeaCobra shot down with YaKB gun on 16 February and a SeaCobra claimed a Mi 25 shot down with rockets on 18 February 21 The last engagement between the two types was on 22 May 1986 when Mi 25s shot down a SeaCobra The final claim tally was 10 SeaCobras and 6 Mi 25s destroyed The relatively small numbers and the inevitable disputes over actual kill numbers makes it unclear if one gunship had a real technical superiority over the other Iraqi Mi 25s also claimed 43 kills against other Iranian helicopters such as Agusta Bell UH 1 Hueys 28 In general the Iraqi pilots liked the Mi 25 in particular for its high speed long range high versatility and large weapon load but disliked the relatively ineffectual anti tank guided weapons and lack of agility 27 The Mi 25 was also used by Iraq in chemical warfare against Iranians and Kurdish civilians in Halabja 28 Nicaraguan civil war 1980 1988 Edit Mi 25s were also used by the Nicaraguan Army during the civil war of the 1980s 32 33 Nicaragua received 12 Mi 25s some sources claim 18 in the mid 1980s to deal with Contra insurgents 28 The Mi 25s performed ground attacks on the Contras and were also fast enough to intercept light aircraft being used by the insurgents The U S Reagan Administration regarded introduction of the Mi 25s as a major escalation of tensions in Central America Two Mi 25s were shot down by Stingers fired by the Contras A third Mi 25 was damaged while pursuing Contras near the Honduran border when it was intercepted by Honduran F 86 Sabres and A 37 Dragonflies A fourth was flown to Honduras by a defecting Sandinista pilot in December 1988 Sri Lankan Civil War 1987 2009 Edit The Indian Peace Keeping Force 1987 90 in Sri Lanka used Mi 24s when an Indian Air Force detachment was deployed there in support of the Indian and Sri Lankan armed forces in their fight against various Tamil militant groups such as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam LTTE It is believed that Indian losses were considerably reduced by the heavy fire support from their Mi 24s The Indians lost no Mi 24s in the operation as the Tigers had no weapons capable of downing the gunship at the time 28 34 Since 14 November 1995 the Mi 24 has been used by the Sri Lanka Air Force in the war against the LTTE liberation group and has proved highly effective at providing close air support for ground forces The Sri Lanka Air Force operates a mix of Mi 24 35P and Mi 24V 35 versions attached to its No 9 Attack Helicopter Squadron They have recently been upgraded with modern Israeli FLIR and electronic warfare systems Five were upgraded to intercept aircraft by adding radar fully functional helmet mounted target tracking systems and AAMs More than five Mi 24s have been lost to LTTE MANPADS and another two lost in attacks on air bases with one heavily damaged but later returned to service 34 Peruvian operations 1989 1995 Edit The Peruvian Air Force received 12 Mi 25Ds and 2 Mi 25DU from the Soviets in 1983 1984 and 1985 after ordering them in the aftermath of 1981 Paquisha conflict with Ecuador Seven more second hand units 4 Mi 24D and 3 Mi 25D were obtained from Nicaragua in 1992 These have been permanently based at the Vitor airbase near La Joya ever since operated by the 2nd Air Group of the 211th Air Squadron Their first deployment occurred in June 1989 during the war against Communist guerrillas in the Peruvian highlands mainly against Shining Path Despite the conflict continuing it has decreased in scale and is now limited to the jungle areas of Valley of Rivers Apurimac Ene and Mantaro VRAEM 35 36 37 38 Gulf War 1991 Edit An Iraqi Mi 25 Hind D captured during the 1991 Persian Gulf War The Mi 24 was also heavily employed by the Iraqi Army during their invasion of Kuwait although most were withdrawn by Saddam Hussein when it became apparent that they would be needed to help retain his grip on power in the aftermath of the war In the ensuing 1991 uprisings in Iraq these helicopters were used against dissidents as well as fleeing civilian refugees 39 40 Sierra Leone Civil War 1991 2002 Edit Three Mi 24Vs owned by Sierra Leone and flown by South African military contractors including Neall Ellis were used against RUF rebels 41 In 1995 they helped drive the RUF from the capital Freetown 42 Neall Ellis also piloted a Mi 24 during the British led Operation Barras against West Side Boys 43 Guinea also used its Mi 24s against the RUF on both sides of the border and was alleged to have provided air support to the LURD insurgency in northern Liberia in 2001 03 Croatian War of Independence 1990s Edit Twelve Mi 24s were delivered to Croatia in 1993 and were used effectively in 1995 by the Croatian Army in Operation Storm against the Army of Krajina The Mi 24 was used to strike deep into enemy territory and disrupt Krajina army communications One Croatian Mi 24 crashed near the city of Drvar Bosnia and Herzegovina due to strong winds Both the pilot and the operator survived The Mi 24s used by Croatia were obtained from Ukraine One Mi 24 was modified to carry Mark 46 torpedoes The helicopters were withdrawn from service in 2004 44 First and Second Wars in Chechnya 1990s 2000s Edit During the First and Second Chechen Wars beginning in 1994 and 1999 respectively Mi 24s were employed by the Russian armed forces In the first year of the Second Chechen War 11 Mi 24s were lost by Russian forces about half of which were lost as a result of enemy action 45 Cenepa War 1995 Edit Peru employed Mi 25s against Ecuadorian forces during the short Cenepa conflict in early 1995 The only loss occurred on 7 February when a FAP Mi 25 was downed after being hit in quick succession by at least two probably three 9K38 Igla shoulder fired missiles during a low altitude mission over the Cenepa valley The three crewmen were killed 46 By 2011 two Mi 35P were purchased from Russia to reinforce the 211th Air Squadron 47 Sudanese Civil War 1995 2005 Edit In 1995 the Sudanese Air Force acquired six Mi 24s for use in Southern Sudan and the Nuba mountains to engage the SPLA At least two aircraft were lost in non combat situations within the first year of operation A further twelve were bought in 2001 48 and used extensively in the oil fields of Southern Sudan Mi 24s were also deployed to Darfur in 2004 5 First and Second Congo Wars 1996 2003 Edit Three Mi 24s were used by Mobutu s army and were later acquired by the new Air Force of the Democratic Republic of the Congo 49 These were supplied to Zaire in 1997 as part of a French Serbian contract At least one was flown by Serbian mercenaries One hit a power line and crashed on 27 March 1997 killing the three crew and four passengers 50 Zimbabwean Mi 24s were also operated in coordination with the Congolese Army The United Nations peacekeeping mission employed Indian Air Force Mi 24 35 helicopters to provide support during the Second Congo War The IAF has been operating in the region since 2003 51 Kosovo War 1998 1999 Edit Two second hand Mi 24Vs procured from Ukraine earlier in the 1990s were used by the Yugoslav Special Operation Unit JSO against Kosovo Albanian rebels during the Kosovo War 52 Insurgency in Macedonia 2001 Edit North Macedonia Mi 24V The North Macedonian military acquired used Ukrainian Mi 24Vs which were then used frequently against Albanian insurgents during the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia now North Macedonia The main areas of action were in Tetovo Radusha and Aracinovo 53 Ivorian Civil War 2002 2004 Edit During the Ivorian Civil War five Mil Mi 24s piloted by mercenaries were used in support of government forces They were later destroyed by the French Army in retaliation for an air attack on a French base that killed nine soldiers 54 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Edit An Afghan Air Force Mi 35 over Kandahar 2009 In 2008 and 2009 the Czech Republic donated six Mi 24s under the ANA Equipment Donation Programme As a result the Afghan National Army Air Corps ANAAC gained the ability to escort its own helicopters with heavily armed attack helicopters ANAAC operates nine Mi 35s Major Caleb Nimmo a United States Air Force Pilot was the first American to fly the Mi 35 Hind or any Russian helicopter in combat 55 56 On 13 September 2011 a Mi 35 of the Afghan Air Force was used to hold back an attack on ISAF and police buildings 57 The Polish Helicopter Detachment contributed Mi 24s to the International Security Assistance Force ISAF The Polish pilots trained in Germany before deploying to Afghanistan and train with U S service personnel On 26 January 2011 one Mi 24 caught on fire during take off from its base in Ghazni One American and four Polish soldiers evacuated unharmed 58 India has also donated Mi 35s to Afghanistan Four helicopters were to be supplied with three already transferred in January 2016 59 The three Mi 35s made a big difference in the offensive against militants according to General John Campbell commander of US forces in Afghanistan 60 Iraq War 2003 2011 Edit The Polish contingent in Iraq used six Mi 24Ds after December 2004 One of them crashed on 18 July 2006 in an air base in Al Diwaniyah 61 Polish Mi 24Ds used in Iraq were not returned to Poland due to their age condition low combat value of the Mi 24D variant and high shipping costs depending on their condition they were transferred to the new Iraqi Army or scrapped War in Somalia 2006 2009 Edit The Ethiopian Air Force operated about three Mil Mi 35 and ten Mil Mi 24D helicopter gunships in the Somali theatre One was shot down near Mogadishu International Airport on 30 March 2007 by Somali insurgents 62 2008 Russo Georgian War Edit Mil Mi 24s were used by both sides during the fighting in South Ossetia 63 During the war Georgian Air Force Mi 24s attacked their first targets on an early morning hour of 8 August targeting the Ossetian presidential palace The second target was a cement factory near Tskhinval where major enemy forces and ammunition were located 63 The last combat mission of the GAF Mi 24s was on 11 August when a large Russian convoy consisting of light trucks and BMP IFVs which were heading to the Georgian village of Avnevi was targeted by Mi 24s completely destroying the convoy 63 The Georgian Air Force lost 2 Mi 24s on Senaki air base They were destroyed by Russian troops on the ground Both helicopters were in operational 64 The Russian army heavily used Mi 24s in the conflict Russian upgraded Mi 24PNs were credited for destroying 2 Georgian T 72SIM1 tanks using guided missiles at night time though some sources attribute those kills to Mil Mi 28 63 The Russian army did not lose any Mi 24s throughout the conflict mainly because those helicopters were deployed to areas where Georgian air defence was not active 63 though some were damaged by small arms fire and at least one Mi 24 was lost due to technical reasons War in Chad 2008 Edit On returning to Abeche one of the Chadian Mi 35s made a forced landing at the airport It was claimed that it was shot down by rebels 65 66 Libyan civil war 2011 Edit The Libyan Air Force Mi 24s were used by both sides to attack enemy positions during the 2011 Libyan civil war 67 A number were captured by the rebels who formed the Free Libyan Air Force together with other captured air assets During the battle for Benina airport one Mi 35 serial number 853 was destroyed on the ground on 23 February 2011 In the same action serial number 854 was captured by the rebels together with an Mi 14 serial number 1406 citation needed Two Mi 35s operating for the pro Gaddafi Libyan Air Force were destroyed on the ground on 26 March 2011 by French aircraft enforcing the no fly zone 68 One Free Libyan Air Force Mi 25D serial number 854 captured at the beginning of the revolt violated the no fly zone on 9 April 2011 to strike loyalist positions in Ajdabiya It was shot down by Libyan ground forces during the action The pilot Captain Hussein Al Warfali died in the crash citation needed The rebels claimed that a number of other Mi 25s were shot down 2010 2011 Ivorian crisis Edit Ukrainian army Mi 24P helicopters as part of the United Nations peacekeeping force fired four missiles at a pro Gbagbo military camp in Ivory Coast s main city of Abidjan 69 Syrian Civil War 2011 present Edit See also List of aviation shootdowns and accidents during the Syrian Civil War The Syrian Air Force have used Mi 24s to attack rebels throughout Syria including many of the nation s major cities 70 Controversy has surrounded an alleged delivery of Mi 25s to the Syrian military due to Turkey and other NATO members disallowing such arms shipments through their territory 71 On 3 November 2016 a Russian Mi 35 made an emergency landing near Syria s Palmyra city and was hit and destroyed most likely by an unguided recoilless weapon after it touched down The crew returned safely to the Khmeimim air base 72 Second Kachin conflict 2011 present Edit The Myanmar Air Force used the Mi 24 in the Kachin conflict against the Kachin Independence Army 73 Two Mi 35 helicopters were shot down by the Kachin Independence Army during the heavy fighting in the mountains of northern Burma in 2012 and early 2013 74 On 3 May 2021 in the morning a Myanmar Air Force Mi 35 was shot down by the Kachin Independence Army hit by a MANPADS during air raids involving attack helicopters and fighter jets A video emerged showing the helicopter being hit while flying over a village 75 76 Post U S Iraqi insurgency Edit Iraq ordered a total of 34 Mi 35Ms in 2013 as part of an arms deal with Russia that also included Mi 28 attack helicopters 77 The delivery of the first four was announced by then Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki in November 2013 78 79 Their first deployment began in late December against camps of the al Qaeda linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL and several Islamist militants in the al Anbar province that had taken control of several areas of Fallujah and Ramadi 80 FLIR footage of the strikes has been released by the military 81 On 3 October 2014 ISIL militants reportedly used a FN 6 shoulder launched missile in Baiji to shoot down an Iraqi Army Mi 35M attack helicopter 82 Video footage released by ISIL militants shows at least another two Iraqi Mi 35s brought down by light anti aircraft artillery 83 Balochistan Insurgency 2012 present Edit In 2018 Pakistan received 4 Mi 35M Hind E Gunships from Russia under the 153 million deal 84 85 They are now stationed at the Army Aviation Corps base at Quetta Cantonment The gunships have since been used in several counter insurgency operations against various militant groups in the Balochistan province of Pakistan In early 2022 a base in Nushki and a check post in Panjgur belonging to the Frontier Corps Balochistan Paramilitary were attacked by BLA terrorists The attack in Nushki was swiftly repulsed but the situation in Panjgaur was not good to which Mi 35 Hind and AH 1F Cobra gunships were called in for support It provided much needed ground support and reconnaissance in the counter offensive which led to success 86 87 Crimean crisis 2014 Edit During the annexation of the Crimean Peninsula Russia deployed 13 Mi 24s to support their infantry as they advanced through the region However these aircraft saw no combat during their deployment 88 War in Donbas 2014 Edit During the Siege of Sloviansk on 2 May 2014 two Ukrainian Mi 24s were shot down by pro Russian insurgents The Ukrainian armed forces claim that they were downed by MANPADS while on patrol close to Slavyansk 89 The Ukrainian government confirmed that both aircraft were shot down along with an Mi 8 damaged by small arms fire Initial reports mentioned two dead and others wounded later five crew members were confirmed dead and one taken prisoner until being released on 5 May 90 91 92 On 5 May 2014 another Ukrainian Mi 24 was forced to make an emergency landing after being hit by machine gun fire while on patrol close to Slavyansk The Ukrainian forces recovered the two pilots and destroyed the helicopter with a rocket strike by an Su 25 aircraft to prevent its capture by pro Russian insurgents 93 Ukrainian Sukhoi Su 25 attack aircraft with MiG 29 fighters providing top cover supported Mi 24s during the battle for Donetsk Airport 94 On 13 October 2018 a Ukrainian Mi 24 shot down an Orlan 10 UAV using cannon fire near Lysychansk 95 Chadian offensive against Boko Haram 2015 Edit Chadian Mi 24s were used during the 2015 West African offensive against Boko Haram 96 Azerbaijan Karabakh 2014 2016 2020 Edit On 12 November 2014 Azerbaijani forces shot down an Armenian forces Mi 24 from a formation of two which were flying along the disputed border close to the frontline between Azerbaijani and Armenian troops in the disputed Karabakh territory The helicopter was hit by an Igla S shoulder launched missile fired by Azerbaijani soldiers while flying at low altitude and crashed killing all three on board 97 98 99 On 2 April 2016 during a clash between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces an Azerbaijani Mi 24 helicopter was shot down by Nagorno Karabakh forces The downing was confirmed by the Azerbaijani defence ministry 100 101 102 103 On 9 November 2020 during the Nagorno Karabakh war a Russian Mi 24 was shot down by Azerbaijani forces with a MANPADS 104 The Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry stated that the downing was an accident Two crew members were killed and one sustained moderate injuries The Russian defence ministry confirmed the downing in a press release the same day 105 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 present Edit During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine on 1 March Ukrainian forces shot down a Russian Mi 35M helicopter with MANPADS in the Kyiv Reservoir see also Battle of Kyiv On 5 May 2022 the helicopter was retrieved by Ukrainian engineers in Vyshgorod 106 Two Russian Mi 35 were shot down by a MANPADS on 5 March 2022 107 108 On 6 March one Mi 24P with registration number RF 94966 was shot down by Ukrainian MANPADS in Kyiv Oblast 109 110 On 8 March 2022 one Ukrainian Mil Mi 24 from the Ukrainian 16th Army Aviation Brigade uk was lost over Brovary Kyiv Pilots Col Oleksandr Maryniak and Cptn Ivan Bezzub were killed 111 112 On 17 March a Russian Mi 35M was reportedly destroyed by Ukrainian Ministry of Defence unknown location 113 On 1 April 2022 two Ukrainian Mi 24s reportedly entered Russia and attacked an oil storage facility in Belgorod 114 Variants EditMain article List of Mil Mi 24 variantsOperators Edit Map with Mil Mi 24 operators in blue and former operators in red AfghanistanAfghan Air Force 115 AlgeriaAlgerian Air Force 115 AngolaAngolan Air Force 115 ArmeniaArmenian Air Force 115 Nagorno Karabakh Defense Army 115 AzerbaijanAzerbaijani Air Forces 115 BelarusBelarus Air Force 115 Brazilian Air Force Mi 35M A Bulgarian Air Force Mi 24 in flight BulgariaBulgarian Air Force 115 Burkina FasoBurkina Faso Air Force 115 BurundiBurundi National Army 115 ChadChadian Air Force 115 Congo Republic of theCongolese Air Force 115 Democratic Republic of the CongoCongolese Democratic Air Force 115 CubaCuban Air Force 115 CyprusCyprus Air Forces operates the Mil Mi 35PN variant 115 A Czech Air Force Mi 24 Czech RepublicCzech Air Force 115 DjiboutiDjibouti Air Force 115 MI 35P of the Djibouti Air Force EgyptEgyptian Air Force 116 Equatorial GuineaEquatorial Guinean Air Force 115 EritreaEritrean Air Force 115 EthiopiaEthiopian Air Force 115 Georgian Air Force Mi 24 GeorgiaGeorgian Air Force 115 GuineaGuinean Air Force 115 Hungarian Mi 24 HungaryHungarian Air Force 115 IndiaIndian Air Force 115 Indonesian Army Mi 35P IndonesiaIndonesian Army 115 IraqIraqi Army 115 KazakhstanMilitary of Kazakhstan 115 117 118 KyrgyzstanMilitary of Kyrgyzstan 115 LibyaLibyan Air Force 115 MaliAir Force of Mali 115 MozambiqueMilitary of Mozambique 115 MyanmarMyanmar Air Force 115 NamibiaNamibian Air Force 115 NicaraguaNicaraguan Air Force 115 NigerAir Force of Niger 115 NigeriaNigerian Air Force 115 North KoreaKorean People s Army Air and Anti Air Force 115 North MacedoniaAir Force of North Macedonia 115 PakistanPakistan Army 115 Peruvian Air Force Mi 25D PeruPeruvian Air Force 115 PolandPolish Land Forces 115 A Russian Air Force Mil Mi 35P RussiaRussian Air Force 115 Border Service of Russia 119 Internal Troops of Russia 120 RwandaRwandan Air Force 115 Serbian Mil Mi 35M during Sadejstvo 2020 military exercise SerbiaSerbian Air Force 121 SenegalSenegalese Air Force 115 Sierra LeoneSierra Leone Air Wing 115 Sri LankaSri Lanka Air Force 115 SudanSudanese Air Force 115 SyriaSyrian Air Force 115 TajikistanMilitary of Tajikistan 115 TurkmenistanMilitary of Turkmenistan 115 UgandaUgandan Air Force 115 A Ukrainian Mi 24 UkraineUkrainian Ground Forces 115 United StatesUnited States Army 115 United States Air Force for training 122 UzbekistanUzbekistan Air and Air Defence Forces 123 VenezuelaArmy of Venezuela 115 Vietnam People s Air Force Mi 24 YemenYemen Air Force 115 ZimbabweAir Force of Zimbabwe 115 Former operators Edit BrazilBrazilian Air Force 115 124 CroatiaCroatian Air Force 125 CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakian Air Force 126 127 East GermanyEast German Air Force transferred to Germany on reunification 128 129 GermanyGerman Army inherited from East Germany in 1990 retired 1993 130 131 KampucheaKampuchean People s Revolutionary Air Force 132 NicaraguaFuerza Aerea Sandinista 130 SlovakiaSlovakian Air Force 133 134 South YemenPeople s Democratic Republic of Yemen Air Force 135 Soviet UnionSoviet Air Force transferred to successor states 136 137 YugoslaviaSpecial Operations Unit 138 TransnistriaTransnistria Air Force citation needed VietnamVietnam People s Air Force 115 Aircraft on display EditMi 24 helicopters can be seen in the following museums Russia Central Air Force Museum Monino Mi 24A Mi 25Belgium Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History Brussel Mi 24Brazil Museu Aeroespacial Rio de Janeiro Mi 35MBulgaria Muzei na aviatsiyata Plovdiv Mi 24Czech Republic Prague Aviation Museum Kbely Mi 24D tactical number 0220China Chinese Aviation Museum Beijing Mi 24Ethiopia Martyrs Memorial Monument Bahir Dar Mi 24A 139 Germany Luftwaffenmuseum der Bundeswehr Berlin Mi 24D Mi 24P Technik Museum SpeyerHungary Museum of Hungarian Aviation Szolnok Kerteszet Szajol Mi 24D tactical number 577Iran Sa ad Abad Museum in TehranLatvia Riga Aviation Museum Riga Mi 24A tactical number 20Nicaragua Airforce Base Augusto C Sandino International Airport Managua Mi 25 tactical number 361Poland Polish Army Museum Warsaw Mi 24D tactical number 013 Polish Air Force Museum Deblin Mi 24D tactical number 016South Africa South African Air Force Museum Swartkops Air Force Base One Mi 24A of the Algerian Air Force on display Slovakia Military History Museum Piestany Mi 24D tactical number 0100 140 Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Air Force Museum Ratmalana SLAF HingurakgodaUkraine Museum of the Great Patriotic War Kyiv Mi 24B Ukraine State Aviation Museum Kyiv Mi 24A Mi 24D Mi 24P Mi 24VUnited Kingdom Imperial War Museum Duxford Cambridgeshire Mi 24D Number 96 German Air force Markings The Helicopter Museum Weston super Mare Somerset Mi 24D 96 26 141 Midland Air Museum Coventry Airport Mi 24D Red 6 on loan from BAE SYSTEMS 142 United States Southern Museum of Flight Birmingham Alabama Pima Air and Space Museum Tucson Arizona Cold War Air Museum Lancaster Texas 143 Russell Military Museum Zion Illinois Mi 24D 110 144 Vietnam Vietnam People s Air Force Museum Hanoi Mi 24ASpecifications Mi 24 Edit Cabin door to the rear troop utility compartment Possible armament configuration on Mi 24W Yakushev Borzov YakB 12 7 machine gun Mi 24 during Centre 2019 exercise Data from Indian Military org 145 unreliable source General characteristicsCrew 2 3 pilot weapons system officer and technician optional Capacity 8 troops 4 stretchers 2 400 kg 5 291 lb cargo on an external sling Length 17 5 m 57 ft 5 in fuselage only19 79 m 65 ft including rotors dd dd Wingspan 6 5 m 21 ft 4 in stub wings Height 6 5 m 21 ft 4 in Empty weight 8 500 kg 18 739 lb Max takeoff weight 12 000 kg 26 455 lb Powerplant 2 Isotov TV3 117 turboshaft engines 1 600 kW 2 200 shp each Main rotor diameter 17 3 m 56 ft 9 in Main rotor area 235 1 m2 2 531 sq ft NACA 23012 146 Performance Maximum speed 335 km h 208 mph 181 kn Range 450 km 280 mi 240 nmi Service ceiling 4 900 m 16 100 ft Armament Internal guns flexible 12 7 mm Yakushev Borzov Yak B Gatling gun on most variants Maximum of 1 470 rounds of ammunition fixed twin barrel GSh 30K autocannon on the Mi 24P 250 rounds of ammunition flexible twin barrel GSh 23L autocannon on the Mi 24VP and Mi 24VM 450 rounds of ammunition flexible GIAT dual feed 20mm M693 autocannon on Mi 24 SuperHind Mk II III IV V 320 rounds of ammunition PKB passenger compartment window mounted machine gunsExternal stores Total payload is 1 500 kg of external stores Inner hardpoints can carry at least 500 kg Outer hardpoints can carry up to 250 kg Wing tip pylons can only carry the 9M17 Phalanga in the Mi 24A D or the 9K114 Shturm complex in the Mi 24V F Bomb load Bombs within weight range presumably ZAB FAB RBK ODAB etc up to 500 kg MBD multiple ejector racks presumably MBD 4 with 4 FAB 100 KGMU2V submunition mine dispenser podsFirst generation armament standard production Mi 24D GUV 8700 gunpod with a 12 7 mm Yak B 2 7 62 mm GShG 7 62 mm combination or one 30 mm AGS 17 UB 16 S 5 rocket launchers UB 32 S 5 rocket launchers S 24 240 mm rocket 9M17 Fleyta a pair on each wingtip pylon Second generation armament Mi 24V Mi 24P and most upgraded Mi 24D UPK 23 250 gunpod carrying the GSh 23L B 8V20 a lightweight long tubed helicopter version of the S 8 rocket launcher 9K114 Shturm in pairs on the outer and wingtip pylonsPopular culture EditMain article Aircraft in fiction Mil Mi 24 Hind The Mi 24 has appeared in several films and has been a common feature in many video games See 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area ASN Wikibase Occurrence 276264 Aviation Safety Network 6 March 2022 U Lvivskij oblasti poproshalisya z ekipazhem Mi 24 kotrij zbili okupanti v boyu na Kiyivshini in Ukrainian 11 March 2022 U boyu za Kiyiv zaginuv vijskovij lotchik Oleksandr Marinyak FOTO Dzherelo Censor Net in Ukrainian 13 March 2022 Znajdeno ulamki rosijskogo vertolota Mi 35 mil in ua in Ukrainian 17 March 2022 Russia blames Ukraine for fuel depot blast Kyiv denies role WTNH 1 April 2022 Retrieved 1 April 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf World Air Forces 2019 Flightglobal Insight 2019 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Egypt confirms it is operating Mi 24 attack helicopters 14 January 2020 Russia delivers four Mi 35M helicopters to Kazakhstan Russia delivers combat aircraft missile systems to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan this year Mladenov Air International May 2011 p 112 Mladenov Air International May 2011 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Planespotters net Just Aviation Planespotters net 25 April 2010 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2012 Trade Registers Armstrade sipri org Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 20 November 2014 Slovakia Mi 24 were withdrawn from service PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 3 April 2016 SME Petit Press a s Vrtuľniky Mi 24 vzlietli v Presove naposledy presov korzar sme sk Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Cooper Tom 2017 Hot Skies Over Yemen Volume 1 Aerial Warfare Over the Southern Arabian Peninsula 1962 1994 Solihull UK Helion amp Company Publishing p 43 ISBN 978 1 912174 23 2 World s Air Forces 1987 pg 86 flightglobal com Archived from the original on 17 May 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2013 Soviet Union nationalcoldwarexhibition org Archived from the original on 6 November 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2013 Serbia Paramilitary Police Aeroflight co uk Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Contributions by Subhabrata Samal Contributions by Subhabrata Samal Retrieved 12 November 2022 Military History Museum Piestany Archived 26 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine foto number 7 Eastern European Helicopters Archived 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Helicopter Museum Retrieved 10 August 2014 Midland Air Museum Explore our Exhibits Aircraft Listing Midlandairmuseum co uk Archived from the original on 18 June 2007 Retrieved 17 July 2018 Aircraft Cwam org Archived from the original on 14 December 2014 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Russell Military Museum Archived from the original on 15 March 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2019 Mil Mi 24 Mi 25 Mi 35 Hind Akbar Indian Military org 5 October 2009 Archived from the original on 5 September 2012 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Delalande Arnaud 2016 Iraqi Air Power Reborn The Iraqi air arms since 2004 Houston Harpia Publishing ISBN 978 0 9854554 7 7 Hoyle Craig 11 17 December 2012 World Air Forces Directory Flight International Vol 182 no 5370 pp 40 64 ISSN 0015 3710 Hoyle Craig 5 11 December 2017 World Air Forces Directory Flight International Vol 192 no 5615 pp 26 57 ISSN 0015 3710 Mladenov Alexander May 2011 Fighting Terrorism amp Enforcing the Law in Russia Air International Vol 80 no 5 pp 108 114 ISSN 0306 5634 Further reading EditEden Paul ed The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London UK Amber Books 2004 ISBN 978 1 904687 84 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mil Mi 24 Mil Mi 24 Mi 25 Mi 35 Hind Akbar at Indian military database CzechAirSpotters gallery of Mi 24 Mi 24PN Gallery Mi 24 service tactics and variants A Rescue Mission by Sri Lanka Air Force with Mi 24 Mi 24 Hind from modeller s view Mi 24D walkaround photos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mil Mi 24 amp oldid 1132891704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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