fbpx
Wikipedia

9K32 Strela-2

The 9K32 Strela-2 (Russian: Cтрела, "arrow"; NATO reporting name SA-7 Grail) is a light-weight, shoulder-fired, surface-to-air missile (or MANPADS) system. It is designed to target aircraft at low altitudes with passive infrared homing guidance and destroy them with a high explosive warhead.

9K32 Strela-2
SA-7 Grail, SA-N-5 Grail
KBM Kolomna 9K32M Strela-2M (SA-7b) missile and canister
TypeMan portable surface-to-air missile launcher
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1970–present
Used bySee operators
WarsWar of Attrition
October War
Portuguese Colonial War
Vietnam War
Cambodian Civil War
The Troubles
Basque conflict
Western Sahara War
Rhodesian Bush War
Nicaraguan Revolution
Uganda–Tanzania War
Salvadoran Civil War
1982 Lebanon War
Lebanese Civil War
Iran–Iraq War
Gulf War
Falklands War
Second Sudanese Civil War
South African Border War
Soviet–Afghan War
War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Syrian occupation of Lebanon
Yugoslav Wars
Iraq War
Libyan Civil War (2011)
Insurgency in Egypt (2013–present) (Sinai insurgency)
Syrian Civil War
War in Donbas
Yemeni Civil War (2015–present)
Libyan Civil War (2014–2020)
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
Production history
DesignerKBM (Kolomna)
Designedc. 1964
Unit costUS$120,000 (launcher with 5 missiles, export price to Libya, 1972–1973)[1]
VariantsSee versions
Specifications
Mass9.8 kg (21.6 lb) (Strela-2M missile)[2]
15 kg (33.1 lb) (system, ready to fire)[2]
Length1.44 m (4 ft 9 in)[2]
Diameter72 mm (2.8 in)[2]
Wingspan0.3 m

Effective firing range800 m (2,600 ft) (Strela-2M) (minimal range)[2]
Maximum firing range3,700 m (12,100 ft) (Strela-2)
4,200 m (13,800 ft) (Strela-2M)[2]
Warhead weight1.15 kg directed-energy blast fragmentation warhead (Strela-2M),[2] 370 g HE content
Detonation
mechanism
Non-delay impact and grazing fuzes, 14–17 second delay self-destruct.

Flight altitude50–1500 m (Strela-2)
50–2300 m (Strela-2M)[2]
Maximum speed 430 m/s (1,400 ft/s) (Strela-2)
500 m/s (1,600 ft/s)(Strela-2M)[3]
Guidance
system
Infra-red passive homing (AM-modulated reticle seeker head with uncooled PbS detector element), proportional navigation logic

Broadly comparable in performance with the US Army FIM-43 Redeye, the Strela-2 was the first Soviet man-portable SAM – full-scale production began in 1970.[4] While the Redeye and 9K32 Strela-2 were similar, the missiles were not identical.

The Strela-2 was a staple of the Cold War and was produced in huge numbers for the Soviet Union and their allies, as well as revolutionary movements.[5] Though since surpassed by more modern systems, the Strela and its variants remain in service in many countries, and have seen widespread use in nearly every regional conflict since 1972.

Development Edit

The end of World War II led to a major shift in Soviet defence policy. The advent of long range, high altitude, nuclear-armed American bombers, capable of penetrating Soviet airspace at heights and speeds unreachable and unmatchable by anti-aircraft guns and most interceptors, appeared to render every conventional weapon obsolete at a stroke. Numerous long-range, high-altitude SAM systems, such as the S-25 Berkut and S-75 Dvina, were rapidly developed and fielded to counter this large vulnerability. Due to the apparent "obsolescence" of conventional arms, however, relatively little development took place to field mobile battlefield air defences.

This direction was soon changed with the beginning of the Korean War. An entirely conventional conflict, it proved that nuclear weapons were not the be-all and end-all of warfare. In the face of a powerful and modern American air force, carrying non-nuclear payloads, the Soviet Union invested heavily in a multi-tier air defence system, consisting of several new mobile SAMs, to cover all altitude ranges and protect ground forces. The new doctrine listed five requirements:

  • Front-level medium-to-high-altitude area defense system 9K8 Krug (NATO designation SA-4 "Ganef")
  • Army-level low-to-medium-range area defense system 3K9 Kub (NATO designation SA-6 "Gainful")
  • Division-level low-altitude short-range system 9K33 Osa (NATO designation SA-8 "Gecko")
  • Regiment-level all-weather radar-guided gun system ZSU-23-4 "Shilka" and very-short-range missile systems 9K31 Strela-1 (NATO designation SA-9 "Gaskin")
  • Battalion-level man-portable 9K32 Strela-2 (NATO designation SA-7 "Grail")

Both Strela-1 and Strela-2 were initially intended to be man-portable systems. As the Strela-2 proved to be a considerably smaller and lighter package, however, the role of the Strela-1 was changed, becoming a heavier, vehicle-mounted system with increased range and performance to better support the ZSU-23-4 in the regimental air defense role.

 
SA-7a components. It is best distinguished by the squarish gripstock.

As development began in the Turopov OKB (later changed to Kolomna), detailed information on the design of the US FIM-43 Redeye became available. While it was not a reverse-engineered copy, in many ways the Strela design borrowed heavily from the Redeye, which had started development a few years earlier.[citation needed] Due to the comparatively primitive Soviet technical base, development was protracted, and many problems arose, especially in designing a sufficiently small seeker head and rocket. Eventually, the designers settled for a simpler seeker head than that of the Redeye, allowing the initial version, the 9K32 "Strela-2" (US DoD designation SA-7A, missile round 9M32) to finally enter service in 1968, five years behind schedule. At the time, it was described by one expert as being "the premier Russian export line".[6]

Improvements Edit

The initial variant suffered from numerous shortcomings: it could only engage targets flying at relatively slow airspeeds and low altitudes and then only from rear hemisphere, it suffered from poor guidance reliability (particularly in the presence of natural or man-made background IR radiation sources), and even when a hit was achieved, it often failed to destroy the target.[7][8] Poor lethality was an issue especially when used against jet aircraft: the hottest part of the target was the nozzle behind the actual engine, which the missile therefore usually hit; but there its small warhead often failed to cause significant damage to the engine itself.

In order to address the shortcomings, two improved versions were ordered in 1968; as an intermediate stop-gap the slightly improved 9K32M "Strela-2M" (NATO reporting name SA-7b) to replace the original, as well as the more ambitious Strela-3.

 
Components of the most common variant, the 9K32M Strela-2M/SA-7b

As the modifications introduced with the Strela-2M were relatively minor, the process was fast and it was accepted in service in 1970.[8] The Strela-2M replaced the Strela-2 in production lines immediately. Improvements were made particularly to increase the engagement envelope of the new system:[7]

  • Higher thrust propellant increased slant range from 3.4 to 4.2 km (2.1 to 2.6 mi) and ceiling from 1.5 to 2.3 km (0.93 to 1.43 mi)
  • Improved guidance and control logic allowed the engagement of helicopters and propeller-driven aircraft (but not jets) approaching at a maximum speed of 150 m/s (490 ft/s; 340 mph)
  • Maximum speed of receding targets was increased from 220 to 260 m/s (720 to 850 ft/s; 490 to 580 mph)
  • More automated gripstock provided a simplified firing method against fast targets: a single trigger pull followed by lead and superelevation replacing the separate stages of releasing the seeker to track, and launching the missile (see description below)

Contrary to what was initially reported in some Western publications, more recent information indicates that, while lethality on impact had proven to be a problem, the warhead remained the same 1.17 kg (2.6 lb) unit (including 370-gram (13 oz) TNT charge) as in the original.[9] This remained the warhead of all Soviet MANPADS up to and including most 9K38 Igla variants; to address the problem of poor lethality, a more powerful HE filling than TNT, improved fuzing, a terminal maneuver, and finally a separate charge to set off any remaining rocket fuel were gradually introduced in later MANPADS systems, but the original Strela-2/2M warhead design of a 370-gram (13 oz) directed-energy HE charge in a pre-fragmented casing remained.

The seeker head improvements were only minor changes to allow better discrimination of the target signal against background emissions.[7][9] Some sources claim that the seeker sensitivity was also improved.[8] The only defence against infra-red countermeasures remained the seeker head's narrow field of view, which could be hoped to help the rapidly slowing flare fall off the missile field of view as it was tracking a fast-moving target.[7] In practice, flares proved to be a highly effective countermeasure against both versions of the Strela-2.

The seeker is commonly referred to as a hot metal tracker. The seeker can only see infrared energy in the near infrared (NIR) spectrum, emitted by very hot surfaces only seen on the inside of the jet nozzle. This allows only rear-aspect engagement of jet targets, earning the weapon its other moniker as a revenge weapon, since the missile has to "chase" an aircraft after it has already passed by.

The Strela-2M was also procured for use on-board Warsaw Pact warships;[10] installed on four-round pedestal mounts[10] aboard Soviet amphibious warfare vessels and various smaller combatants, the weapon remained unchanged, but was assigned the NATO reporting name SA-N-5 "Grail".[10]

Description Edit

The missile launcher system consists of the green missile launch tube containing the missile, a grip stock and a cylindrical thermal battery. The launch tube is reloadable at depot, but missile rounds are delivered to fire units in their launch tubes. The device can be reloaded up to five times.[11]

 
A Strela being aimed, the lens of the seeker clearly visible

When engaging slow or straight-receding targets, the operator tracks the target with the iron sights in the launch tube and applies half-trigger. This action "uncages" the seeker and allows its attempt to track. If a target IR signature can be tracked against the background present, this is indicated by a light and a buzzer sound. The shooter then pulls the trigger fully, and immediately applies lead and superelevation. This method is called a manual engagement. An automatic mode, which is used against fast targets, allows the shooter to fully depress the trigger in one pull followed by immediate lead and superelevation of the launch tube. The seeker will uncage and will automatically launch the missile if a strong enough signal is detected.

The manufacturer lists reaction time measured from the carrying position (missile carried on a soldier's back with protective covers) to missile launch to be 13 seconds, a figure that is achievable but requires considerable training and skill in missile handling. With the launcher on the shoulder, covers removed and sights extended, reaction time from fire command to launch reduces to 6–10 seconds, depending greatly on the target difficulty and the shooter's skill.

After activating the power supply to the missile electronics, the gunner waits for electricity supply and gyros to stabilize, puts the sights on target and tracks it smoothly with the launch tube's iron sights, and pulls the trigger on the grip stock. This activates the seeker electronics and the missile attempts to lock onto the target. If the target is producing a strong enough signal and the angular tracking rate is within acceptable launch parameters, the missile alerts the gunner that the target is locked on by illuminating a light in the sight mechanism, and producing a constant buzzing noise. The operator then has 0.8 seconds to provide lead to the target while the missile's on-board power supply is activated and the throw-out motor ignited.

Should the target be outside acceptable parameters, then the light cue in the sight and the buzzer signal tell the gunner to re-aim the missile.

On launch, the booster burns out before the missile leaves the launch tube at 32 m/s and rotating at around 20 revolutions per second. As the missile leaves the tube, the two forward steering fins unfold, as do the four rear stabilizing tail fins. The self-destruct mechanism is then armed, which is set to destroy the missile after between 14 and 17 seconds to prevent it hitting the ground if it should miss the target.

 
Strela shortly after launch, fins unfurled, just before sustainer motor activation

Once the missile is five and a half meters away from the gunner, c. 0.3 seconds after leaving the launch tube, it activates the rocket sustainer motor. The sustainer motor takes it to a velocity of 430 metres per second (1,400 ft/s; 960 mph), and sustains it at this speed. Once it reaches peak speed, at a distance of around 120 metres (390 ft) from the gunner, the final safety mechanism is disabled and the missile is fully armed. All told, the booster burns for 0.5 second and the driving engine for another 2.0 seconds.[11]

The missile's uncooled lead sulfide passive infra-red seeker head detects infrared radiation at below 2.8 μm in wavelength. It has a 1.9 degree field of view and can track at 9 degrees per second. The seeker head tracks the target with an amplitude-modulated spinning reticle (spin-scan or AM tracking), which attempts to keep the seeker constantly pointed towards the target. The spinning reticle measures the amount of incoming infrared (IR) energy. It does this by using a circular pattern that has solid portions and slats that allow the IR energy to pass through to the seeker. As the reticle spins IR energy passes through the open portions of the reticle. Based on where the IR energy falls on the reticle the amount or amplitude of IR energy allowed through to the seeker increases the closer to the center of the reticle. Therefore, the seeker is able to identify where the center of the IR energy is. If the seeker detects a decrease in the amplitude of the IR energy it steers the missile back towards where the IR energy was the strongest. The seeker's design creates a dead-space in the middle of the reticle. The center mounted reticle has no detection capability. This means that as the seeker tracks a target as soon as the seeker is dead center, (aimed directly at the IR source) there is a decrease in the amplitude of IR energy. The seeker interprets this decrease as being off target so it changes direction. This causes the missile to move off target until another decrease in IR energy is detected and the process repeats itself. This gives the missile a very noticeable wobble in flight as the seeker bounces in and out from the dead-space. This wobble becomes more pronounced as the missile closes on the target as the IR energy fills a greater portion of the reticle. These continuous course corrections effectively bleed energy from the missile reducing its range and velocity.

 
A Soviet soldier posing with a Strela launcher

The guidance of the SA-7 follows proportional convergence logic, also known as angle rate tracking system or pro-logic. In this method, as the seeker tracks the target, the missile is turned towards where the seeker is turning towards – not where it is pointing at – relative to the missile's longitudinal axis. Against a target flying in a straight-line course at constant speed, the angle rate of seeker-to-body reduces to zero when the missile is in a straight-line flight path to intercept point.

Combat use Edit

As a consequence of their widespread availability and large numbers, the Strela system has seen use in conflicts across the globe.

Middle East Edit

Egypt Edit

The first combat use of the missile is credited as being in 1969 during the War of Attrition by Egyptian soldiers.[12]The first "kill" was claimed on 19 August 1969. An Israeli 102 Squadron A-4H Skyhawk was hit with a shoulder-fired missile 12 miles west of the Suez Canal and pilot SqL Nassim Ezer Ashkenazi captured. Between this first firing and June 1970 the Egyptian army fired 99 missiles resulting in 36 hits. The missile proved to have poor kinematic reach against combat jets, and also poor lethality as many aircraft that were hit managed to return safely to base.

The missile was used later in the Yom Kippur War,[13][14] where 4,356 Strelas were fired,[13] scoring few hits and just 2[14]–4[13] kills, with 26[14]–28[13] damaged. A-4s were fitted with lengthened exhaust pipes in order to prevent fatal damage to the engine, a solution made in the previous war, together with flare launchers. However, together with Shilka and SA-2/3/6s, they caused very heavy losses to the Israeli Air Force in the first days. Subsequently, Arab forces fired so many SAMs that they almost depleted their weapon stocks. SA-7s were not that effective against fast jets, but they were the best weapon available to Arab infantry at the time.[citation needed]

A Strela 2 was reportedly used by the Islamist militant group Ansar Bait al-Maqdis to destroy an Egyptian military Mil-8 helicopter operating in the northern Sinai region on 26 January 2014 near Sheikh Zuweid (close to the border with Gaza), killing its five occupants. This is the first attack of this type during the Sinai insurgency, which has raged on the peninsula due to the security and political turmoil since the 2011 revolution. The MANPADS is reported by United Nations to have come from former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's large stocks, which have been widely proliferated after Libya's civil war chaos and have become a concern to regional and world security.[15]

Syria Edit

The Strela was deployed by Syrian forces occupying Lebanon, along with other Soviet air-defence systems that challenged U.S., French and Israeli airpower in the aftermath of the 1982 conflict and the deployment of the Multinational Force in Lebanon during that year. On 10 November 1983, an SA-7 was fired at a French Super Etendard near Bourj el-Barajneh while flying over Druze People's Liberation Army (PLA) positions. On 3 December, more Strelas and anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) were fired at United States Navy F-14 Tomcats flying a reconnaissance mission.[16][17]

The Americans responded with a large strike package of 12 A-7 Corsairs and 16 A-6 Intruders (supported by a single E-2C Hawkeye, two EA-6B Prowlers and two F-14As) launched from the carriers USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) and USS Independence (CV-62) sailing in the Mediterranean. The aircraft were to bomb Syrian installations, AAA sites and weapons depots near Falouga and Hammana, some 16 km north of Beirut-Damascus highway, when they were received by a volley of (possibly up to 40) Syrian SAMs, one of which hit a Corsair (AE305 of the VA-15), forcing the pilot to eject over the sea before being rescued by a USN search and rescue mission.[17]

The attack formation broke, with each pilot attacking each objective on its own, leading to the downing of a second U.S. aircraft, an Intruder from VA-85, hit by either an SA-7 or an SA-9. The navigator, Lieutenant Bobby Goodman ejected near a village surrounded by Syrian positions. The pilot, Lt. Mark Lange, ejected too late and died from his wounds soon after being captured by Syrian soldiers and Lebanese civilians. Goodman was captured by the Syrians and taken to Damascus before being freed in January 1984.[16][18]

A second Corsair, searching for the downed Intruder crew, was later hit by an SA-7. The pilot, Cdr. Edward Andrews, managed to eject over the sea near Beirut and was rescued by a fisherman and his son who in turn handed him over to the U.S Marines.[16][18]

During the civil war, several Strelas have made their way to rebel hands, and YouTube videos have shown them being fired. In 2013, Foreign Policy, citing rebels sources, reported the shipment, with Qatari help, of some 120 SA-7s from Libya (with large stocks acquired by Gaddafi and proliferated after that country's civil war) through Turkey and with Turkish authorities' knowledge[19][20]

Lebanon Edit

On 24 June 1974, Palestinian guerrillas operating in southern Lebanon fired two SA-7s against invading Israel Air Force (IAF) aircraft, though no hits were scored.[21]

The Lebanese Al-Mourabitoun militia received either from Syria or the PLO a number of SA-7s, which they employed against Israeli Air Force (IAF) fighter-bomber jets during the 1982 Lebanon War.[22]

During the 1983–84 Mountain War, the Druze People's Liberation Army (PLA) militia received from Syria a number of Strela missiles, which were used to bring down two Lebanese Air Force Hawker Hunter fighter jets[23] and one Israeli IAI Kfir fighter-bomber aircraft, on November 20, over the mountainous Chouf district southeast of Beirut (the pilot was rescued by the Lebanese Army).[24][25][26] The Christian Maronite Lebanese Forces militia (LF) also received from Iraq a number of Strela missiles in 1988–89.[27]

The Shiite Hezbollah guerrilla group also acquired some Strelas in the late 1980s and fired them against Israeli aircraft in November 1991.[28] Since then, they have since fired many Strelas against Israeli aircraft, including two against Israeli warplanes on 12 June 2001 near Tyre, but have never scored a hit.[29]

Iraq Edit

In the early dawn of 31 January 1991, during the Battle of Khafji in Operation Desert Storm, an Iraqi soldier shot down an American AC-130H gunship with a Strela 2, killing all 14 crewmembers.[30]

Strela-2 missiles have been used against Turkish Army helicopters by the PKK in northern Iraq. During Operation Hammer; on 18 May 1997, a Strela-2 missile was used to shoot down an AH-1W Super Cobra attack helicopter. On 4 June 1997, another Strela was used to bring down a Turkish Army AS-532UL Cougar transport helicopter in the Zakho area, killing the 11 soldiers on board.[31][32][33] The video of the first attack was used extensively for PKK propaganda and eventually released to the Internet. Greece and Serbia's intelligence services, as well as Iran, Syria, Armenia, and Cyprus were traced as possible sources of the missiles.[31][34]

A Strela-2 missile is said to have been used in April 2005, when members of the insurgents shot down an Mi-8 helicopter operated by Blackwater, killing all 11 crew members. The Islamic Army in Iraq took responsibility for the action and a video showing the downing was released on the Internet.[35] The missile launcher is not visible on the video, however, making it impossible to confirm the type of MANPADS used.

The spate of helicopter shoot-downs during 2006 and 2007 in Iraq has been partly attributed to the prevalence of the Strela amongst Sunni insurgent groups of that time;[36] while al Qaeda is said to have produced an hour-long training video on how to use SA-7s.[29]

Saudi Arabia Edit

In late 2001, a Sudanese man with links to Al-Qaida fired an SA-7 at an American F-15 Eagle fighter taking off from Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. The missile missed the target and was not detected by the pilot or anyone at the base. Saudi police found the empty launcher in the desert in May 2002, and a suspect was arrested in Sudan a month later. He led police to a cache in the desert where a second missile was buried.[37]

Gaza Edit

During October 2012, militants in Gaza fired a Strela at an IDF helicopter.[38] During Operation Pillar of Defense, Hamas released a video purporting to be a Strela missile launch at an IAF target.[39] In March 2013, one was also reportedly fired from Gaza at an IAF helicopter.[38] In 2022 one was fired at IAF F16 to stop an air raid. In April 2023, a video released by the armed wing of Hamas showed the simultaneous launches of three missiles towards an IAF aircraft after it had downed a locally produced drone over the southern Gaza Strip.[40]

Yemen Edit

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula allegedly shot down a UAE Mirage fighter jet with a Strela during the Yemeni Civil War (2015–present).[41] Houthi rebels were seen carrying 9K32 Strela-2s.[42]

Southeast Asia Edit

 
Damage to an AC-130 gunship caused by an SA-7, May 1972

The Strela-2 system was also given to North Vietnam, where along with the more advanced Strela-2M it achieved 204 hits out of 589 firings against US and South Vietnamese aircraft between 1972 and 1975 according to Russian sources.[9] (Some sources, such as Fiszer (2004),[8] claim that it was used from 1968 onwards).

Roughly 90–110 kills and several dozen damaged are attributed to Strela-2/2M hits between April 1972 and the Fall of Saigon in April 1975, almost all against helicopters and propeller-driven aircraft. As in the War of Attrition, the missile's speed and range proved insufficient against fast jets and results were poor: only one U.S. A-4 Skyhawk, one U.S. F-4 Phantom and three South Vietnamese F-5 Freedom Fighter are known to have been shot down with Strela-2s during the conflict.

U.S. fixed-wing losses are listed in the following table.[43] The internet site Arms-expo.ru states 14 fixed-wing aircraft and 10 helicopters were shot down with 161 missile rounds used between 28 April and 14 July 1972.[9] Between April 1972 and January 1973, 29 fixed-wing aircraft and 14 helicopters were shot down (01 F-4, 7 O-1, 03 O-2, 04 OV-10, 09 A-1, 04 A-37, 01 CH-47, 04 AH-1, 09 UH-1)[44] The difference in fixed-wing losses may be at least partly due to South Vietnamese aircraft shot down by the weapon.

Date Type Unit Altitude when hit Casualties Mission Location
ft m
1972-05-01 O-2A 20th TASS 0 FAC Quang Tri
1972-05-01 A-1H 1 SOS 3,500 1,100 0 SAR Quang Tri
1972-05-02 A-1E 1 SOS 5,500 1,700 0 SAR Quang Tri
1972-05-02 A-1G 1 SOS 6,500 2,000 1 WIA SAR Quang Tri
1972-05-02 UH-1 5 KIA Quang Tri[45]
1972-05-11 AH-1 2 KIA A Loc[45]
1972-05-11 O-2 2 KIA A Loc[45]
1972-05-11 O-2 2 KIA An Loc[45]
1972-05-14 O-1 4,000 1,200 0 FAC An Loc
1972-05-22 F-4 0
1972-05-24 UH-1 4 KIA Hue[45]
1972-05-24 AH-1 2 KIA An Loc[45]
1972-05-25 OV-10 0 Hue[45]
1972-05-26 TA-4F H&MS-15 4,500 1,400 0 armed recce Hue
1972-06-11 OH-6 2 KIA Hue[45]
1972-06-18 AC-130A 16 SOS 12 KIA armed recce A Shau
1972-06-20 AH-1 2 KIA An Loc[45]
1972-06-21 AH-1 0 An Loc[45]
1972-06-29 OV-10A 20 TASS 6,500 2,000 1 KIA FAC Quang Tri
1972-07-02 O-1 0 FAC Phum Long (Cambodia)
1972-07-05 A-37 0 Hue[45]
1972-07-11 CH-53 46 KIA[46] Transport Quang Tri
1972-10-31 CH-47 15 KIA Sai Gon[45]
1972-11-23 O-2 0 An Loc[45]
1972-03-12 AH-1 0
1972-12-19 OV-10A 20 TASS 1 KIA FAC Quang Tri
1973-01-08 UH-1 6 KIA Quang Tri[45]
1973-01-27 OV-10A 23 TASS 6,000 1,800 2 MIA FAC Quang Tri

The table shows heavy losses particularly in the beginning of May, with especially lethal results on the 1st and 2nd, where the shootdown of the O-2 FAC led to further losses when a rescue operation was attempted. After these initial losses, changes in tactics and widespread introduction of decoy flares helped to counter the threat, but a steady flow of attrition[clarification needed] and necessity of minimizing time spent in the Strela's engagement envelope nonetheless continued to limit the effectiveness of US battlefield air operations until the end of US involvement in South-East Asia. The United States lost at least 10 AH-1 Cobras and several UH-1 Hueys to Strela-2/2M hits in South East Asia.

From 28 January 1973 to July 1973, the Republic of Vietnam Air Force lost 8 aircraft and helicopter with 22 missile rounds used (1 A-37, 3 A-1, 1 F-5, 2 UH-1, 1 CH-47)[45] From January 1973 to December 1974, the Republic of Vietnam Air Force lost at least 28 planes and helicopters to Strela-2s.[13]

In 1975 spring offensive, a few dozen aircraft and helicopter were shot down by SA-7s. On 14 April, one F-5 was shot down[47] In Ho Chi Minh campaign, PAVN claimed 34 aircraft and helicopter were shot down by SA-7s, including 9 on 29 April[48]

In the late 1980s, Strela-2s were used against Royal Thai Air Force aircraft by Laotian and Vietnamese forces during numerous border clashes. An RTAF F-5E was damaged on 4 March 1987 and another F-5E was shot down on 4 February 1988 near the Thai-Cambodian border.

Western Asia Edit

Afghanistan Edit

 
An Afghan Mujahid with a Strela 2

Strela-2M was used also in Afghanistan during the Soviet–Afghan War by the Mujahiddeen. The missiles were obtained from various sources, some from Egypt and China (locally manufactured Sakr Eye and HN-5 versions of the SAM), and the CIA also assisted the guerrillas in finding missiles from other sources.

Results from combat use were not dissimilar from experiences with the Strela-2/2M from Vietnam: while 42 helicopters were shot down by various Strela-2 variants (including a few Mi-24s until exhaust shrouds made them next to invisible to the short-wavelength Strela-2 seeker) only five fixed-wing aircraft were destroyed with the weapon. Due to its poor kinematic performance and vulnerability to even the most primitive infra-red countermeasures, the guerrillas considered the Strela-2 suitable for use against helicopters and prop-driven transports, but not combat jets.

However, the recent studies and interviews after the Cold war say that most Strelas sold to the Mujahiddeen on the black market were broken/damaged or faulty. This is possibly another reason why the Soviet army in Afghanistan didn't expect working anti-aircraft missiles like the Stinger to be used.[49]

On 22 July 2007 the first reported attack of the Taliban against a coalition aircraft using MANPADS was reported. The weapon was reported to be an SA-7 allegedly smuggled from Iran to the Taliban. The missile failed after the crew of the USAF C-130, flying over the Nimroz province, launched flares and made evasive manoeuvers.[50]

However, most of the Strelas operated by al-Qaeda in Afghanistan are probably inherited from fighters that used it during the Soviet invasion. Most are probably faulty, broken or in other ways not usable (even from the beginning) against military helicopters, with the intercepts of NATO aviation by Stingers (acquired also during 80s) or other missiles.[citation needed]

Georgia Edit

The SA-7 saw heavy usage by all sides during the Georgian Civil War. The first known loss to an SA-7 happened on 13 June 1993, when a GAF Su-25 was shot down by a Strela over Shubara. On two later occasions, Georgian airliners (a Tu-134A and a Tu-134B) were shot down by SA-7s, killing a total of 110 people.[51]

Africa Edit

Guinea-Bissau Edit

PAIGC rebels fighting for independence from Portugal began to receive SA-7s in early 1973, a development that immediately became a threat to Portuguese air supremacy. On 23 March 1973, two Portuguese Air Force (FAP) Fiat G.91s were shot down by SA-7s, followed six weeks later by another Fiat, and a Dornier Do 27.[52]

Mozambique Edit

FRELIMO fighters in Mozambique were also able to field some SA-7s with Chinese support, although the weapon is not known to have caused any losses to the FAP, even if it forced Portuguese pilots to change their tactics. In one case a Douglas DC-3 carrying foreign military attaches and members of the senior Portuguese military command was hit by an SA-7 in one of the engines. The crippled plane managed to land safely and was later repaired.[53]

Angola Edit

In Angola and Namibia, SA-7s were deployed against the South African Air Force with limited success. The SAAF lost Atlas Impalas to Strelas on 24 January 1980 and 10 October 1980. Another Impala was hit by an SA-7 on 23 December 1983, but the pilot was able to fly the aircraft back to Ondangwa AB.[54] UNITA also reportedly obtained 50 SA-7s that Israel had captured, via the CIA. The first one was fired at Cuban aircraft by a French mercenary on 13 March 1976, but the missile failed to hit the target. The individual missiles may have been in poor condition, as none scored a direct hit.[55] Additionally, it is claimed that UNITA used SA-7s to shoot down two Transafrik International Lockheed L-100-30 Hercules flying UN charters, on 26 December 1998[56] and 2 January 1999,[57] both near Huambo.[58]

Sudan Edit

Using an SA-7, the Sudan People's Liberation Army shot down a Sudan Airways Fokker F-27 Friendship 400M taking off from Malakal on 16 August 1986, killing all 60 on board.[59] On 21 December 1989, an Aviation Sans Frontières Britten-Norman BN-2A-9 Islander (F-OGSM) was shot down by an SA-7 while taking off from Aweil Sudan, killing the four crew on board.[60]

Western Sahara Edit

The Polisario Front used SA-7s against the Royal Moroccan Air Force and Mauritanian Air Force during the Western Sahara War over the former Spanish colonies of the Spanish Sahara. The Mauritania Air Force lost a Britten-Norman Defender to a SA-7 fired by the Polisario on 29 December 1976.[61] Between 1975 and 1991, the Royal Moroccan Air Force has lost several Northrop F-5A Freedom Fighters and Dassault Mirage F1s to SA-7s fired by the Polisario.[62] In a case of mistaken identity, a Dornier 228 owned by the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research was shot down over the Western Sahara near Dakhla on 24 February 1985. Two Dornier 228s named Polar 2 and Polar 3 were on a return flight to Germany following a South Pole expedition. After having taken off from Dakar, Senegal, en route to Arrecife, Canary Islands, flying 5 minutes behind Polar 2 and at a lower altitude (9,000 feet), Polar 3 was shot down by a SA-7 fired by the Polisario.[63] The crew of three was killed. In another incident, on 8 December 1988, two Douglas DC-7CFs flying at 11,000 feet from Dakar, Senegal to Agadir, Morocco for a locust control mission there, had SA-7s fired at them by the Polisario. One aircraft, N284, was hit and lost one of its engines and part of a wing. This led to the aircraft crashing, killing the crew of five.[64] The other aircraft, N90804, also was hit and lost an engine along with suffering other damage, but it was able to land safely at Sidi Ifni Morocco.[65]

Airliner attacks Edit

During the Rhodesian Bush War, members of the military wing of the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army brought down two Vickers Viscount civilian airliners near Kariba; the first in September 1978, the second in February 1979. There was great loss of life in both instances as the flights were returning from a well known tourist attraction.[66]

  • Vickers Viscount, Flight RH825, 3 September 1978 – downed by a Strela missile near Kariba Dam. After initial impact, the pilot was able to make an emergency landing in a nearby field but the aircraft broke up on impact. Eighteen of the fifty-six passengers in the tail section survived the crash. Ten of these survivors were shot dead at the crash-site by insurgents, who later looted the bodies and wreckage.[66]
  • Vickers Viscount, Flight RH827, 12 February 1979 – shot by down Strela missile near Kariba Dam; all 59 people on board were killed.

UNITA claimed that they used one to shoot down a TAAG Boeing 737-2M2 taking off from Lubango on 8 November 1983.[67]

A Lignes Aériennes Congolaises Boeing 727-30 taking off from Kindu was shot down by an SA-7 fired by rebel forces in 1998, killing all 41 on board.[68]

Two missiles were fired at a Boeing 757 during the 2002 Mombasa attacks in Kenya. Neither missile struck its target.[69][70]

Latin America Edit

Argentina Edit

Strela-2M missiles were available to Argentinian troops in the Falkland Islands during the Falklands War. War Machine Encyclopedia shows no records of any launches, but several missiles were captured.[71]

Nicaragua Edit

The Strela-2 was used by both Sandinista government forces and US-backed Contra insurgents during the 1979–1990 civil war.

On 3 October 1983, at about 10:00 am, Sandinista soldier Fausto Palacios used a Strela to shoot down a Contra-operated Douglas DC-3 that had taken off from Catamacas airport in Honduras, carrying supplies, over the area of Los Cedros, in the Nueva Segovia Department. One crewman died in the crash and four were captured by government forces. The pilot, Major Roberto Amador Alvarez, as well as his co-pilot Capt. Hugo Reinaldo Aguilar were former members of the extinct National Guard of the former dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle.[72][73][74]

On 27 August 1984, Sandinista soldier Fanor Medina Leyton shot down a Contra-operated Douglas C-47 Skytrain with a Strela. Sources differ over the attack and crash area: both a Russian source and Sandinista officials reported the Jinotega Department, while the Aviation Safety Network reports the Quilalí area in the Nueva Segovia department. All eight occupants were killed. The pilot, José Luis Gutiérrez Lugo, was reported as a former pilot for the Somoza family. Sandinista and Contra forces subsequently battled for the control of six packages dropped from the plane.[72][75][76]

On 5 October 1986 a Corporate Air Services C-123 Provider (HPF821, previously N4410F and USAF 54-679, (c/n 20128))[77] conducting a covert drop of arms to Contra fighters in Nicaragua was shot down by Sandinista soldier José Fernando Canales Alemán, using an SA-7. CIA pilots William J. Cooper and Wallace "Buzz" Sawyer as well as radio operator Freddy Vilches were killed in the crash. Loadmaster Eugene Hasenfus parachuted to safety and was taken prisoner. He was later released in December 1986.[78] The flight had departed Ilopango Airport, El Salvador loaded with 70 Soviet-made AK-47 rifles and 100,000 rounds of ammunition, rocket grenades and other supplies.[79]

On 15 June 1987, a Contra-operated Beechcraft Baron 56TC (reg. N666PF, msn. TG-60) was hit by Sandinista anti-aircraft fire over the Nueva Segovia Department. The (formerly civilian) light utility aircraft, which was removed from the US registry two years before,[80] and was reportedly modified to carry rockets for use in an air-to-ground light strike role, was downed after an attack that reportedly included dropping leaflets and, possibly, reconnaissance.[81][82][83] The aircraft crashed 6 km. inside Honduras, in an area known as Cerro El Tigre and its three occupants, all former military elements of the Somoza dictatorship, were injured and captured after the crash landing and were treated in Honduras.[84] The pilot, Juan Gomez, a former colonel in Somoza's National Guard was also reported to be the head of the Contra air force.[85] A Russian source credits the Baron’s downing to an Strela-2 fired from Murra by Sandinista soldier Jose Manuel Rodriguez.[86][87]

El Salvador Edit

FMLN rebels acquired SA-7 missiles around 1989 and employed them extensively in the closing years of the Salvadoran Civil War, dramatically increasing the combat losses of Salvadoran Air Force aircraft. At least two O-2 Skymasters (on 26 September and 19 November 1990), one A-37 Dragonfly (on November 23, 1990), two Hughes 500 helicopters (2 February and 18 May 1990), and two UH-1Hs were lost to SA-7s. One of the UH-1Hs (on 2 January 1991) was crewed by US Army personnel, while the other was operated by the Honduran Air Force.[88][89]

Colombia Edit

In late December 2012, a video showing FARC rebels attempting to shoot down a Colombian Air Force Arpía helicopter with an SA-7 in the Cauca raised the alarm in the Colombian military, though the missile failed.[90][91]

During that same month, a Strela was captured by the Colombian military. It is believed that they might came from Cuba, Nicaragua or Peru; the only Latin American operators of the type.[92] Furthermore, the CIA's motive to remove and destroy Chinese copies of the SA-7 (HN-5s) from Bolivia in 2005 was the fear of them reaching FARC rebels because, according to a US military magazine, “they used the HN-5 against Colombian-operated U.S-made helicopters”.[93] The Ecuadorian Army captured an HN-5 allegedly destined for the FARC in the border province of Sucumbíos, near Colombia, in July 2013.[94][95]

Europe Edit

Northern Ireland Edit

The Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) acquired some missiles from Libya. One was reported to have been fired at a British Army Air Corps Lynx helicopter in July 1991 in South Armagh; however, it missed its target.[96] To counter the new threat, the British helicopters flew in pairs below 15 meters (50 feet) or above 150 meters (500 feet).

Spain Edit

In 2001, the Basque separatist group ETA tried on three occasions (29 April, 4 and 11 May) to use Strela 2 missiles to shoot down the Dassault Falcon 900 aircraft with the then-Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar on board. The attempts, which were made near the Fuenterrabía and Foronda airports, were unsuccessful as each time the missiles failed to launch. In 2004, several systems were captured by the Civil Guard.[97] Some Strela 2 missiles were bought from the IRA in 1999, while Libya was tracked as the original source used by the IRA.[98]

Ukraine Edit

During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Germany reversed its ban on weapon sales to provide Ukraine with military support.[99] On 23 March 2022, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock confirmed the delivery of 500 Strela-2 missiles which were part of former East German arsenals.[100]

Versions Edit

  • 9K32M Strela-2M: "SA-7b Grail"
  • Strela 2M/A: Yugoslav upgraded version with larger warhead
  • CA-94 and CA-94M: Romanian license-built versions of the 9K32 and 9K32M, respectively
  • HN-5: Chinese unlicensed copy
  • Anza Mk-I: Pakistani version based on SA-7.[101]
  • Ayn al Saqr (عين الصقر; "Hawk Eye"): Egyptian copy[102]
  • Hwasung-Chong: North Korean license-built copy of Egyptian Ayn al Saqr system[5]

Operators Edit

 
Map with 9K32 operators in blue with former operators in red

Current operators Edit

Former operators Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Efrat, Moshe (1983). "The Economics of Soviet Arms Transfers to the Third World. A Case Study: Egypt". Soviet Studies. 35 (4): 437–456. doi:10.1080/09668138308411496. ISSN 0038-5859. JSTOR 151253.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h . New-factoria.ru. Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  3. ^ . New-factoria.ru. 2010-11-14. Archived from the original on 2009-04-14. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  4. ^ James C. O'Halloran. Jane's Land Based Air Defence 2005–2006 (10th ed.). Jane's Information Group, London.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Dr. Michael Ashkenazi; Princess Mawuena Amuzu; Jan Grebe; Christof Kögler; Marc Kösling (February 2013). "MANPADS: A Terrorist Threat to Civilian Aviation?" (PDF). Bonn International Center of Conversion (BICC) – Internationales Konversionszentrum Bonn GmbH. (PDF) from the original on 2018-08-21. Retrieved 2018-08-20.
  6. ^ Twentieth Century Artillery (ISBN 1-84013-315-5), 2000, Ian Hogg, Chapter 6, p. 226.
  7. ^ a b c d Lappi, Ahti: Ilmatorjunta Kylmässä Sodassa, 2003
  8. ^ a b c d On arrows and needles: Russia's Strela and Igla portable killers. Journal of Electronic Defense, January, 2004. Michal Fiszer and Jerzy Gruszczynski
  9. ^ a b c d e . Arms-expo.ru. Archived from the original on 2011-01-26. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  10. ^ a b c War Machine, issue 64 (magazine), 1984, Orbis Publications, p. 1274.
  11. ^ a b . bellum.nu. 2007-03-07. Archived from the original on 2008-06-02. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  12. ^ Cullen & Foss 1992, p. 41.
  13. ^ a b c d e Cullen & Foss 1992, p. 42.
  14. ^ a b c (PDF). Central Intelligence Agency. 8 April 1986. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-23. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  15. ^ Kirkpatrick, David D. (27 January 2014). "Militants Down Egyptian Helicopter, Killing 5 Soldiers". The New York Times. from the original on 1 February 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  16. ^ a b c d Tom Cooper & Eric L. Palmer (26 September 2003). . Acig.org. Archived from the original on 7 October 2013. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  17. ^ a b Micah Zenko (13 February 2012). . Politics, Power, and Preventive Action. Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  18. ^ a b . Ejection-history.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  19. ^ Chivers, C.J. (24 July 2013). "The Risky Missile Systems That Syria's Rebels Believe They Need". The New York Times. from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  20. ^ Chivers, C. J.; Schmitt, Eric; Mazzetti, Mark (21 June 2013). "In Turnabout, Syria Rebels Get Libyan Weapons". The New York Times. from the original on 24 July 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  21. ^ a b See US State Department Cable Beirut 7015, Jun. 20, 1974
  22. ^ Samer Kassis, Invasion of Lebanon 1982, Abteilung 502, 2019, p. 196. ISBN 978-84-120935-1-3
  23. ^ Ken Guest, Lebanon, in Flashpoint! At the Front Line of Today's Wars, Arms and Armour Press, London 1994, p. 106. ISBN 1-85409-247-2 This source reports on the loss of an American-made F-16, though the plane was actually an Israeli-made Kfir.
  24. ^ "Israeli Plane Shot Down by Surface-to-air Missiles over Lebanon". 21 November 1983.
  25. ^ "Israelis Bomb Lebanese Sites, Lose One Plane". The Washington Post. 1983-11-21. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  26. ^ Friedman, Thomas L. (21 November 1983). "Israeli Jets Bomb Palestinian Bases In Lebanon Hills – The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  27. ^ Samer Kassis, 30 Years of Military Vehicles in Lebanon, Beirut: Elite Group, 2003, p. 36. ISBN 9953-0-0705-5
  28. ^ Nicolas Blanford (2011) Warriors of God: Inside Hezbollah's Thirty-Year Struggle Against Israel. New York: Random House.
  29. ^ a b "Terrorists known to possess SAMs". CNN. 2002-11-28. from the original on 2011-03-22. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on October 25, 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  31. ^ a b c "Netzwerk Friedenskooperative – Themen – Türkei/Kurdistan-Invasion – turkhg52". Friedenskooperative.de. 1997-06-06. from the original on 2013-05-14. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  32. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident 04-JUN-1997 Aérospatiale AS 532UL Cougar 140". Aviation-safety.net. from the original on 2014-05-17. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  33. ^ "Sabah Politika Haber". Arsiv.sabah.com.tr. from the original on 2011-10-23. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  34. ^ . Al-Monitor. Archived from the original on 2013-05-17. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  35. ^ a b John F. Burns (23 April 2005). "Video Appears to Show Insurgents Kill a Downed Pilot". The New York Times. from the original on 2013-05-17. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  36. ^ "Why are U.S. helicopters getting shot down in Iraq? | FP Passport". Blog.foreignpolicy.com. 2007-02-19. from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  37. ^ "TRACES OF TERROR: THE DRAGNET; Sudanese Says He Fired Missile at U.S. Warplane". New York Times. 14 June 2002. from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  38. ^ a b Harel, Amos (2012-10-16). "For first time, Palestinians in Gaza fire missile at IAF helicopter Israel News Broadcast". Haaretz. from the original on 2013-08-15. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  39. ^ "Small Arms, Big Problems – By Damien Spleeters". Foreign Policy. 2012-11-19. from the original on 2013-06-09. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  40. ^ "Hamas Releases Video of Firing Surface-to-Air Missiles at Israeli Fighter Jet over Gaza – Al-Manar TV Lebanon". english.almanar.com.lb. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
  41. ^ Desk, iHLS News (4 April 2016). "Al-Qaeda Brought Down Jet With Surface-to-Air Missile – iHLS Israel Homeland Security". from the original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  42. ^ a b "YouTube". youtube.com. from the original on 2017-04-06. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  43. ^ Vietnam Air Losses, Christopher Hobson, 2002
  44. ^ Dân Trí (2015-05-02). "Người Nga nói thật về Chiến tranh Việt Nam | Báo Dân trí". Dantri.com.vn. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Strela – 'Nỏ thần' gây khiếp đảm trên chiến trường Việt nam". 17 July 2013.
  46. ^ Melson, Charles D.; Arnold, Curtis G. (1991). U.S. Marines in Vietnam, The war that would not end, 1971-1973 (PDF). History and Museums Division, U.S. Marine Corps. PCN 190 003112 00.
  47. ^ Ý kiến của bạn. "Hạ gục F-5". Sknc.qdnd.vn. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  48. ^ "Ngày cuối bi thảm của Không quân Việt Nam Cộng hòa". Soha.vn. 24 November 2017. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  49. ^ "Roads of terror", ep. 1 Planete documentary film
  50. ^ Coghlan, Tom (2007-07-28). "Taliban in first heat-seeking missile attack". Telegraph. from the original on 2014-03-15. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  51. ^ "CIS region – Авиация в локальных конфликтах – www.skywar.ru". skywar.ru. from the original on 2018-04-19. Retrieved 2017-10-23.
  52. ^ a b http://s188567700.online.de/CMS/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=220&Itemid=47[dead link]
  53. ^ a b http://s188567700.online.de/CMS/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=139&Itemid=47[dead link]
  54. ^ Angola: Claims & Reality about SAAF Losses 2011-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  55. ^ a b Angola since 1961 2011-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  56. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2016-01-19 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  57. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2016-01-21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  58. ^ Man-Portable Air Defence Systems 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  59. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2013-10-29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  60. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2015-07-12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  61. ^ Morocco, Mauritania & West Sahara since 1972 Archived 2012-07-29 at archive.today Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  62. ^ Western Sahara war 1975–1991 2011-10-04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  63. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2012-10-24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  64. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2016-02-03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  65. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  66. ^ a b c Anthony Trethowan (2008). Delta Scout: Ground Coverage operator (2008 ed.). 30deg South Publishers. p. 184. ISBN 978-1-920143-21-3.
  67. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  68. ^ Criminal Occurrence description 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  69. ^ . Archived from the original on March 1, 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  70. ^ Bolkcom; Elias; Feickert. (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-23. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  71. ^ a b War Machine, Italian version printed by De Agostini, Novara, 1983, p.155
  72. ^ a b c "Nicaragua – Авиация в локальных конфликтах – www.skywar.ru". from the original on 28 February 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  73. ^ "Nicaragua Reports Shooting Down Rebel DC-3 Registered in Oklahoma". NewsOK.com. from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  74. ^ "Daily News – Google News Archive Search". from the original on 12 March 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  75. ^ "Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  76. ^ Kinzer, Stephen (29 August 1984). "Nicaragua says it downed a rebel supply plane". The New York Times. from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2017-02-04.
  77. ^ Omang, Joanne, and Wilson, George C., "Questions About Plane's Origins Grow", Washington Post, Washington, D.C., Thursday, October 9, 1986, pages A-1, A-32
  78. ^ "Intrusions, Overflights, Shootdowns and Defections During the Cold War and Thereafter". from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  79. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Fairchild C-123K Provider HPF821 San Carlos". 5 October 1986. from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  80. ^ https://onespotter.com/aircraft/fid/778341/N666PF
  81. ^ Branigin, William (1987-06-25). "CONTRAS SAID TO BREAK UP SANDINISTA SPY NETWORK". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  82. ^ Tyroler, Deborah. (June 19, 1987). Contra Aircraft Downed By Sandinistas; Nicaraguan Government Identifies Three-man Crew. University of New Mexico Digital Repository; Latin America Digital Beat News and Educational Services; NotiCen [LADB Article Id: 076537 /ISSN: 1089-1560]. Retrieved on August 17, 2023 from: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1709&context=noticen
  83. ^ Skywar.ru. (n.d.). Contras. Skywar.ru. Retrieved on August 17, 2023 from: http://www.skywar.ru/contras.html
  84. ^ Tyroler, 1987
  85. ^ Tyroler, 19 June 1987
  86. ^ Skywar.ru. (n.d.). Contras. Skywar.ru. Retrieved on August 17, 2023 from: http://www.skywar.ru/contras.html
  87. ^ Skywar.ru. (n.d.). Sandinista. Skywar.ru. http://www.skywar.ru/sandinista.html
  88. ^ a b Cooper, Tom. "El Salvador, 1980–1992". ACIG.org. from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  89. ^ "Blog de las Fuerzas de Defensa de la República Argentina: Conflictos americanos: El factor aéreo en El Salvador, 1980–1992 (2/2)". Fdra.blogspot.com. from the original on 2014-01-16. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  90. ^ "Misiles tierra-aire SA-7 en posesión de las FARC – Analisis 24". 7 April 2013. Archived from the original on 7 April 2013.
  91. ^ "Misiles Antiaéreos en Poder de las FARC. MANPAD SA-7 Strela". YouTube. 2012-12-09. from the original on 2014-09-20. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  92. ^ "Incautado Misil Antiaéreo SA-7 "Grail" a las FARC, en el Departamento del Cauca ~ WebInfomil". Webinfomil.com. December 2012. from the original on 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  93. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  94. ^ "Ejercito Ecuatoriano incauta misil antiaéreo destinado a las FARC ~ Webinfomil". 2 July 2013. from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  95. ^ "Militares ecuatorianos descubren un misil cerca de la frontera con Colombia". YouTube. from the original on 24 June 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  96. ^ Jackson, Brian A., et al. Aptitude for Destruction, Volume 2: Case Studies of Organizational Learning in Five Terrorist Groups, Volume 2 Rand Corporation, May 5, 2005, pg. 110.
  97. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 February 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  98. ^ Govan, Fiona (2010-01-18). "Spanish PM 'saved' by faulty IRA missile". Telegraph. from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  99. ^ "Germany reverses ban on weapon sales to Ukraine — as it happened". DW. 2022-02-26.
  100. ^ "Deutschland sendet weitere »Strela«-Raketenwerfer in die Ukraine". Spiegel. 2022-03-23.
  101. ^ "Anza Mk-I Mk-II Mk-III Man- Portable air defense missile system". armyrecognition.com. 8 May 2018. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
  102. ^ . Aoi.com.eg. Archived from the original on 2014-02-16. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  103. ^ "Number of Gaza terror groups possess Strela 2 MANPADS". FDD's Long War Journal. 25 September 2013. from the original on 19 July 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  104. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p (PDF). Small Arms Survey. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-13. Retrieved 2018-07-02.
  105. ^ 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 (PDF). Small Arms Survey. March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-18. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  106. ^ 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 International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) (14 February 2018). "The Military Balance 2018". The Military Balance. 118.
  107. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r . Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Archived from the original on 2010-04-14. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  108. ^ Small Arms Survey (2015). (PDF). Small Arms Survey 2015: weapons and the world (PDF). Cambridge University Press. p. 203. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-01-28. Retrieved 2018-08-29.
  109. ^ "Defense & Security Intelligence & Analysis: IHS Jane's | IHS". Janes.com. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  110. ^ "Oryx on Twitter". from the original on 2017-03-15. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  111. ^ "MENASTREAM on Twitter".
  112. ^ "MENASTREAM on Twitter".
  113. ^ "Turan Oguz on Twitter".
  114. ^ a b c d e f Thomas W. Zarzecki, (2002). Arms Diffusion: The Spread of Military Innovations in the International System. Routledge ISBN 0415935148
  115. ^ "Mongolian Army". 2 June 2010.
  116. ^ a b c d e f Cullen & Foss 1992, p. 43.
  117. ^ "Iraq: Turning a blind eye: The arming of the Popular Mobilization Units" (PDF). Amnesty International. 5 January 2017. (PDF) from the original on 13 March 2017. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
  118. ^ Mitzer, Stijn; Oliemans, Joost (15 December 2021). "Desert Storm: Listing The Polisario's Inventory of AFVs". Oryx.
  119. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies (1989). The Military Balance, 1989-1990. London: Brassey's. p. 153. ISBN 978-0080375694.
  120. ^ "Syria war: Rebel group supplied with anti-air missiles". Middle East Eye. from the original on 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  121. ^ "Alex Mello on Twitter".
  122. ^ Samer Kassis, Invasion of Lebanon 1982, Abteilung 502, 2019, p. 196. ISBN 978-84-120935-1-3
  123. ^ . Arms-expo.ru. Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  124. ^ (PDF). 10 December 1985. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-23. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  125. ^ "Germany to ship anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine – DW – 03/03/2022". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  126. ^ "German minister says further Strela missiles are on way to Ukraine". Reuters. 23 March 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  127. ^ "Oded Berkowitz on Twitter".
  128. ^ "Sami on Twitter".
  129. ^ Mitzer, Stijn; Oliemans, Joost (22 December 2020). "The Forgotten Deterrent: Kuwait's Luna-M 'FROG-7' Artillery Rockets". Oryx Blog.
  130. ^ a b International Institute for Strategic Studies (5 February 2008). The Military Balance. 2008. Routledge. ISBN 978-1857434613.
  131. ^ Samer Kassis, 30 Years of Military Vehicles in Lebanon, Beirut: Elite Group, 2003. ISBN 9953-0-0705-5 p. 36.
  132. ^ "MENASTREAM on Twitter".
  133. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-23. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  134. ^ Jaster, Robert Scott (1997). The Defence of White Power: South African Foreign Policy under Pressure. Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 66–68, 93–103. ISBN 978-0333454558.
  135. ^ Dmitruk, Tomasz (2018), "Dwie dekady w NATO. Modernizacja techniczna Sił Zbrojnych RP [3]" [Two decades in NATO. Technical modernization of Polish Armed Forces [3]], www.magnum-x.pl (in Polish), from the original on 2021-06-16
  136. ^ Geraint Hughes, My Enemy's Enemy: Proxy Warfare in International Politics. Sussex Academic Press, 2014. p. 73.
  137. ^ Jeapes, Tony (1980). SAS Operation Oman. London: William Kimber. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-7183-0018-0.
  138. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies (1989). The Military Balance, 1989-1990. London: Brassey's. p. 34. ISBN 978-0080375694.
  139. ^ S. Boyne, "The White Legion: Mercenaries in Zaire", Jane's Intelligence Review, London. June 1997, p. 279.
  • Cullen, Tony; Foss, Christopher F., eds. (1992). Jane's Land-Based Air Defence 1992–93 (5th ed.). Coulsdon, UK: Jane's Data Division. ISBN 0-7106-0979-5.

External links Edit

    9k32, strela, redirects, here, apollo, test, mission, this, section, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, imp. SA 7 redirects here For the Apollo test mission see A 102 SA 7 This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 9K32 Strela 2 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The 9K32 Strela 2 Russian Ctrela arrow NATO reporting name SA 7 Grail is a light weight shoulder fired surface to air missile or MANPADS system It is designed to target aircraft at low altitudes with passive infrared homing guidance and destroy them with a high explosive warhead 9K32 Strela 2SA 7 Grail SA N 5 GrailKBM Kolomna 9K32M Strela 2M SA 7b missile and canisterTypeMan portable surface to air missile launcherPlace of originSoviet UnionService historyIn service1970 presentUsed bySee operatorsWarsWar of AttritionOctober WarPortuguese Colonial WarVietnam WarCambodian Civil WarThe TroublesBasque conflictWestern Sahara WarRhodesian Bush WarNicaraguan RevolutionUganda Tanzania WarSalvadoran Civil War1982 Lebanon WarLebanese Civil WarIran Iraq WarGulf WarFalklands WarSecond Sudanese Civil WarSouth African Border WarSoviet Afghan WarWar in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Syrian occupation of LebanonYugoslav WarsIraq WarLibyan Civil War 2011 Insurgency in Egypt 2013 present Sinai insurgency Syrian Civil WarWar in DonbasYemeni Civil War 2015 present Libyan Civil War 2014 2020 2022 Russian invasion of UkraineProduction historyDesignerKBM Kolomna Designedc 1964Unit costUS 120 000 launcher with 5 missiles export price to Libya 1972 1973 1 VariantsSee versionsSpecificationsMass9 8 kg 21 6 lb Strela 2M missile 2 15 kg 33 1 lb system ready to fire 2 Length1 44 m 4 ft 9 in 2 Diameter72 mm 2 8 in 2 Wingspan0 3 mEffective firing range800 m 2 600 ft Strela 2M minimal range 2 Maximum firing range3 700 m 12 100 ft Strela 2 4 200 m 13 800 ft Strela 2M 2 Warhead weight1 15 kg directed energy blast fragmentation warhead Strela 2M 2 370 g HE contentDetonationmechanismNon delay impact and grazing fuzes 14 17 second delay self destruct Flight altitude50 1500 m Strela 2 50 2300 m Strela 2M 2 Maximum speed430 m s 1 400 ft s Strela 2 500 m s 1 600 ft s Strela 2M 3 GuidancesystemInfra red passive homing AM modulated reticle seeker head with uncooled PbS detector element proportional navigation logicBroadly comparable in performance with the US Army FIM 43 Redeye the Strela 2 was the first Soviet man portable SAM full scale production began in 1970 4 While the Redeye and 9K32 Strela 2 were similar the missiles were not identical The Strela 2 was a staple of the Cold War and was produced in huge numbers for the Soviet Union and their allies as well as revolutionary movements 5 Though since surpassed by more modern systems the Strela and its variants remain in service in many countries and have seen widespread use in nearly every regional conflict since 1972 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Improvements 2 Description 3 Combat use 3 1 Middle East 3 1 1 Egypt 3 1 2 Syria 3 1 3 Lebanon 3 1 4 Iraq 3 1 5 Saudi Arabia 3 1 6 Gaza 3 1 7 Yemen 3 2 Southeast Asia 3 3 Western Asia 3 3 1 Afghanistan 3 3 2 Georgia 3 4 Africa 3 4 1 Guinea Bissau 3 4 2 Mozambique 3 4 3 Angola 3 4 4 Sudan 3 4 5 Western Sahara 3 4 6 Airliner attacks 3 5 Latin America 3 5 1 Argentina 3 5 2 Nicaragua 3 5 3 El Salvador 3 5 4 Colombia 3 6 Europe 3 6 1 Northern Ireland 3 6 2 Spain 3 6 3 Ukraine 4 Versions 5 Operators 5 1 Current operators 5 2 Former operators 6 References 7 External linksDevelopment EditThe end of World War II led to a major shift in Soviet defence policy The advent of long range high altitude nuclear armed American bombers capable of penetrating Soviet airspace at heights and speeds unreachable and unmatchable by anti aircraft guns and most interceptors appeared to render every conventional weapon obsolete at a stroke Numerous long range high altitude SAM systems such as the S 25 Berkut and S 75 Dvina were rapidly developed and fielded to counter this large vulnerability Due to the apparent obsolescence of conventional arms however relatively little development took place to field mobile battlefield air defences This direction was soon changed with the beginning of the Korean War An entirely conventional conflict it proved that nuclear weapons were not the be all and end all of warfare In the face of a powerful and modern American air force carrying non nuclear payloads the Soviet Union invested heavily in a multi tier air defence system consisting of several new mobile SAMs to cover all altitude ranges and protect ground forces The new doctrine listed five requirements Front level medium to high altitude area defense system 9K8 Krug NATO designation SA 4 Ganef Army level low to medium range area defense system 3K9 Kub NATO designation SA 6 Gainful Division level low altitude short range system 9K33 Osa NATO designation SA 8 Gecko Regiment level all weather radar guided gun system ZSU 23 4 Shilka and very short range missile systems 9K31 Strela 1 NATO designation SA 9 Gaskin Battalion level man portable 9K32 Strela 2 NATO designation SA 7 Grail Both Strela 1 and Strela 2 were initially intended to be man portable systems As the Strela 2 proved to be a considerably smaller and lighter package however the role of the Strela 1 was changed becoming a heavier vehicle mounted system with increased range and performance to better support the ZSU 23 4 in the regimental air defense role nbsp SA 7a components It is best distinguished by the squarish gripstock As development began in the Turopov OKB later changed to Kolomna detailed information on the design of the US FIM 43 Redeye became available While it was not a reverse engineered copy in many ways the Strela design borrowed heavily from the Redeye which had started development a few years earlier citation needed Due to the comparatively primitive Soviet technical base development was protracted and many problems arose especially in designing a sufficiently small seeker head and rocket Eventually the designers settled for a simpler seeker head than that of the Redeye allowing the initial version the 9K32 Strela 2 US DoD designation SA 7A missile round 9M32 to finally enter service in 1968 five years behind schedule At the time it was described by one expert as being the premier Russian export line 6 Improvements Edit The initial variant suffered from numerous shortcomings it could only engage targets flying at relatively slow airspeeds and low altitudes and then only from rear hemisphere it suffered from poor guidance reliability particularly in the presence of natural or man made background IR radiation sources and even when a hit was achieved it often failed to destroy the target 7 8 Poor lethality was an issue especially when used against jet aircraft the hottest part of the target was the nozzle behind the actual engine which the missile therefore usually hit but there its small warhead often failed to cause significant damage to the engine itself In order to address the shortcomings two improved versions were ordered in 1968 as an intermediate stop gap the slightly improved 9K32M Strela 2M NATO reporting name SA 7b to replace the original as well as the more ambitious Strela 3 nbsp Components of the most common variant the 9K32M Strela 2M SA 7bAs the modifications introduced with the Strela 2M were relatively minor the process was fast and it was accepted in service in 1970 8 The Strela 2M replaced the Strela 2 in production lines immediately Improvements were made particularly to increase the engagement envelope of the new system 7 Higher thrust propellant increased slant range from 3 4 to 4 2 km 2 1 to 2 6 mi and ceiling from 1 5 to 2 3 km 0 93 to 1 43 mi Improved guidance and control logic allowed the engagement of helicopters and propeller driven aircraft but not jets approaching at a maximum speed of 150 m s 490 ft s 340 mph Maximum speed of receding targets was increased from 220 to 260 m s 720 to 850 ft s 490 to 580 mph More automated gripstock provided a simplified firing method against fast targets a single trigger pull followed by lead and superelevation replacing the separate stages of releasing the seeker to track and launching the missile see description below Contrary to what was initially reported in some Western publications more recent information indicates that while lethality on impact had proven to be a problem the warhead remained the same 1 17 kg 2 6 lb unit including 370 gram 13 oz TNT charge as in the original 9 This remained the warhead of all Soviet MANPADS up to and including most 9K38 Igla variants to address the problem of poor lethality a more powerful HE filling than TNT improved fuzing a terminal maneuver and finally a separate charge to set off any remaining rocket fuel were gradually introduced in later MANPADS systems but the original Strela 2 2M warhead design of a 370 gram 13 oz directed energy HE charge in a pre fragmented casing remained The seeker head improvements were only minor changes to allow better discrimination of the target signal against background emissions 7 9 Some sources claim that the seeker sensitivity was also improved 8 The only defence against infra red countermeasures remained the seeker head s narrow field of view which could be hoped to help the rapidly slowing flare fall off the missile field of view as it was tracking a fast moving target 7 In practice flares proved to be a highly effective countermeasure against both versions of the Strela 2 The seeker is commonly referred to as a hot metal tracker The seeker can only see infrared energy in the near infrared NIR spectrum emitted by very hot surfaces only seen on the inside of the jet nozzle This allows only rear aspect engagement of jet targets earning the weapon its other moniker as a revenge weapon since the missile has to chase an aircraft after it has already passed by The Strela 2M was also procured for use on board Warsaw Pact warships 10 installed on four round pedestal mounts 10 aboard Soviet amphibious warfare vessels and various smaller combatants the weapon remained unchanged but was assigned the NATO reporting name SA N 5 Grail 10 Description EditThe missile launcher system consists of the green missile launch tube containing the missile a grip stock and a cylindrical thermal battery The launch tube is reloadable at depot but missile rounds are delivered to fire units in their launch tubes The device can be reloaded up to five times 11 nbsp A Strela being aimed the lens of the seeker clearly visibleWhen engaging slow or straight receding targets the operator tracks the target with the iron sights in the launch tube and applies half trigger This action uncages the seeker and allows its attempt to track If a target IR signature can be tracked against the background present this is indicated by a light and a buzzer sound The shooter then pulls the trigger fully and immediately applies lead and superelevation This method is called a manual engagement An automatic mode which is used against fast targets allows the shooter to fully depress the trigger in one pull followed by immediate lead and superelevation of the launch tube The seeker will uncage and will automatically launch the missile if a strong enough signal is detected The manufacturer lists reaction time measured from the carrying position missile carried on a soldier s back with protective covers to missile launch to be 13 seconds a figure that is achievable but requires considerable training and skill in missile handling With the launcher on the shoulder covers removed and sights extended reaction time from fire command to launch reduces to 6 10 seconds depending greatly on the target difficulty and the shooter s skill After activating the power supply to the missile electronics the gunner waits for electricity supply and gyros to stabilize puts the sights on target and tracks it smoothly with the launch tube s iron sights and pulls the trigger on the grip stock This activates the seeker electronics and the missile attempts to lock onto the target If the target is producing a strong enough signal and the angular tracking rate is within acceptable launch parameters the missile alerts the gunner that the target is locked on by illuminating a light in the sight mechanism and producing a constant buzzing noise The operator then has 0 8 seconds to provide lead to the target while the missile s on board power supply is activated and the throw out motor ignited Should the target be outside acceptable parameters then the light cue in the sight and the buzzer signal tell the gunner to re aim the missile On launch the booster burns out before the missile leaves the launch tube at 32 m s and rotating at around 20 revolutions per second As the missile leaves the tube the two forward steering fins unfold as do the four rear stabilizing tail fins The self destruct mechanism is then armed which is set to destroy the missile after between 14 and 17 seconds to prevent it hitting the ground if it should miss the target nbsp Strela shortly after launch fins unfurled just before sustainer motor activationOnce the missile is five and a half meters away from the gunner c 0 3 seconds after leaving the launch tube it activates the rocket sustainer motor The sustainer motor takes it to a velocity of 430 metres per second 1 400 ft s 960 mph and sustains it at this speed Once it reaches peak speed at a distance of around 120 metres 390 ft from the gunner the final safety mechanism is disabled and the missile is fully armed All told the booster burns for 0 5 second and the driving engine for another 2 0 seconds 11 The missile s uncooled lead sulfide passive infra red seeker head detects infrared radiation at below 2 8 mm in wavelength It has a 1 9 degree field of view and can track at 9 degrees per second The seeker head tracks the target with an amplitude modulated spinning reticle spin scan or AM tracking which attempts to keep the seeker constantly pointed towards the target The spinning reticle measures the amount of incoming infrared IR energy It does this by using a circular pattern that has solid portions and slats that allow the IR energy to pass through to the seeker As the reticle spins IR energy passes through the open portions of the reticle Based on where the IR energy falls on the reticle the amount or amplitude of IR energy allowed through to the seeker increases the closer to the center of the reticle Therefore the seeker is able to identify where the center of the IR energy is If the seeker detects a decrease in the amplitude of the IR energy it steers the missile back towards where the IR energy was the strongest The seeker s design creates a dead space in the middle of the reticle The center mounted reticle has no detection capability This means that as the seeker tracks a target as soon as the seeker is dead center aimed directly at the IR source there is a decrease in the amplitude of IR energy The seeker interprets this decrease as being off target so it changes direction This causes the missile to move off target until another decrease in IR energy is detected and the process repeats itself This gives the missile a very noticeable wobble in flight as the seeker bounces in and out from the dead space This wobble becomes more pronounced as the missile closes on the target as the IR energy fills a greater portion of the reticle These continuous course corrections effectively bleed energy from the missile reducing its range and velocity nbsp A Soviet soldier posing with a Strela launcherThe guidance of the SA 7 follows proportional convergence logic also known as angle rate tracking system or pro logic In this method as the seeker tracks the target the missile is turned towards where the seeker is turning towards not where it is pointing at relative to the missile s longitudinal axis Against a target flying in a straight line course at constant speed the angle rate of seeker to body reduces to zero when the missile is in a straight line flight path to intercept point Combat use EditAs a consequence of their widespread availability and large numbers the Strela system has seen use in conflicts across the globe Middle East Edit Egypt Edit The first combat use of the missile is credited as being in 1969 during the War of Attrition by Egyptian soldiers 12 The first kill was claimed on 19 August 1969 An Israeli 102 Squadron A 4H Skyhawk was hit with a shoulder fired missile 12 miles west of the Suez Canal and pilot SqL Nassim Ezer Ashkenazi captured Between this first firing and June 1970 the Egyptian army fired 99 missiles resulting in 36 hits The missile proved to have poor kinematic reach against combat jets and also poor lethality as many aircraft that were hit managed to return safely to base The missile was used later in the Yom Kippur War 13 14 where 4 356 Strelas were fired 13 scoring few hits and just 2 14 4 13 kills with 26 14 28 13 damaged A 4s were fitted with lengthened exhaust pipes in order to prevent fatal damage to the engine a solution made in the previous war together with flare launchers However together with Shilka and SA 2 3 6s they caused very heavy losses to the Israeli Air Force in the first days Subsequently Arab forces fired so many SAMs that they almost depleted their weapon stocks SA 7s were not that effective against fast jets but they were the best weapon available to Arab infantry at the time citation needed A Strela 2 was reportedly used by the Islamist militant group Ansar Bait al Maqdis to destroy an Egyptian military Mil 8 helicopter operating in the northern Sinai region on 26 January 2014 near Sheikh Zuweid close to the border with Gaza killing its five occupants This is the first attack of this type during the Sinai insurgency which has raged on the peninsula due to the security and political turmoil since the 2011 revolution The MANPADS is reported by United Nations to have come from former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi s large stocks which have been widely proliferated after Libya s civil war chaos and have become a concern to regional and world security 15 Syria Edit The Strela was deployed by Syrian forces occupying Lebanon along with other Soviet air defence systems that challenged U S French and Israeli airpower in the aftermath of the 1982 conflict and the deployment of the Multinational Force in Lebanon during that year On 10 November 1983 an SA 7 was fired at a French Super Etendard near Bourj el Barajneh while flying over Druze People s Liberation Army PLA positions On 3 December more Strelas and anti aircraft artillery AAA were fired at United States Navy F 14 Tomcats flying a reconnaissance mission 16 17 The Americans responded with a large strike package of 12 A 7 Corsairs and 16 A 6 Intruders supported by a single E 2C Hawkeye two EA 6B Prowlers and two F 14As launched from the carriers USS John F Kennedy CV 67 and USS Independence CV 62 sailing in the Mediterranean The aircraft were to bomb Syrian installations AAA sites and weapons depots near Falouga and Hammana some 16 km north of Beirut Damascus highway when they were received by a volley of possibly up to 40 Syrian SAMs one of which hit a Corsair AE305 of the VA 15 forcing the pilot to eject over the sea before being rescued by a USN search and rescue mission 17 The attack formation broke with each pilot attacking each objective on its own leading to the downing of a second U S aircraft an Intruder from VA 85 hit by either an SA 7 or an SA 9 The navigator Lieutenant Bobby Goodman ejected near a village surrounded by Syrian positions The pilot Lt Mark Lange ejected too late and died from his wounds soon after being captured by Syrian soldiers and Lebanese civilians Goodman was captured by the Syrians and taken to Damascus before being freed in January 1984 16 18 A second Corsair searching for the downed Intruder crew was later hit by an SA 7 The pilot Cdr Edward Andrews managed to eject over the sea near Beirut and was rescued by a fisherman and his son who in turn handed him over to the U S Marines 16 18 During the civil war several Strelas have made their way to rebel hands and YouTube videos have shown them being fired In 2013 Foreign Policy citing rebels sources reported the shipment with Qatari help of some 120 SA 7s from Libya with large stocks acquired by Gaddafi and proliferated after that country s civil war through Turkey and with Turkish authorities knowledge 19 20 Lebanon Edit On 24 June 1974 Palestinian guerrillas operating in southern Lebanon fired two SA 7s against invading Israel Air Force IAF aircraft though no hits were scored 21 The Lebanese Al Mourabitoun militia received either from Syria or the PLO a number of SA 7s which they employed against Israeli Air Force IAF fighter bomber jets during the 1982 Lebanon War 22 During the 1983 84 Mountain War the Druze People s Liberation Army PLA militia received from Syria a number of Strela missiles which were used to bring down two Lebanese Air Force Hawker Hunter fighter jets 23 and one Israeli IAI Kfir fighter bomber aircraft on November 20 over the mountainous Chouf district southeast of Beirut the pilot was rescued by the Lebanese Army 24 25 26 The Christian Maronite Lebanese Forces militia LF also received from Iraq a number of Strela missiles in 1988 89 27 The Shiite Hezbollah guerrilla group also acquired some Strelas in the late 1980s and fired them against Israeli aircraft in November 1991 28 Since then they have since fired many Strelas against Israeli aircraft including two against Israeli warplanes on 12 June 2001 near Tyre but have never scored a hit 29 Iraq Edit In the early dawn of 31 January 1991 during the Battle of Khafji in Operation Desert Storm an Iraqi soldier shot down an American AC 130H gunship with a Strela 2 killing all 14 crewmembers 30 Strela 2 missiles have been used against Turkish Army helicopters by the PKK in northern Iraq During Operation Hammer on 18 May 1997 a Strela 2 missile was used to shoot down an AH 1W Super Cobra attack helicopter On 4 June 1997 another Strela was used to bring down a Turkish Army AS 532UL Cougar transport helicopter in the Zakho area killing the 11 soldiers on board 31 32 33 The video of the first attack was used extensively for PKK propaganda and eventually released to the Internet Greece and Serbia s intelligence services as well as Iran Syria Armenia and Cyprus were traced as possible sources of the missiles 31 34 A Strela 2 missile is said to have been used in April 2005 when members of the insurgents shot down an Mi 8 helicopter operated by Blackwater killing all 11 crew members The Islamic Army in Iraq took responsibility for the action and a video showing the downing was released on the Internet 35 The missile launcher is not visible on the video however making it impossible to confirm the type of MANPADS used The spate of helicopter shoot downs during 2006 and 2007 in Iraq has been partly attributed to the prevalence of the Strela amongst Sunni insurgent groups of that time 36 while al Qaeda is said to have produced an hour long training video on how to use SA 7s 29 Saudi Arabia Edit In late 2001 a Sudanese man with links to Al Qaida fired an SA 7 at an American F 15 Eagle fighter taking off from Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia The missile missed the target and was not detected by the pilot or anyone at the base Saudi police found the empty launcher in the desert in May 2002 and a suspect was arrested in Sudan a month later He led police to a cache in the desert where a second missile was buried 37 Gaza Edit During October 2012 militants in Gaza fired a Strela at an IDF helicopter 38 During Operation Pillar of Defense Hamas released a video purporting to be a Strela missile launch at an IAF target 39 In March 2013 one was also reportedly fired from Gaza at an IAF helicopter 38 In 2022 one was fired at IAF F16 to stop an air raid In April 2023 a video released by the armed wing of Hamas showed the simultaneous launches of three missiles towards an IAF aircraft after it had downed a locally produced drone over the southern Gaza Strip 40 Yemen Edit Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula allegedly shot down a UAE Mirage fighter jet with a Strela during the Yemeni Civil War 2015 present 41 Houthi rebels were seen carrying 9K32 Strela 2s 42 Southeast Asia Edit nbsp Damage to an AC 130 gunship caused by an SA 7 May 1972The Strela 2 system was also given to North Vietnam where along with the more advanced Strela 2M it achieved 204 hits out of 589 firings against US and South Vietnamese aircraft between 1972 and 1975 according to Russian sources 9 Some sources such as Fiszer 2004 8 claim that it was used from 1968 onwards Roughly 90 110 kills and several dozen damaged are attributed to Strela 2 2M hits between April 1972 and the Fall of Saigon in April 1975 almost all against helicopters and propeller driven aircraft As in the War of Attrition the missile s speed and range proved insufficient against fast jets and results were poor only one U S A 4 Skyhawk one U S F 4 Phantom and three South Vietnamese F 5 Freedom Fighter are known to have been shot down with Strela 2s during the conflict U S fixed wing losses are listed in the following table 43 The internet site Arms expo ru states 14 fixed wing aircraft and 10 helicopters were shot down with 161 missile rounds used between 28 April and 14 July 1972 9 Between April 1972 and January 1973 29 fixed wing aircraft and 14 helicopters were shot down 01 F 4 7 O 1 03 O 2 04 OV 10 09 A 1 04 A 37 01 CH 47 04 AH 1 09 UH 1 44 The difference in fixed wing losses may be at least partly due to South Vietnamese aircraft shot down by the weapon Date Type Unit Altitude when hit Casualties Mission Locationft m1972 05 01 O 2A 20th TASS 0 FAC Quang Tri1972 05 01 A 1H 1 SOS 3 500 1 100 0 SAR Quang Tri1972 05 02 A 1E 1 SOS 5 500 1 700 0 SAR Quang Tri1972 05 02 A 1G 1 SOS 6 500 2 000 1 WIA SAR Quang Tri1972 05 02 UH 1 5 KIA Quang Tri 45 1972 05 11 AH 1 2 KIA A Loc 45 1972 05 11 O 2 2 KIA A Loc 45 1972 05 11 O 2 2 KIA An Loc 45 1972 05 14 O 1 4 000 1 200 0 FAC An Loc1972 05 22 F 4 01972 05 24 UH 1 4 KIA Hue 45 1972 05 24 AH 1 2 KIA An Loc 45 1972 05 25 OV 10 0 Hue 45 1972 05 26 TA 4F H amp MS 15 4 500 1 400 0 armed recce Hue1972 06 11 OH 6 2 KIA Hue 45 1972 06 18 AC 130A 16 SOS 12 KIA armed recce A Shau1972 06 20 AH 1 2 KIA An Loc 45 1972 06 21 AH 1 0 An Loc 45 1972 06 29 OV 10A 20 TASS 6 500 2 000 1 KIA FAC Quang Tri1972 07 02 O 1 0 FAC Phum Long Cambodia 1972 07 05 A 37 0 Hue 45 1972 07 11 CH 53 46 KIA 46 Transport Quang Tri1972 10 31 CH 47 15 KIA Sai Gon 45 1972 11 23 O 2 0 An Loc 45 1972 03 12 AH 1 01972 12 19 OV 10A 20 TASS 1 KIA FAC Quang Tri1973 01 08 UH 1 6 KIA Quang Tri 45 1973 01 27 OV 10A 23 TASS 6 000 1 800 2 MIA FAC Quang TriThe table shows heavy losses particularly in the beginning of May with especially lethal results on the 1st and 2nd where the shootdown of the O 2 FAC led to further losses when a rescue operation was attempted After these initial losses changes in tactics and widespread introduction of decoy flares helped to counter the threat but a steady flow of attrition clarification needed and necessity of minimizing time spent in the Strela s engagement envelope nonetheless continued to limit the effectiveness of US battlefield air operations until the end of US involvement in South East Asia The United States lost at least 10 AH 1 Cobras and several UH 1 Hueys to Strela 2 2M hits in South East Asia From 28 January 1973 to July 1973 the Republic of Vietnam Air Force lost 8 aircraft and helicopter with 22 missile rounds used 1 A 37 3 A 1 1 F 5 2 UH 1 1 CH 47 45 From January 1973 to December 1974 the Republic of Vietnam Air Force lost at least 28 planes and helicopters to Strela 2s 13 In 1975 spring offensive a few dozen aircraft and helicopter were shot down by SA 7s On 14 April one F 5 was shot down 47 In Ho Chi Minh campaign PAVN claimed 34 aircraft and helicopter were shot down by SA 7s including 9 on 29 April 48 In the late 1980s Strela 2s were used against Royal Thai Air Force aircraft by Laotian and Vietnamese forces during numerous border clashes An RTAF F 5E was damaged on 4 March 1987 and another F 5E was shot down on 4 February 1988 near the Thai Cambodian border Western Asia Edit Afghanistan Edit nbsp An Afghan Mujahid with a Strela 2Strela 2M was used also in Afghanistan during the Soviet Afghan War by the Mujahiddeen The missiles were obtained from various sources some from Egypt and China locally manufactured Sakr Eye and HN 5 versions of the SAM and the CIA also assisted the guerrillas in finding missiles from other sources Results from combat use were not dissimilar from experiences with the Strela 2 2M from Vietnam while 42 helicopters were shot down by various Strela 2 variants including a few Mi 24s until exhaust shrouds made them next to invisible to the short wavelength Strela 2 seeker only five fixed wing aircraft were destroyed with the weapon Due to its poor kinematic performance and vulnerability to even the most primitive infra red countermeasures the guerrillas considered the Strela 2 suitable for use against helicopters and prop driven transports but not combat jets However the recent studies and interviews after the Cold war say that most Strelas sold to the Mujahiddeen on the black market were broken damaged or faulty This is possibly another reason why the Soviet army in Afghanistan didn t expect working anti aircraft missiles like the Stinger to be used 49 On 22 July 2007 the first reported attack of the Taliban against a coalition aircraft using MANPADS was reported The weapon was reported to be an SA 7 allegedly smuggled from Iran to the Taliban The missile failed after the crew of the USAF C 130 flying over the Nimroz province launched flares and made evasive manoeuvers 50 However most of the Strelas operated by al Qaeda in Afghanistan are probably inherited from fighters that used it during the Soviet invasion Most are probably faulty broken or in other ways not usable even from the beginning against military helicopters with the intercepts of NATO aviation by Stingers acquired also during 80s or other missiles citation needed Georgia Edit The SA 7 saw heavy usage by all sides during the Georgian Civil War The first known loss to an SA 7 happened on 13 June 1993 when a GAF Su 25 was shot down by a Strela over Shubara On two later occasions Georgian airliners a Tu 134A and a Tu 134B were shot down by SA 7s killing a total of 110 people 51 Africa Edit Guinea Bissau Edit PAIGC rebels fighting for independence from Portugal began to receive SA 7s in early 1973 a development that immediately became a threat to Portuguese air supremacy On 23 March 1973 two Portuguese Air Force FAP Fiat G 91s were shot down by SA 7s followed six weeks later by another Fiat and a Dornier Do 27 52 Mozambique Edit FRELIMO fighters in Mozambique were also able to field some SA 7s with Chinese support although the weapon is not known to have caused any losses to the FAP even if it forced Portuguese pilots to change their tactics In one case a Douglas DC 3 carrying foreign military attaches and members of the senior Portuguese military command was hit by an SA 7 in one of the engines The crippled plane managed to land safely and was later repaired 53 Angola Edit In Angola and Namibia SA 7s were deployed against the South African Air Force with limited success The SAAF lost Atlas Impalas to Strelas on 24 January 1980 and 10 October 1980 Another Impala was hit by an SA 7 on 23 December 1983 but the pilot was able to fly the aircraft back to Ondangwa AB 54 UNITA also reportedly obtained 50 SA 7s that Israel had captured via the CIA The first one was fired at Cuban aircraft by a French mercenary on 13 March 1976 but the missile failed to hit the target The individual missiles may have been in poor condition as none scored a direct hit 55 Additionally it is claimed that UNITA used SA 7s to shoot down two Transafrik International Lockheed L 100 30 Hercules flying UN charters on 26 December 1998 56 and 2 January 1999 57 both near Huambo 58 Sudan Edit Using an SA 7 the Sudan People s Liberation Army shot down a Sudan Airways Fokker F 27 Friendship 400M taking off from Malakal on 16 August 1986 killing all 60 on board 59 On 21 December 1989 an Aviation Sans Frontieres Britten Norman BN 2A 9 Islander F OGSM was shot down by an SA 7 while taking off from Aweil Sudan killing the four crew on board 60 Western Sahara Edit The Polisario Front used SA 7s against the Royal Moroccan Air Force and Mauritanian Air Force during the Western Sahara War over the former Spanish colonies of the Spanish Sahara The Mauritania Air Force lost a Britten Norman Defender to a SA 7 fired by the Polisario on 29 December 1976 61 Between 1975 and 1991 the Royal Moroccan Air Force has lost several Northrop F 5A Freedom Fighters and Dassault Mirage F1s to SA 7s fired by the Polisario 62 In a case of mistaken identity a Dornier 228 owned by the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research was shot down over the Western Sahara near Dakhla on 24 February 1985 Two Dornier 228s named Polar 2 and Polar 3 were on a return flight to Germany following a South Pole expedition After having taken off from Dakar Senegal en route to Arrecife Canary Islands flying 5 minutes behind Polar 2 and at a lower altitude 9 000 feet Polar 3 was shot down by a SA 7 fired by the Polisario 63 The crew of three was killed In another incident on 8 December 1988 two Douglas DC 7CFs flying at 11 000 feet from Dakar Senegal to Agadir Morocco for a locust control mission there had SA 7s fired at them by the Polisario One aircraft N284 was hit and lost one of its engines and part of a wing This led to the aircraft crashing killing the crew of five 64 The other aircraft N90804 also was hit and lost an engine along with suffering other damage but it was able to land safely at Sidi Ifni Morocco 65 Airliner attacks Edit During the Rhodesian Bush War members of the military wing of the Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army brought down two Vickers Viscount civilian airliners near Kariba the first in September 1978 the second in February 1979 There was great loss of life in both instances as the flights were returning from a well known tourist attraction 66 Vickers Viscount Flight RH825 3 September 1978 downed by a Strela missile near Kariba Dam After initial impact the pilot was able to make an emergency landing in a nearby field but the aircraft broke up on impact Eighteen of the fifty six passengers in the tail section survived the crash Ten of these survivors were shot dead at the crash site by insurgents who later looted the bodies and wreckage 66 Vickers Viscount Flight RH827 12 February 1979 shot by down Strela missile near Kariba Dam all 59 people on board were killed UNITA claimed that they used one to shoot down a TAAG Boeing 737 2M2 taking off from Lubango on 8 November 1983 67 A Lignes Aeriennes Congolaises Boeing 727 30 taking off from Kindu was shot down by an SA 7 fired by rebel forces in 1998 killing all 41 on board 68 Two missiles were fired at a Boeing 757 during the 2002 Mombasa attacks in Kenya Neither missile struck its target 69 70 Latin America Edit Argentina Edit Strela 2M missiles were available to Argentinian troops in the Falkland Islands during the Falklands War War Machine Encyclopedia shows no records of any launches but several missiles were captured 71 Nicaragua Edit The Strela 2 was used by both Sandinista government forces and US backed Contra insurgents during the 1979 1990 civil war On 3 October 1983 at about 10 00 am Sandinista soldier Fausto Palacios used a Strela to shoot down a Contra operated Douglas DC 3 that had taken off from Catamacas airport in Honduras carrying supplies over the area of Los Cedros in the Nueva Segovia Department One crewman died in the crash and four were captured by government forces The pilot Major Roberto Amador Alvarez as well as his co pilot Capt Hugo Reinaldo Aguilar were former members of the extinct National Guard of the former dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle 72 73 74 On 27 August 1984 Sandinista soldier Fanor Medina Leyton shot down a Contra operated Douglas C 47 Skytrain with a Strela Sources differ over the attack and crash area both a Russian source and Sandinista officials reported the Jinotega Department while the Aviation Safety Network reports the Quilali area in the Nueva Segovia department All eight occupants were killed The pilot Jose Luis Gutierrez Lugo was reported as a former pilot for the Somoza family Sandinista and Contra forces subsequently battled for the control of six packages dropped from the plane 72 75 76 On 5 October 1986 a Corporate Air Services C 123 Provider HPF821 previously N4410F and USAF 54 679 c n 20128 77 conducting a covert drop of arms to Contra fighters in Nicaragua was shot down by Sandinista soldier Jose Fernando Canales Aleman using an SA 7 CIA pilots William J Cooper and Wallace Buzz Sawyer as well as radio operator Freddy Vilches were killed in the crash Loadmaster Eugene Hasenfus parachuted to safety and was taken prisoner He was later released in December 1986 78 The flight had departed Ilopango Airport El Salvador loaded with 70 Soviet made AK 47 rifles and 100 000 rounds of ammunition rocket grenades and other supplies 79 On 15 June 1987 a Contra operated Beechcraft Baron 56TC reg N666PF msn TG 60 was hit by Sandinista anti aircraft fire over the Nueva Segovia Department The formerly civilian light utility aircraft which was removed from the US registry two years before 80 and was reportedly modified to carry rockets for use in an air to ground light strike role was downed after an attack that reportedly included dropping leaflets and possibly reconnaissance 81 82 83 The aircraft crashed 6 km inside Honduras in an area known as Cerro El Tigre and its three occupants all former military elements of the Somoza dictatorship were injured and captured after the crash landing and were treated in Honduras 84 The pilot Juan Gomez a former colonel in Somoza s National Guard was also reported to be the head of the Contra air force 85 A Russian source credits the Baron s downing to an Strela 2 fired from Murra by Sandinista soldier Jose Manuel Rodriguez 86 87 El Salvador Edit FMLN rebels acquired SA 7 missiles around 1989 and employed them extensively in the closing years of the Salvadoran Civil War dramatically increasing the combat losses of Salvadoran Air Force aircraft At least two O 2 Skymasters on 26 September and 19 November 1990 one A 37 Dragonfly on November 23 1990 two Hughes 500 helicopters 2 February and 18 May 1990 and two UH 1Hs were lost to SA 7s One of the UH 1Hs on 2 January 1991 was crewed by US Army personnel while the other was operated by the Honduran Air Force 88 89 Colombia Edit In late December 2012 a video showing FARC rebels attempting to shoot down a Colombian Air Force Arpia helicopter with an SA 7 in the Cauca raised the alarm in the Colombian military though the missile failed 90 91 During that same month a Strela was captured by the Colombian military It is believed that they might came from Cuba Nicaragua or Peru the only Latin American operators of the type 92 Furthermore the CIA s motive to remove and destroy Chinese copies of the SA 7 HN 5s from Bolivia in 2005 was the fear of them reaching FARC rebels because according to a US military magazine they used the HN 5 against Colombian operated U S made helicopters 93 The Ecuadorian Army captured an HN 5 allegedly destined for the FARC in the border province of Sucumbios near Colombia in July 2013 94 95 Europe Edit Northern Ireland Edit The Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA acquired some missiles from Libya One was reported to have been fired at a British Army Air Corps Lynx helicopter in July 1991 in South Armagh however it missed its target 96 To counter the new threat the British helicopters flew in pairs below 15 meters 50 feet or above 150 meters 500 feet Spain Edit In 2001 the Basque separatist group ETA tried on three occasions 29 April 4 and 11 May to use Strela 2 missiles to shoot down the Dassault Falcon 900 aircraft with the then Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar on board The attempts which were made near the Fuenterrabia and Foronda airports were unsuccessful as each time the missiles failed to launch In 2004 several systems were captured by the Civil Guard 97 Some Strela 2 missiles were bought from the IRA in 1999 while Libya was tracked as the original source used by the IRA 98 Ukraine Edit During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Germany reversed its ban on weapon sales to provide Ukraine with military support 99 On 23 March 2022 German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock confirmed the delivery of 500 Strela 2 missiles which were part of former East German arsenals 100 Versions Edit9K32M Strela 2M SA 7b Grail Strela 2M A Yugoslav upgraded version with larger warhead CA 94 and CA 94M Romanian license built versions of the 9K32 and 9K32M respectively HN 5 Chinese unlicensed copy Anza Mk I Pakistani version based on SA 7 101 Ayn al Saqr عين الصقر Hawk Eye Egyptian copy 102 Hwasung Chong North Korean license built copy of Egyptian Ayn al Saqr system 5 Operators Edit nbsp Map with 9K32 operators in blue with former operators in redCurrent operators Edit nbsp Al Nasser Salah al Deen Brigades 103 nbsp Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula 104 nbsp al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb 104 nbsp Al Shabaab 105 nbsp Afghanistan 5 nbsp Algeria 106 nbsp Angola 106 nbsp Azerbaijan 106 nbsp Benin 5 nbsp Boko Haram 105 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Botswana 106 nbsp Bulgaria 106 license built 5 nbsp Burkina Faso 106 nbsp Burundi 106 nbsp Cambodia 107 nbsp Cape Verde 5 nbsp Chad 5 nbsp Cuba 106 nbsp Czech Republic 106 nbsp Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda 2 systems 108 nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo 106 nbsp Ecuador 106 nbsp Egypt 106 nbsp El Salvador 109 nbsp Eritrea 106 nbsp Ethiopia 106 nbsp Free Syrian Army 106 nbsp Georgia 106 nbsp Ghana 106 nbsp Guinea 106 nbsp Guinea Bissau 106 nbsp Guyana 107 nbsp Hamas 105 nbsp Hezbollah 105 Hizbul Mujahideen 104 nbsp Houthis 42 110 nbsp India 106 nbsp Iran 106 nbsp Islamic State 104 nbsp Islamic State Sinai Province 111 nbsp Ivory Coast 106 Jaish al Islam 112 nbsp Kazakhstan 5 nbsp Kurdistan Workers Party PKK 31 113 nbsp Kuwait 107 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 106 nbsp Laos 106 nbsp Lebanon 106 nbsp Libya 114 nbsp Lord s Resistance Army 104 nbsp Mali 5 nbsp Mauritania 106 nbsp Mauritius 5 nbsp Moldova 5 nbsp Mongolia 115 107 nbsp Morocco 114 nbsp Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa 105 nbsp Mozambique 107 nbsp Namibia 106 nbsp National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad 104 New People s Army 116 nbsp Nicaragua 106 nbsp Nigeria 106 nbsp North Korea 106 nbsp Oman 106 nbsp Palestinian Islamic Jihad 104 also known as al Quds Brigades nbsp Peru 106 nbsp Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command 106 nbsp Popular Mobilization Units 117 nbsp Qatar 106 Rally of Democratic Forces 104 nbsp Romania 107 nbsp Russia 106 nbsp Rwanda 106 nbsp Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic 118 nbsp Serbia 106 nbsp Seychelles 107 nbsp Sierra Leone 114 nbsp Slovakia 106 nbsp Somalia 107 nbsp Somaliland 104 nbsp South Sudan 106 nbsp South Sudan Liberation Movement 105 nbsp Sudan 106 nbsp Sudan Revolutionary Front 104 nbsp Syria 106 nbsp Tahrir al Sham 106 nbsp Tajikistan 106 nbsp Taliban 105 nbsp Tanzania 106 nbsp Tunisia 5 nbsp Turkmenistan 106 nbsp Uganda 106 nbsp Ukraine 106 nbsp United Arab Emirates 114 nbsp United Wa State Army 104 nbsp Uzbekistan 5 nbsp Vietnam 106 nbsp Yemen 107 nbsp Zambia 106 nbsp Zimbabwe 106 Former operators Edit nbsp Afghan Mujahideen 119 nbsp African National Congress 107 nbsp Ahlu Sunna Waljama a 105 nbsp Ansar al Islam 120 nbsp Ansar al Sharia Libya 121 nbsp Argentina 71 Armed Forces Revolutionary Council 105 Army of Republika Srpska Army of the Republic of Serb Krajina nbsp Al Mourabitoun 122 nbsp Belarus Phased out from active service 29 disposed of 123 nbsp Caucasus Emirate 104 Chadian Union of Forces for Democracy and Development 104 nbsp Mali CNRDR 105 nbsp Contras 124 nbsp Croatia 5 nbsp Cyprus 114 nbsp Czechoslovakia 107 nbsp East Germany 107 nbsp ETA 105 FAN 116 nbsp Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front FMLN 88 nbsp FARC 104 nbsp Finland Strela 2M operated under designation ItO 78 107 nbsp Frelimo 53 nbsp Germany Former East German stocks 2 700 Strela 2s were donated to Ukraine in response to the 2022 Russian invasion 125 126 nbsp Harkat ul Ansar 105 nbsp Hungary 107 nbsp Iraq 104 Islamic Army in Iraq 35 nbsp Islamic Courts Union 105 nbsp Islamic State in Libya 127 Jaish al Haramoun 128 nbsp Jamiat e Islami 105 nbsp Jordan 5 Jumbish e Mili 105 nbsp Khmer People s National Liberation Front 116 nbsp Khmer Rouge 116 nbsp Kosovo Liberation Army 105 Kurdistan Democratic Party nbsp Kuwait 129 nbsp Latvia 5 Strela 2M as of 2008 130 136 nbsp Lebanese Forces 131 nbsp Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam 105 Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy 105 nbsp Moro National Liberation Front 116 nbsp Mozambique National Resistance 116 Mujahideen Shura Council of Derna 132 nbsp National Congress for the Defense of the Congolese People 105 nbsp National Liberation Army 105 Niger Movement for Justice 105 nbsp North Macedonia 54 in 2008 130 179 nbsp North Vietnam 9 nbsp North Yemen 107 nbsp PAIGC 52 nbsp Palestinian Authority 105 nbsp Palestine Liberation Organization factions in Lebanon 21 likely As Sa iqa 133 Patriotic Movement of Cote d Ivoire 105 nbsp People s Armed Forces of Liberation of Angola 134 People s Liberation Army Lebanon 16 nbsp Poland until 2018 135 nbsp People s Movement for the Liberation of Angola 136 nbsp Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf 137 nbsp Provisional Irish Republican Army 105 nbsp Revolutionary United Front 105 Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat 105 nbsp Sandinista National Liberation Front 72 nbsp Shan State Army 104 nbsp Slovenia 5 Somali National Alliance 105 Somali Salvation Alliance 105 nbsp South Africa 114 nbsp South Yemen 107 nbsp Soviet Union 138 nbsp Sudan People s Liberation Army 105 Incorporated into government nbsp UNITA 55 nbsp Viet Cong 107 nbsp White mercenaries in the Congo 139 nbsp Yugoslavia 107 nbsp Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army 66 References Edit Efrat Moshe 1983 The Economics of Soviet Arms Transfers to the Third World A Case Study Egypt Soviet Studies 35 4 437 456 doi 10 1080 09668138308411496 ISSN 0038 5859 JSTOR 151253 a b c d e f g h Perenosnoj zenitno raketnyj kompleks 9K32M Strela 2M New factoria ru Archived from the original on 2008 10 11 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Zenitnaya upravlyaemaya raketa 9M32M Raketnaya tehnika New factoria ru 2010 11 14 Archived from the original on 2009 04 14 Retrieved 2013 08 24 James C O Halloran Jane s Land Based Air Defence 2005 2006 10th ed Jane s Information Group London a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Dr Michael Ashkenazi Princess Mawuena Amuzu Jan Grebe Christof Kogler Marc Kosling February 2013 MANPADS A Terrorist Threat to Civilian Aviation PDF Bonn International Center of Conversion BICC Internationales Konversionszentrum Bonn GmbH Archived PDF from the original on 2018 08 21 Retrieved 2018 08 20 Twentieth Century Artillery ISBN 1 84013 315 5 2000 Ian Hogg Chapter 6 p 226 a b c d Lappi Ahti Ilmatorjunta Kylmassa Sodassa 2003 a b c d On arrows and needles Russia s Strela and Igla portable killers Journal of Electronic Defense January 2004 Michal Fiszer and Jerzy Gruszczynski a b c d e Strela 2 9K32 SA 7 Grail perenosnyj zenitnyj raketnyj kompleks ORUZhIE ROSSII Informacionnoe agentstvo Arms expo ru Archived from the original on 2011 01 26 Retrieved 2013 08 24 a b c War Machine issue 64 magazine 1984 Orbis Publications p 1274 a b SA 7 Grail 9K32 Strela 2 bellum nu 2007 03 07 Archived from the original on 2008 06 02 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Cullen amp Foss 1992 p 41 a b c d e Cullen amp Foss 1992 p 42 a b c China s Search for Air Defense On the Verge of Foreign Acquisitions PDF Central Intelligence Agency 8 April 1986 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 23 Retrieved 2018 07 21 Kirkpatrick David D 27 January 2014 Militants Down Egyptian Helicopter Killing 5 Soldiers The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 February 2017 Retrieved 5 October 2014 a b c d Tom Cooper amp Eric L Palmer 26 September 2003 Disaster in Lebanon US and French Operations in 1983 Acig org Archived from the original on 7 October 2013 Retrieved 2013 08 24 a b Micah Zenko 13 February 2012 When America Attacked Syria Politics Power and Preventive Action Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 a b 2005 Ejection history org uk Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Chivers C J 24 July 2013 The Risky Missile Systems That Syria s Rebels Believe They Need The New York Times Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 22 November 2014 Chivers C J Schmitt Eric Mazzetti Mark 21 June 2013 In Turnabout Syria Rebels Get Libyan Weapons The New York Times Archived from the original on 24 July 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2017 a b See US State Department Cable Beirut 7015 Jun 20 1974 Samer Kassis Invasion of Lebanon 1982 Abteilung 502 2019 p 196 ISBN 978 84 120935 1 3 Ken Guest Lebanon in Flashpoint At the Front Line of Today s Wars Arms and Armour Press London 1994 p 106 ISBN 1 85409 247 2 This source reports on the loss of an American made F 16 though the plane was actually an Israeli made Kfir Israeli Plane Shot Down by Surface to air Missiles over Lebanon 21 November 1983 Israelis Bomb Lebanese Sites Lose One Plane The Washington Post 1983 11 21 Retrieved 2021 11 20 Friedman Thomas L 21 November 1983 Israeli Jets Bomb Palestinian Bases In Lebanon Hills The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved 2021 11 20 Samer Kassis 30 Years of Military Vehicles in Lebanon Beirut Elite Group 2003 p 36 ISBN 9953 0 0705 5 Nicolas Blanford 2011 Warriors of God Inside Hezbollah s Thirty Year Struggle Against Israel New York Random House a b Terrorists known to possess SAMs CNN 2002 11 28 Archived from the original on 2011 03 22 Retrieved 2010 05 24 Spirit 03 and the Battle for Khafji Archived from the original on October 25 2008 Retrieved 5 October 2014 a b c Netzwerk Friedenskooperative Themen Turkei Kurdistan Invasion turkhg52 Friedenskooperative de 1997 06 06 Archived from the original on 2013 05 14 Retrieved 2013 08 24 ASN Aircraft accident 04 JUN 1997 Aerospatiale AS 532UL Cougar 140 Aviation safety net Archived from the original on 2014 05 17 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Sabah Politika Haber Arsiv sabah com tr Archived from the original on 2011 10 23 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Rebel Missiles Could End Up Being a Nightmare for Turkey Al Monitor the Pulse of the Middle East Al Monitor Archived from the original on 2013 05 17 Retrieved 2013 08 24 a b John F Burns 23 April 2005 Video Appears to Show Insurgents Kill a Downed Pilot The New York Times Archived from the original on 2013 05 17 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Why are U S helicopters getting shot down in Iraq FP Passport Blog foreignpolicy com 2007 02 19 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2013 08 24 TRACES OF TERROR THE DRAGNET Sudanese Says He Fired Missile at U S Warplane New York Times 14 June 2002 Archived from the original on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 19 May 2011 a b Harel Amos 2012 10 16 For first time Palestinians in Gaza fire missile at IAF helicopter Israel News Broadcast Haaretz Archived from the original on 2013 08 15 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Small Arms Big Problems By Damien Spleeters Foreign Policy 2012 11 19 Archived from the original on 2013 06 09 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Hamas Releases Video of Firing Surface to Air Missiles at Israeli Fighter Jet over Gaza Al Manar TV Lebanon english almanar com lb Retrieved 2023 04 04 Desk iHLS News 4 April 2016 Al Qaeda Brought Down Jet With Surface to Air Missile iHLS Israel Homeland Security Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2017 a b YouTube youtube com Archived from the original on 2017 04 06 Retrieved 2017 03 17 Vietnam Air Losses Christopher Hobson 2002 Dan Tri 2015 05 02 Người Nga noi thật về Chiến tranh Việt Nam Bao Dan tri Dantri com vn Retrieved 2022 03 08 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Strela Nỏ thần gay khiếp đảm tren chiến trường Việt nam 17 July 2013 Melson Charles D Arnold Curtis G 1991 U S Marines in Vietnam The war that would not end 1971 1973 PDF History and Museums Division U S Marine Corps PCN 190 003112 00 Y kiến của bạn Hạ gục F 5 Sknc qdnd vn Retrieved 2022 03 08 Ngay cuối bi thảm của Khong quan Việt Nam Cộng hoa Soha vn 24 November 2017 Retrieved 2022 03 08 Roads of terror ep 1 Planete documentary film Coghlan Tom 2007 07 28 Taliban in first heat seeking missile attack Telegraph Archived from the original on 2014 03 15 Retrieved 2013 08 24 CIS region Aviaciya v lokalnyh konfliktah www skywar ru skywar ru Archived from the original on 2018 04 19 Retrieved 2017 10 23 a b http s188567700 online de CMS index php option com content amp task view amp id 220 amp Itemid 47 dead link a b http s188567700 online de CMS index php option com content amp task view amp id 139 amp Itemid 47 dead link Angola Claims amp Reality about SAAF Losses Archived 2011 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 a b Angola since 1961 Archived 2011 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2016 01 19 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2016 01 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Man Portable Air Defence Systems Archived 2011 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2013 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2015 07 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Morocco Mauritania amp West Sahara since 1972 Archived 2012 07 29 at archive today Retrieved 4 October 2011 Western Sahara war 1975 1991 Archived 2011 10 04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2012 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2016 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 a b c Anthony Trethowan 2008 Delta Scout Ground Coverage operator 2008 ed 30deg South Publishers p 184 ISBN 978 1 920143 21 3 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Criminal Occurrence description Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 4 October 2011 Proliferation of MANPADS and the threat to civil aviation Archived from the original on March 1 2008 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Bolkcom Elias Feickert MANPADs Threat to Commercial Aviation PDF Congressional Research Service Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 23 Retrieved 2013 08 24 a b War Machine Italian version printed by De Agostini Novara 1983 p 155 a b c Nicaragua Aviaciya v lokalnyh konfliktah www skywar ru Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Nicaragua Reports Shooting Down Rebel DC 3 Registered in Oklahoma NewsOK com Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Daily News Google News Archive Search Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2010 Kinzer Stephen 29 August 1984 Nicaragua says it downed a rebel supply plane The New York Times Archived from the original on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 2017 02 04 Omang Joanne and Wilson George C Questions About Plane s Origins Grow Washington Post Washington D C Thursday October 9 1986 pages A 1 A 32 Intrusions Overflights Shootdowns and Defections During the Cold War and Thereafter Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 5 October 2014 ASN Aircraft accident Fairchild C 123K Provider HPF821 San Carlos 5 October 1986 Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 https onespotter com aircraft fid 778341 N666PF Branigin William 1987 06 25 CONTRAS SAID TO BREAK UP SANDINISTA SPY NETWORK Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2023 08 22 Tyroler Deborah June 19 1987 Contra Aircraft Downed By Sandinistas Nicaraguan Government Identifies Three man Crew University of New Mexico Digital Repository Latin America Digital Beat News and Educational Services NotiCen LADB Article Id 076537 ISSN 1089 1560 Retrieved on August 17 2023 from https digitalrepository unm edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 1709 amp context noticen Skywar ru n d Contras Skywar ru Retrieved on August 17 2023 from http www skywar ru contras html Tyroler 1987 Tyroler 19 June 1987 Skywar ru n d Contras Skywar ru Retrieved on August 17 2023 from http www skywar ru contras html Skywar ru n d Sandinista Skywar ru http www skywar ru sandinista html a b Cooper Tom El Salvador 1980 1992 ACIG org Archived from the original on 16 January 2014 Retrieved 30 January 2013 Blog de las Fuerzas de Defensa de la Republica Argentina Conflictos americanos El factor aereo en El Salvador 1980 1992 2 2 Fdra blogspot com Archived from the original on 2014 01 16 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Misiles tierra aire SA 7 en posesion de las FARC Analisis 24 7 April 2013 Archived from the original on 7 April 2013 Misiles Antiaereos en Poder de las FARC MANPAD SA 7 Strela YouTube 2012 12 09 Archived from the original on 2014 09 20 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Incautado Misil Antiaereo SA 7 Grail a las FARC en el Departamento del Cauca WebInfomil Webinfomil com December 2012 Archived from the original on 2013 06 07 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Revista dice que misiles chinos eran efectivos Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Ejercito Ecuatoriano incauta misil antiaereo destinado a las FARC Webinfomil 2 July 2013 Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Militares ecuatorianos descubren un misil cerca de la frontera con Colombia YouTube Archived from the original on 24 June 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Jackson Brian A et al Aptitude for Destruction Volume 2 Case Studies of Organizational Learning in Five Terrorist Groups Volume 2 Rand Corporation May 5 2005 pg 110 ETA quiso atentar con misiles contra Aznar en 2001 Archived from the original on 18 February 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Govan Fiona 2010 01 18 Spanish PM saved by faulty IRA missile Telegraph Archived from the original on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Germany reverses ban on weapon sales to Ukraine as it happened DW 2022 02 26 Deutschland sendet weitere Strela Raketenwerfer in die Ukraine Spiegel 2022 03 23 Anza Mk I Mk II Mk III Man Portable air defense missile system armyrecognition com 8 May 2018 Retrieved 2 April 2023 CaaUCă CaOCNcIe Uia OŢN Aoi com eg Archived from the original on 2014 02 16 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Number of Gaza terror groups possess Strela 2 MANPADS FDD s Long War Journal 25 September 2013 Archived from the original on 19 July 2018 Retrieved 19 July 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Armed Actor Research Notes Armed Groups Holding of Guided Light Weapons Number 31 June 2013 PDF Small Arms Survey Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 13 Retrieved 2018 07 02 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 Guided light weapons reportedly held by non state armed groups 1998 2013 PDF Small Arms Survey March 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 18 Retrieved 2018 06 28 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 International Institute for Strategic Studies IISS 14 February 2018 The Military Balance 2018 The Military Balance 118 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Trade Register Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Archived from the original on 2010 04 14 Retrieved 2018 07 20 Small Arms Survey 2015 Waning Cohesion The Rise and Fall of the FDLR FOCA PDF Small Arms Survey 2015 weapons and the world PDF Cambridge University Press p 203 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 01 28 Retrieved 2018 08 29 Defense amp Security Intelligence amp Analysis IHS Jane s IHS Janes com Retrieved 2013 08 24 Oryx on Twitter Archived from the original on 2017 03 15 Retrieved 2018 07 19 MENASTREAM on Twitter MENASTREAM on Twitter Turan Oguz on Twitter a b c d e f Thomas W Zarzecki 2002 Arms Diffusion The Spread of Military Innovations in the International System Routledge ISBN 0415935148 Mongolian Army 2 June 2010 a b c d e f Cullen amp Foss 1992 p 43 Iraq Turning a blind eye The arming of the Popular Mobilization Units PDF Amnesty International 5 January 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 13 March 2017 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Mitzer Stijn Oliemans Joost 15 December 2021 Desert Storm Listing The Polisario s Inventory of AFVs Oryx International Institute for Strategic Studies 1989 The Military Balance 1989 1990 London Brassey s p 153 ISBN 978 0080375694 Syria war Rebel group supplied with anti air missiles Middle East Eye Archived from the original on 2018 07 20 Retrieved 2018 07 20 Alex Mello on Twitter Samer Kassis Invasion of Lebanon 1982 Abteilung 502 2019 p 196 ISBN 978 84 120935 1 3 Belorussiya polnostyu utilizirovala PZRK Strela 2M ORUZhIE ROSSII Informacionnoe agentstvo Arms expo ru Archived from the original on 2014 04 13 Retrieved 2013 08 24 Struggle for Nicaragua escalation PDF 10 December 1985 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 23 Retrieved 2018 07 21 Germany to ship anti aircraft missiles to Ukraine DW 03 03 2022 Deutsche Welle Retrieved 2 July 2023 German minister says further Strela missiles are on way to Ukraine Reuters 23 March 2022 Retrieved 2 July 2023 Oded Berkowitz on Twitter Sami on Twitter Mitzer Stijn Oliemans Joost 22 December 2020 The Forgotten Deterrent Kuwait s Luna M FROG 7 Artillery Rockets Oryx Blog a b International Institute for Strategic Studies 5 February 2008 The Military Balance 2008 Routledge ISBN 978 1857434613 Samer Kassis 30 Years of Military Vehicles in Lebanon Beirut Elite Group 2003 ISBN 9953 0 0705 5 p 36 MENASTREAM on Twitter Palestinians in Lebanon Reportedly receive SA 7s PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 23 Retrieved 2018 07 21 Jaster Robert Scott 1997 The Defence of White Power South African Foreign Policy under Pressure Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan pp 66 68 93 103 ISBN 978 0333454558 Dmitruk Tomasz 2018 Dwie dekady w NATO Modernizacja techniczna Sil Zbrojnych RP 3 Two decades in NATO Technical modernization of Polish Armed Forces 3 www magnum x pl in Polish archived from the original on 2021 06 16 Geraint Hughes My Enemy s Enemy Proxy Warfare in International Politics Sussex Academic Press 2014 p 73 Jeapes Tony 1980 SAS Operation Oman London William Kimber p 227 ISBN 978 0 7183 0018 0 International Institute for Strategic Studies 1989 The Military Balance 1989 1990 London Brassey s p 34 ISBN 978 0080375694 S Boyne The White Legion Mercenaries in Zaire Jane s Intelligence Review London June 1997 p 279 Cullen Tony Foss Christopher F eds 1992 Jane s Land Based Air Defence 1992 93 5th ed Coulsdon UK Jane s Data Division ISBN 0 7106 0979 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Strela 2 Training of Czech Air defence units video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 9K32 Strela 2 amp oldid 1179921956, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

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