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Scud missile

A Scud missile is one of a series of tactical ballistic missiles developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War. It was exported widely to both Second and Third World countries. The term comes from the NATO reporting name attached to the missile by Western intelligence agencies. The Russian names for the missile are the R-11 (the first version), and the R-17 (later R-300) Elbrus (later developments). The name Scud has been widely used to refer to these missiles and the wide variety of derivative variants developed in other countries based on the Soviet design.

Scud
TypeTactical ballistic missile
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1957–present (Scud A)
1964–present (Scud B)
1965–present (Scud C)
1989–present (Scud D)
Used bysee Operators
WarsYom Kippur War, Iran–Iraq War, Gulf War, Afghan Civil War (1989–1992), Yemeni Civil War (1994), First Chechen War, Second Chechen War, Libyan Civil War, Syrian Civil War, Yemeni Civil War (2015–present), Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen, 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
Production history
DesignedFrom 1950
Specifications
Mass4,400 kg (9,700 lb) Scud A
5,900 kg (13,000 lb) Scud B
6,400 kg (14,100 lb) Scud C
6,500 kg (14,300 lb) Scud D
Length11.25 m (36.9 ft)
Diameter0.88 m (2 ft 11 in)
WarheadConventional high-explosive, Fragmentation, Chemical VX warhead

EngineSingle-stage liquid-fuel
Operational
range
180 km (110 mi) Scud A
300 km (190 mi) Scud B
600 km (370 mi) Scud C
700 km (430 mi) Scud D
Maximum speed Mach 4, 1.7 km/s (1.1 mi/s)[clarification needed]
Guidance
system
Inertial guidance, Scud-D adds DSMAC terminal guidance
Accuracy3,000 m (9,800 ft) Scud A
450 m (1,480 ft) Scud B
700 m (2,300 ft) Scud C
50 m (160 ft) Scud D

Scud missiles have been used in combat since the 1970s, mostly in wars in the Middle East. They became familiar to the Western public during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when Iraq fired dozens at Israel and Saudi Arabia. In Russian service it is being replaced by the 9K720 Iskander.

Development

 
MAZ-543 (9P117) Launcher with 8K14 rocket of 9K72 missile complex "Elbrus" (Scud B), Saint-Petersburg Artillery Museum, Russia. (2007)

The first use of the term Scud was in the NATO name SS-1b Scud-A, applied to the R-11 Zemlya ballistic missile. The earlier R-1 missile had carried the NATO name SS-1 Scunner, but was of a very different design, almost directly a copy of the German V-2 rocket. The R-11 used technology gained from the V-2 as well, but was a new design, smaller and differently shaped than the V-2 and R-1 weapons. The R-11 was developed by the Korolyev OKB[1] and entered service in 1957. The most revolutionary innovation in the R-11 was the engine, designed by A. M. Isaev. Far simpler than the V-2's multi-chamber design, and employing an anti-oscillation baffle to prevent chugging, it was a forerunner to the larger engines used in Soviet launch vehicles.[citation needed]

Further developed variants were the R-17 (later R-300) Elbrus / SS-1c Scud-B in 1961 and the SS-1d Scud-C in 1965, both of which could carry either a conventional high-explosive, a 5- to 80-kiloton thermonuclear, or a chemical (thickened VX) warhead. The SS-1e Scud-D variant developed in the 1980s can deliver a terminally guided warhead capable of greater precision.[citation needed]

All models are 11.35 m (37.2 ft) long (except Scud-A, which is 1 m (3 ft 3 in) shorter) and 0.88 m (2 ft 11 in) in diameter. They are propelled by a single liquid-fuel rocket engine burning kerosene and corrosion-inhibited red fuming nitric acid (IRFNA) with unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH, Russian TG-02 like German Tonka 250) as liquid igniter (self-ignition with IRFNA) in all models.[citation needed]

The missile reaches a maximum speed of Mach 5.[citation needed]

Variants

Scud-A

The first of the "Scud" series, designated R-11 (SS-1B Scud-A) originated in a 1951 requirement for a ballistic missile with similar performance to the German V-2 rocket. The R-11 was developed by engineer Viktor Makeev, who was then working in the OKB-1, headed by Sergey Korolev. It first flew on 18 April 1953, was fitted with an Isayev engine using kerosene and nitric acid as propellant. On 13 December 1953, a production order was passed with SKB-385 in Zlatoust, a factory dedicated to producing long-range rockets. In June 1955, Makeev was appointed chief designer of the SKB-385 to oversee the program and, in July, the R-11 was formally accepted into military service.[2] The definitive R-11M, designed to carry a nuclear warhead, was accepted officially into service on 1 April 1958. The launch system was placed on an IS-2 chassis and received the GRAU designation 8K11;[3] only 100 Scud-A launchers were built.[4]

The R-11M had a maximum range of 270 km, but when carrying a nuclear warhead, this was reduced to 150 km.[5] Its purpose was strictly as a mobile nuclear strike vector, giving the Soviet Army the ability to hit European targets from forward areas, armed with a nuclear warhead with an estimated yield of 50 kilotons.[6]

A naval variant, the R-11FM (SS-N-1 Scud-A) was first tested in February 1955, and was first launched from a converted Project 611 (Zulu class) submarine in September of the same year. While the initial design was done by Korolev's OKB-1, the program was transferred to Makeev's SKB-385 in August 1955.[2] It became operational in 1959 and was deployed onboard Project 611 and Project 629 (Golf Class) submarines. During its service, 77 launches were conducted, of which 59 were successful.[7]

Scud-B

 
The rear section of an 8K14 missile, displayed at the Poznan Museum of Armaments - pl:Muzeum Uzbrojenia w Poznaniu, Poland. The fixed fins and the graphite vanes that control the missile's path can be seen

The successor to the R-11, the R-17 (SS-1C Scud-B), renamed R-300 in the 1970s, was the most prolific of the series, with a production run estimated at 7,000. It served in 32 countries and four countries besides the Soviet Union manufactured copied versions.[6] The first launch was conducted in 1961, and it entered service in 1964.[1]

The R-17 was an improved version of the R-11. It could carry nuclear, chemical, conventional or fragmentation weapons.[6] At first, the Scud-B was carried on a tracked transporter erector launcher (TEL) similar to that of the Scud-A, designated 2P19, but this was not successful and a wheeled replacement was designed by the Titan Central Design Bureau, becoming operational in 1967.[8] The new MAZ-543 vehicle was officially designated 9P117 Uragan. The launch sequence could be conducted autonomously, but was usually directed from a separate command vehicle. The missile is raised to a vertical position by means of hydraulically powered cranes, which usually takes four minutes, while the total sequence lasts about one hour.[6]

 
2T3M1 Transport for the Soviet Scud-A Launchers

Scud-C

The Makeyev OKB also worked on an extended-range version of the R-17, known in the West as SS-1d Scud-C, that was first launched from Kapustin Yar in 1965. Its range was brought up to 500–600 km, but at the cost of a greatly reduced accuracy and warhead size. Eventually, the advent of more modern types in the same category, such as the TR-1 Temp (SS-12 Scaleboard), made the Scud-C redundant, and it apparently did not enter service with the Soviet armed forces.[9]

Scud-D

The R-17 VTO (SS-1e Scud-D) project was an attempt to enhance the accuracy of the R-17. The Central Scientific Research Institute for Automation and Hydraulics (TsNIAAG) began work on the project in 1968, but the first test launch was conducted only in September 1979. Development continued through the 1980s until the system was accepted into initial service as the 9K720 Aerofon in 1989.[10] However, by this time, more advanced weapons were in use, such as the OTR-21 Tochka (SS-21) and the R-400 Oka (SS-23), and the Scud-D was not acquired by the Soviet armed forces. Instead it was proposed for export as an upgrade for Scud-B users, in the 1990s.[10]

Unlike previous Scud versions, the 9K720 had a warhead that separated from the missile's body, and was fitted with its own terminal guidance system. With a TV camera fitted in the nose, the system could compare the target area with data from an onboard computer library (DSMAC).[10] In this way, it was thought to attain a circular error probable (CEP) of 50 m.

Characteristics

NATO codename Scud-A Scud-B Scud-C Scud-D
U.S. DIA SS-1b SS-1c SS-1d SS-1e
Official designation R-11 R-17/R-300
Deployment Date 1957 1964 1965 1989
Length 10.7 m 11.25 m 11.25 m 12.29 m
Width 0.88 m 0.88 m 0.88 m 0.88 m
Launch weight 4,400 kg 5,900 kg 6,400 kg 6,500 kg
Range 180 km 300 km 600 km 700 km
Payload 950 kg 985 kg 600 kg 985 kg
Accuracy (CEP) 3,000 m 450 m 700 m 50 m

Al Hussein and Iraqi variants

Hwasong-5/Shahab-1

North Korea obtained its first Scud-Bs from Egypt in 1979 or 1980.[11] These missiles were reverse engineered, and reproduced using North Korean infrastructure, including the 125 factory at Pyongyang, a research and development institute at Sanum-dong and the Musudan-ri Launch Facility.[12] The first prototypes were completed in 1984, and designated Hwasong-5. They were exact replicas of the R-17Es obtained from Egypt. The first test flights occurred in April 1984, but the first version saw only limited production, and no operational deployment, as its purpose was only to validate the production process.[citation needed]

Production of the definitive version began at a slow rate in 1985. The type incorporated several minor improvements over the original Soviet design. The range was increased by 10 to 15 percent and it could carry High Explosive (HE) or cluster chemical warheads. Throughout the production cycle, until it was phased out in favour of the Hwasong-6 in 1989, the DPRK manufacturers are thought to have carried out small enhancements, in particular to the guidance system.[12]

In 1985, Iran acquired 90 to 100 Hwasong-5 missiles from North Korea. A production line was also established in Iran, where the Hwasong-5 was produced as the Shahab-1.[12]

Hwasong-6/Shahab-2

The Hwasong-6 was first test-flown in June 1990, and entered full-scale production the same year, or in 1991, until it was superseded by the Rodong-1. It features an improved guidance system, a range of 500 km, but had its payload reduced to 770 kg, though the dimensions are identical to the original Scud. Due to difficulties in procuring MAZ-543 TELs, the North Koreans had to produce a local copy. By 1999, North Korea was estimated to have produced 600 to 1,000 Hwasong-6 missiles, of which 25 served for testing, 300 to 500 were exported, and 300 to 600 are used by the Korean People's Army.[13]

The Hwasong-6 was exported to Iran where it is known as the Shahab-2, and to Syria, where it is manufactured under license with Chinese assistance.[13] Also, according to SIPRI, 150 Scud-C were exported to Syria in 1991–96, 5 to Libya in 1999, 45 to Yemen in 2001–02.[14]

Hwasong-7/Shahab-3

The Nodong (also referred as RoDong, Hwasong-7), was the first North Korean missile to feature important modifications from the Scud design.[15] Development began in 1988, and the first missile was launched in 1990, but it apparently exploded on its launch pad. A second test was carried out in May 1993 successfully.[11][13]

The main characteristics of the Rodong are a range of 1000 km and a CEP estimated at 2,000–4,000 m, giving the North Koreans the ability to strike Japan.[16] The missile is substantially larger than the Hwasong series, and its Isayev 9D21 engine was upgraded with help from Makeyev OKB. Some assistance came also from China and Ukraine while a new TEL was designed using an Italian Iveco truck chassis and an Austrian crane. The rapidity with which the Rodong was designed and exported after just two tests came as a surprise for many Western observers, and led to some speculation that it was in fact based on a cancelled Soviet project from the Cold War period, but this has not been proven.[17]

Iran is known to have financed much of the Rodong program, and in return is allowed to produce the missile, as the Shahab-3. While the first prototypes may have been acquired as early as 1992, production began only in 2001, with assistance from Russia.[citation needed] The Rodong has also been exported to Egypt and Libya.

Hwasong-9/Scud-ER

The Hwasong-9[18][dubious ] also called the Scud-ER (extended range), is essentially a North Korean modification of the Hwasong-6 that exchanges payload for greater range; estimates range from 700–800 km (430–500 mi) to as much as 995 km (618 mi) through a reduced payload of 450–500 kg (990–1,100 lb) and enlarging the fuel and oxidant tanks along with a slight enlargement of the fuselage. The missile is single-stage and road mobile employing an HE, submunition, chemical, or potentially miniaturized nuclear warhead with a CEP of 3 km (1.9 mi). Its range allows the North Korean military to strike anywhere on the Korean peninsula and threaten areas of Japan.[19][20][21]

Development of the Hwasong-9 reportedly began in 1991 and production started in 1994. Deployment began in 2003, intelligence imagery first observed it in 2005, and it was only first revealed publicly in 2007. Reports suggest Syria received Scud-ER missiles in 2000, giving them the ability to target all of Israel and southeastern Turkey, including Ankara; Syria reportedly converted its own Hwasong-6 production line in order to make the longer-range Hwasong-9.[19][20][21]

Scud-ER/Hwasong-9 demonstrated range of 1,000 km with 500 kg payload.[22][23] South Korean and United States intelligence made assessment that missile can travel over 1,000 km, Japan previously rated its range at 1,000 km in 2015 white paper and considers to increase range estimate in 2016's white paper.[24]

The UN confirmed North Korea assisted Syria in development of manoeuvrable vehicle for "Scud D" since 2008.[25] The UN also confirmed that the missile guidance and electronics were upgraded/improved.[26]

Qiam 1

Iran began development of the indigenous Qiam missile prior to 2010, when it was first publicly tested.[27] It is developed from the Shahab-2/Hwasong-6.[28]

The Qiam 1 has a range of 750 km (470 mi) and 10 m (33 ft) (CEP) accuracy.[28] The most noticeable difference from the Shahab-2 is a lack of fins—which could be used to reduce the missile's radar signature during ascent as fins reflect radar.[29] Removing fins from a missile also reduces the structural mass, so the payload weight or missile range can be increased.[29][28] Without the fins and associated drag, the missile can be more responsive to changes in trajectory.[29] Iranian sources cite an improved guidance system on the missile, and analysts note that adjusting the missile's in-flight trajectory without fins requires a highly responsive guidance system.[27][28] The Qiam 1's accuracy is also improved with the addition of a separable warhead.[29] Other changes to the warhead include a "baby-bottle" shape, possibly to increase drag and thus stability during reentry at the expense of range, potentially increasing accuracy. The shape can also increase the terminal velocity of the warhead, making it harder to intercept.[30][28][31]

Deliveries began in either 2010 or 2011.[32][33] The missile's first combat use was against ISIS militants on 18 June 2017.[34] The Burkan 2-H used by the Houthis in Yemen is potentially related, or the Qiam 1 has potentially been used by that group.[35][36]

Burkan-1

The Houthi forces in Yemen unveiled the Burkan-1[37] (also spelled as Borkan 1 and Burqan 1[38]) on 2 September 2016 when it was fired toward King Fahd International Airport.[39][40]

The missile's range is 800 kilometres (500 mi), greater than the Soviet-made Scud-B missiles the Houthi forces took control of in 2015.[40][41] Missiles shot down mid-flight in October 2016 and July 2017 were claimed to target the holy city of Mecca by Saudi Arabia, while the Houthis claimed the targets were airports in the region.[42][43]

Burkan 2-H

The Houthi forces in Yemen unveiled the Burkan 2-H[44] (also spelled as Borkan H2 and Burqan 2H[38]) when it was launched at Saudi Arabia on 22 July 2017.[45]

Analysts identify it as based on the Iranian Qiam 1/Scud-C,[46][36] Iranian Shahab-2/Scud-C,[46] or Scud-D[37] missile. Pictures indicate a "baby bottle" re-entry vehicle, like the Shahab-3 and Qiam 1 missiles. The missile's exact range is unknown, but is greater than 800 kilometres (500 mi).[47]

It has been launched in July 2017, and a second launch was claimed on 4 November 2017, with the missile shot down over the Saudi Arabian capital, Riyadh.[38] According to the US State Department, the missile was actually an Iranian Qiam 1.[35] Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Culture and Information also supplied the Associated Press with pictures from a military briefing of what it claimed were components from the intercepted missile bearing Iranian markings matching those on other pictures of the Qiam 1.[36]

Operational use

 
Scud Transporter Erector Launcher (TEL) with missile in upright position, RAF Spadeadam, England (2005)
 
An R-17 on a reload transport trailer with a ZIL-131 tractor, Tolyatti Technical Museum, Tolyatti, Russia (2010)

The Scud missile family is one of the few ballistic missiles to be extensively used in actual warfare by different forces, second only to the V-2 in terms of combat launches.The first recorded combat use of the Scud was at the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1973, when three missiles were fired by Egypt against Israeli-held Arish and bridgehead on the western bank of the Suez canal.[48] Seven Israeli soldiers were killed.[49] Libya responded to U.S. airstrikes in 1986 by firing two Scud missiles at a U.S. Coast Guard navigation station on the nearby Italian island of Lampedusa, which missed their target. Scud missiles were used in several regional conflicts that included use by Soviet and Afghan Communist forces in Afghanistan, and Iranians and Iraqis against one another in the so-called "War of the cities" during the Iran–Iraq War. Scuds were used by Iraq during the Gulf War against Israel and coalition targets in Saudi Arabia and Israel.[citation needed]

More than a dozen Scuds were fired from Afghanistan at targets in Pakistan in 1988. There were also a small number of Scud missiles used in the 1994 civil war in Yemen, as well as by Russian forces in Chechnya in 1996 and onwards. The missiles saw some minor use by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi in the Libyan Civil War. They have reportedly been used recently in the ongoing Syrian civil war by the Syrian Army.[50]

Iran–Iraq War

Iraq was the first to use ballistic missiles during the Iran–Iraq War, firing limited numbers of Frog-7 rockets at the towns of Dezful and Ahvaz. On 27 October 1982, Iraq launched its first Scud-Bs at Dezful killing 21 civilians and wounding 100. Scud strikes continued during the following years, intensifying sharply in 1985, with more than 100 missiles falling inside Iran.[51]

In response, the Iranians searched for a source of ballistic weapons, finally meeting success in 1985, when they obtained a small number of Scud-Bs from Libya. These weapons were assigned to a special unit, the Khatam Al-Anbya force, attached to the Pasdaran. On 12 March, the first Iranian Scuds fell in Baghdad and Kirkuk. The strikes infuriated Saddam Hussein, but the Iraqi response was limited by the range of their Scuds, that could not reach Tehran. After a request for TR-1 Temp (SS-12 Scaleboard) missiles was refused by the Soviets, Iraq turned to developing its own long-range version of the Scud missile, that became known as the Al Hussein. In the meantime, both sides quickly ran out of missiles, and had to contact their international partners for resupply. In 1986, Iraq ordered 300 Scud-Bs from the Soviet Union, while Iran turned to North Korea for missile deliveries and for assistance in developing a domestic missile industry.[citation needed]

By 1988 the fighting along the border had reached a stalemate, and both belligerents began employing terror tactics in order to break the deadlock. Lasting from 29 February to 20 April, this conflict became known as the war of the cities and saw an intensive use of Scud missiles in what became known as the "Scud duel". The first rounds were fired by Iraq, when seven Al-Husseins landed in Tehran on 29 February. In all, Iraq fired 189 missiles, mostly of the Al-Hussein type, of which 135 landed in Tehran, 23 in Qom, 22 in Isfahan, four in Tabriz, three in Shiraz and two in Karaj.[51] During this episode, Iraq's missiles killed 2,000 Iranians, injured 6,000, and caused a quarter of Tehran's population of ten million to flee the city.[52] The Iranian response included launching 75 to 77 Hwasong-5s, a North Korean Scud variant, at targets in Iraq, mostly in Baghdad.[51]

Prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the government of Saddam Hussein had asserted that Iran fired dozens of Scud missiles at the People's Mujahedin (MKO) in Iraq in 1999 and 2001, with the MKO itself claiming that Iran fired more missiles at Iraq in 2001 than it did during the entire Iran–Iraq War.[53][54][55]

Civil war in Afghanistan

The most intensive – and less well-known – use of Scud missiles occurred during the civil war in Afghanistan between 1989 and 1992. As compensation for the withdrawal of Soviet troops in 1989, the USSR agreed to deliver sophisticated weapons to the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (DRA), among which were large quantities of Scud-Bs, and possibly some Scud-Cs as well.[6] The first 500 were transferred during the early months of 1989, and soon proved to be a critical strategic asset for the DRA. Every Scud battery was composed of three TELs, three reloading vehicles, a mobile meteorological unit, one tanker and several command and control trucks.[56] During the mujahideen attack against Jalalabad, between March and June 1989, three firing batteries manned by Afghan crews advised by Soviets fired approximately 438 missiles in defense of the embattled garrison.[57] Soon all the heavily contested areas of Afghanistan, such as the Salang Pass and the city of Kandahar, were under attack by Scud missiles.[citation needed]

Due to its imprecision, the Scud was used as an area bombing weapon, and its effect was psychological as well as physical: the missiles would explode without warning, as they travelled faster than the sound they produced in-flight. At the time, reports indicated that Scud attacks had devastating consequences on the morale of the Afghan rebels, who eventually learned that by applying guerilla tactics, and keeping their forces dispersed and hidden, they could minimize casualties from Scud attacks.[51] The Scud was also used as a punitive weapon, striking areas that were held by the resistance. In March 1991, shortly after the town of Khost was captured, it was hit by a Scud attack. On 20 April 1991, the marketplace of Asadabad was hit by two Scuds, which killed 300 and wounded 500 inhabitants. Though the exact toll is unknown, these attacks resulted in heavy civilian casualties.[58] The explosions destroyed the headquarters of Islamic leader Jamil al-Rahman, and killed a number of his followers.[59]

In all, between October 1988 and February 1992, with 1,700 to 2,000 Scud launches,[51] Afghanistan saw the greatest concentration of ballistic weapons fired since World War II.[60] After January 1992, the Soviet advisors were withdrawn, reducing the Afghan army's ability to use their ballistic missiles. On 24 April 1992, the mujahideen forces of Ahmad Shah Massoud captured the main Scud stockpile at Afshur. As the communist government collapsed, the few remaining Scuds and their TELs were divided among the rival factions fighting for power. However, the lack of trained personnel prevented a sustained use of such weapons, and, between April 1992 and 1996, only 44 Scuds were fired in Afghanistan. When the Taliban arrived in power in 1996, they captured a few of the remaining Scuds, but lack of maintenance had reduced the state of the missile force to such an extent that there were only five Scud firings, until 2001. After the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the last four surviving Scud launchers were destroyed in 2005.[61]

Gulf War

Scud attacks

 
Damage from an Iraqi scud missile that hit Ramat Gan, Israel, during the first Gulf War (26 January 1991)

At the outbreak of the Gulf War, Iraq had an effective, if limited, ballistic missile force. Besides the original Scud-B, several local variants had been developed. These included the Al-Hussein, developed during the Iran–Iraq War, the Al-Hijarah, a shortened Al-Hussein, and the Al-Abbas, an extended-range Scud fired from fixed launching sites, that was never used. The Soviet-built MAZ-543 vehicle was the prime launcher, along with a few locally designed TELs, the Al Nida and the Al Waleed.[citation needed]

Scuds were responsible for most of the coalition deaths outside Iraq and Kuwait. Of a total 88 Scud missiles, 46 were fired into Saudi Arabia and 42 into Israel.[62][63] Twenty-eight members of the Pennsylvania National Guard were killed when a Scud struck a United States Army barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.[64]

Scud hunting

 
Military personnel examine the remains of a Scud tail assembly during the Gulf War, 26 May 1992

The United States Air Force organized air patrols over areas where Scud launchers were suspected to operate, namely western Iraq near the Jordanian border, where the Scuds were fired at Israel, and southern Iraq, where they were aimed at Saudi Arabia. A-10 strike aircraft flew over these zones during the day, and F-15Es fitted with LANTIRN pods and synthetic aperture radars patrolled at night. However, the infrared signatures and radar signatures of the Iraqi TELSs were almost impossible to distinguish from ordinary trucks and from the surrounding electromagnetic clutter. During the war, while patrolling, strike aircraft managed to sight mobile TELs on 42 occasions, but only eight times the aircraft were able to locate the targets well enough to release their ordnance.[65] In addition, the Iraqi missile units dispersed their Scud TELs and hid them in culverts, wadis, or under highway bridges. They also practiced "shoot-and-scoot" tactics, withdrawing the launcher to a hidden location immediately after it had fired, while the launch sequence that usually took 90 minutes was reduced to half an hour. This enabled them to preserve their forces, despite optimistic claims by the coalition. A post-war Pentagon study concluded that relatively few launchers had been destroyed by coalition aircraft.[65]

Ground-based special forces from the United Kingdom were covertly inserted into Iraq to locate and destroy Scud launchers, either by directing airstrikes or in some cases attacking them directly with MILAN man-portable missiles. An example was the 8-man SAS patrol designated Bravo Two Zero, led by "Andy McNab" (a pseudonym). This patrol resulted in the death or capture of all but one of its members, "Chris Ryan".[65]

The mobility of Scud TELs allowed for a choice of firing position and increased the survivability of the weapon system to such an extent that, of the approximately 100 launchers claimed destroyed by coalition pilots and special forces in the Gulf War, not a single destruction could be confirmed afterwards. After the war, UNSCOM investigations showed that Iraq still had 12 MAZ-543 vehicles, as well as seven Al-Waleed and Al-Nidal launchers, and 62 complete Al-Hussein missiles.[65]

1994 Yemen civil war

During the 1994 civil war in Yemen, South Yemen separatists fired Scud missiles at the Yemeni capital of Sana'a.[66][67]

Chechen Wars

A small number of Scuds were used by Russian forces in 1996 during the First Chechen War and in late 1999/early 2000 during the Second Chechen War, including during the Battle of Grozny (1999–2000).[68][69] Although frequently reported by media as Scuds, the majority of the 60–100 SRBMs fired in the Chechen Wars were the OTR-21 Tochka (SS-21 Scarab-B).[69]

Libyan Civil War

In May 2011, early during the Libyan Civil War, it was rumored that Scud-B's had been fired by Muammar Gaddafi's forces against anti-Gaddafi forces.[70] The first confirmed use happened several months later, when on 15 August 2011, as anti-Gaddafi forces encircled the Gaddafi-controlled capital of Tripoli, Libyan Army forces near Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte fired a Scud missile toward anti-Gaddafi positions in Cyrenaica, well over 100 kilometers away. The missile struck the desert near Ajdabiya, causing no casualties.[71] On 22 August 2011, a second Scud-B also fired by Gaddafi forces in Sirte. On 23 August, opposition forces in Misrata reported that four Scud-B missiles were fired against the city from Sirte, but had caused no damage. Initial claims that an Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System-equipped US Navy cruiser shot down the missiles over the Gulf of Sidra[72] were later denied by US DoD officials.[73]

Syrian Civil War

On 12 December 2012, it was reported by various outlets that the Syrian Army has begun using short-range ballistic missiles against rebels in the Syrian civil war. According to NATO officials, "allied intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets" had detected the launch of a number (later reports said at least 6) of unguided, short-range ballistic missiles inside Syria. The trajectory and distance travelled indicated that they were Scud-type missiles, although no information on the type of Scud being used was provided at the time. An American intelligence official, who asked not to be identified, confirmed that missiles had been fired from the Damascus area at targets in northern Syria, where the majority of the rebels' bases and facilities are located.[74][75]

Three districts in the rebel-held eastern part of Aleppo and the nearby city of Tel Rifat were hit by ballistic missiles on 22 February 2013, flattening up to 20 houses in each of the places hit. Human Rights Watch inspector Ole Solvang toured the areas targeted by Scuds on 25 February, saying that he "has never seen such destruction" during his past visits to the country. According to the New York-based organization at least 141 people were killed in the attacks, including 71 children. The statement added that there was no sign of rebel presence in the areas hit, meaning that the attacks were unlawful. Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoabi denied the government was using ballistic weapons, even as opposition activists claimed more than 30 had been launched since December 2012.[76][77]

Yemeni Civil War (2015–present)

Houthis possessed 300 Scud missiles as of June 2015, although Saudi-led air strikes allegedly damaged or destroyed "most of them."[78] Between 2015 and November 2017, Houthi forces fired more than 170 ballistic missiles at Saudi Arabia, including Scud, Scarab, and modified SA-2 missiles.[79][80] As of October 2016, there were 85 confirmed interceptions using Patriot missiles.[80] In addition to Scud-B missiles, there is a report of a single Scud-C missile launched on 6 June 2015 at Al-Salil Military Base.[81][82] Local versions of Scud missiles, known as the Burkan 1 and Burkan 2-H, have also been displayed and used by the Houthis beginning in September 2016.[46][39]

Nagorno-Karabakh war (2020)

On 11 October 2020 a Scud missile was fired from the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh at Ganja, Azerbaijan, the country's second largest city. As a result, according to Azerbaijan official sources, 10 people, including four women, were killed and 35 people, including children, were injured.[83][84][85][86]

On 16 October 2020, Artsakh in Nagorno-Karabakh fired another Scud missile at Ganja. Officials in Azerbaijan announced that at least 13 people, including two infants, had been killed, with more than 50 others injured.[87][88][89][90][91][92]

Azerbaijan destroyed at least one Scud missile during the course of the war.[93]

Operators

 
Map with Scud operators in blue and former operators in red
 
Scud launcher of the Afghan National Army.
 
An opposing force Scud launcher in the United States.

Operators of Scuds or Scud derivatives as of 2022 are:[6]

Current operators

  Algeria
(Scud-B, Scud-D): Some sources said that Algeria has received one Scud B or D during the period of 1985–1990
  Armenia
(Scud-D): 8 launchers, 32 missiles[94][95]
  Democratic Republic of the Congo
(Scud-B)[96]
  Egypt
(Scud-B, Hwasong-6, Project T)
  Iran
(Scud-B, Hwasong-5, Shahab-1, Shahab-2, Shahab-3, Rodong-1, Qiam 1)
  Kazakhstan
(Scud-B)
  Libya
(Scud-B)
  Myanmar
(Hwasong-6, Hwasong-5[97][98])
  North Korea
(Scud-E, Scud-B, Scud-C, Hwasong-5, Hwasong-6, Rodong-1)
  Oman
( Scud-B)
  Syria
(Scud-B, Scud-C, Scud-D, Hwasong-6, Rodong-1)
  United States
c. 30 Scud-B missiles and four TELs acquired in 1995, and converted into targets by Lockheed Martin.[6]
  Vietnam
(Scud-B, Scud-D, Scud-C, Hwasong-5, Hwasong-6)
  Yemen
(Scud-B, Scud-C, Volcano 1, Volcano H-2)

Former operators

  Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
(Scud-B) – 4 launchers, ~50 missiles, retired in 2005.[61]
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
(Scud-B, Scud-C?) – 43+ launchers, 2000+ missiles.
  Belarus
60 launchers, retired in May 2005
  Bulgaria
(Scud-B) – 36 launchers, retired, destroyed[99]
  Czechoslovakia
(Scud-B) – 30 launchers
  Czech Republic
(Scud-B) – 27 launchers, retired
  East Germany
(Scud-A, Scud-B) – 24 launchers plus decoys,[100] retired 1990
  Hungary
(Scud-B) – 9 launchers, retired, destroyed in 1995[101]
  Iraq
(Scud-B, Al-Hussein, Al-Abbas) – 24–36 launchers[102] plus decoys,[100] 819 missiles,[102] plus 11 MAZ-543 launchers for Al-Hussein.
  Poland
(Scud-B) – 30 launchers, retired in 1989
  Romania
(Scud-B) – 18 launchers, retired
  Russia
(Scud-C, Scud-D) – ~300 launchers remaining at the dissolution of the Soviet Union, retired
  South Yemen
6 launchers
  Soviet Union
~660 launchers
  Slovakia
(Scud-B)-retired
  United Arab Emirates
25 Hwasong-5s purchased from North Korea in 1989. The UAE military were not satisfied with the quality of the missiles, and they were kept in storage.[12]
  Ukraine
50 launchers and 185 missiles, destroyed[103]

See also

References

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Further reading

External links

scud, missile, other, uses, scud, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, series, tactical, ballistic, missiles, developed, soviet, union, during, cold, exported, widely, both, second, third, world, countries, term, comes, from, nato, rep. For other uses see Scud disambiguation SS 1 redirects here For other uses see SS 1 disambiguation A Scud missile is one of a series of tactical ballistic missiles developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War It was exported widely to both Second and Third World countries The term comes from the NATO reporting name attached to the missile by Western intelligence agencies The Russian names for the missile are the R 11 the first version and the R 17 later R 300 Elbrus later developments The name Scud has been widely used to refer to these missiles and the wide variety of derivative variants developed in other countries based on the Soviet design ScudScud missile on TEL vehicle National Museum of Military History BulgariaTypeTactical ballistic missilePlace of originSoviet UnionService historyIn service1957 present Scud A 1964 present Scud B 1965 present Scud C 1989 present Scud D Used bysee OperatorsWarsYom Kippur War Iran Iraq War Gulf War Afghan Civil War 1989 1992 Yemeni Civil War 1994 First Chechen War Second Chechen War Libyan Civil War Syrian Civil War Yemeni Civil War 2015 present Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen 2020 Nagorno Karabakh conflictProduction historyDesignedFrom 1950SpecificationsMass4 400 kg 9 700 lb Scud A 5 900 kg 13 000 lb Scud B 6 400 kg 14 100 lb Scud C 6 500 kg 14 300 lb Scud DLength11 25 m 36 9 ft Diameter0 88 m 2 ft 11 in WarheadConventional high explosive Fragmentation Chemical VX warheadEngineSingle stage liquid fuelOperationalrange180 km 110 mi Scud A 300 km 190 mi Scud B 600 km 370 mi Scud C 700 km 430 mi Scud DMaximum speedMach 4 1 7 km s 1 1 mi s clarification needed GuidancesystemInertial guidance Scud D adds DSMAC terminal guidanceAccuracy3 000 m 9 800 ft Scud A 450 m 1 480 ft Scud B 700 m 2 300 ft Scud C 50 m 160 ft Scud DScud missiles have been used in combat since the 1970s mostly in wars in the Middle East They became familiar to the Western public during the 1991 Persian Gulf War when Iraq fired dozens at Israel and Saudi Arabia In Russian service it is being replaced by the 9K720 Iskander Contents 1 Development 2 Variants 2 1 Scud A 2 2 Scud B 2 3 Scud C 2 4 Scud D 2 5 Characteristics 2 6 Al Hussein and Iraqi variants 2 7 Hwasong 5 Shahab 1 2 8 Hwasong 6 Shahab 2 2 9 Hwasong 7 Shahab 3 2 10 Hwasong 9 Scud ER 2 11 Qiam 1 2 12 Burkan 1 2 13 Burkan 2 H 3 Operational use 3 1 Iran Iraq War 3 2 Civil war in Afghanistan 3 3 Gulf War 3 3 1 Scud attacks 3 3 2 Scud hunting 3 4 1994 Yemen civil war 3 5 Chechen Wars 3 6 Libyan Civil War 3 7 Syrian Civil War 3 8 Yemeni Civil War 2015 present 3 9 Nagorno Karabakh war 2020 4 Operators 4 1 Current operators 4 2 Former operators 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDevelopment Edit MAZ 543 9P117 Launcher with 8K14 rocket of 9K72 missile complex Elbrus Scud B Saint Petersburg Artillery Museum Russia 2007 The first use of the term Scud was in the NATO name SS 1b Scud A applied to the R 11 Zemlya ballistic missile The earlier R 1 missile had carried the NATO name SS 1 Scunner but was of a very different design almost directly a copy of the German V 2 rocket The R 11 used technology gained from the V 2 as well but was a new design smaller and differently shaped than the V 2 and R 1 weapons The R 11 was developed by the Korolyev OKB 1 and entered service in 1957 The most revolutionary innovation in the R 11 was the engine designed by A M Isaev Far simpler than the V 2 s multi chamber design and employing an anti oscillation baffle to prevent chugging it was a forerunner to the larger engines used in Soviet launch vehicles citation needed Further developed variants were the R 17 later R 300 Elbrus SS 1c Scud B in 1961 and the SS 1d Scud C in 1965 both of which could carry either a conventional high explosive a 5 to 80 kiloton thermonuclear or a chemical thickened VX warhead The SS 1e Scud D variant developed in the 1980s can deliver a terminally guided warhead capable of greater precision citation needed All models are 11 35 m 37 2 ft long except Scud A which is 1 m 3 ft 3 in shorter and 0 88 m 2 ft 11 in in diameter They are propelled by a single liquid fuel rocket engine burning kerosene and corrosion inhibited red fuming nitric acid IRFNA with unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine UDMH Russian TG 02 like German Tonka 250 as liquid igniter self ignition with IRFNA in all models citation needed The missile reaches a maximum speed of Mach 5 citation needed Variants EditScud A Edit Main article R 11 Zemlya The first of the Scud series designated R 11 SS 1B Scud A originated in a 1951 requirement for a ballistic missile with similar performance to the German V 2 rocket The R 11 was developed by engineer Viktor Makeev who was then working in the OKB 1 headed by Sergey Korolev It first flew on 18 April 1953 was fitted with an Isayev engine using kerosene and nitric acid as propellant On 13 December 1953 a production order was passed with SKB 385 in Zlatoust a factory dedicated to producing long range rockets In June 1955 Makeev was appointed chief designer of the SKB 385 to oversee the program and in July the R 11 was formally accepted into military service 2 The definitive R 11M designed to carry a nuclear warhead was accepted officially into service on 1 April 1958 The launch system was placed on an IS 2 chassis and received the GRAU designation 8K11 3 only 100 Scud A launchers were built 4 The R 11M had a maximum range of 270 km but when carrying a nuclear warhead this was reduced to 150 km 5 Its purpose was strictly as a mobile nuclear strike vector giving the Soviet Army the ability to hit European targets from forward areas armed with a nuclear warhead with an estimated yield of 50 kilotons 6 A naval variant the R 11FM SS N 1 Scud A was first tested in February 1955 and was first launched from a converted Project 611 Zulu class submarine in September of the same year While the initial design was done by Korolev s OKB 1 the program was transferred to Makeev s SKB 385 in August 1955 2 It became operational in 1959 and was deployed onboard Project 611 and Project 629 Golf Class submarines During its service 77 launches were conducted of which 59 were successful 7 Scud B Edit Main article R 17 Elbrus The rear section of an 8K14 missile displayed at the Poznan Museum of Armaments pl Muzeum Uzbrojenia w Poznaniu Poland The fixed fins and the graphite vanes that control the missile s path can be seen The successor to the R 11 the R 17 SS 1C Scud B renamed R 300 in the 1970s was the most prolific of the series with a production run estimated at 7 000 It served in 32 countries and four countries besides the Soviet Union manufactured copied versions 6 The first launch was conducted in 1961 and it entered service in 1964 1 The R 17 was an improved version of the R 11 It could carry nuclear chemical conventional or fragmentation weapons 6 At first the Scud B was carried on a tracked transporter erector launcher TEL similar to that of the Scud A designated 2P19 but this was not successful and a wheeled replacement was designed by the Titan Central Design Bureau becoming operational in 1967 8 The new MAZ 543 vehicle was officially designated 9P117 Uragan The launch sequence could be conducted autonomously but was usually directed from a separate command vehicle The missile is raised to a vertical position by means of hydraulically powered cranes which usually takes four minutes while the total sequence lasts about one hour 6 2T3M1 Transport for the Soviet Scud A Launchers Scud C Edit The Makeyev OKB also worked on an extended range version of the R 17 known in the West as SS 1d Scud C that was first launched from Kapustin Yar in 1965 Its range was brought up to 500 600 km but at the cost of a greatly reduced accuracy and warhead size Eventually the advent of more modern types in the same category such as the TR 1 Temp SS 12 Scaleboard made the Scud C redundant and it apparently did not enter service with the Soviet armed forces 9 Scud D Edit The R 17 VTO SS 1e Scud D project was an attempt to enhance the accuracy of the R 17 The Central Scientific Research Institute for Automation and Hydraulics TsNIAAG began work on the project in 1968 but the first test launch was conducted only in September 1979 Development continued through the 1980s until the system was accepted into initial service as the 9K720 Aerofon in 1989 10 However by this time more advanced weapons were in use such as the OTR 21 Tochka SS 21 and the R 400 Oka SS 23 and the Scud D was not acquired by the Soviet armed forces Instead it was proposed for export as an upgrade for Scud B users in the 1990s 10 Unlike previous Scud versions the 9K720 had a warhead that separated from the missile s body and was fitted with its own terminal guidance system With a TV camera fitted in the nose the system could compare the target area with data from an onboard computer library DSMAC 10 In this way it was thought to attain a circular error probable CEP of 50 m Characteristics Edit NATO codename Scud A Scud B Scud C Scud DU S DIA SS 1b SS 1c SS 1d SS 1eOfficial designation R 11 R 17 R 300Deployment Date 1957 1964 1965 1989Length 10 7 m 11 25 m 11 25 m 12 29 mWidth 0 88 m 0 88 m 0 88 m 0 88 mLaunch weight 4 400 kg 5 900 kg 6 400 kg 6 500 kgRange 180 km 300 km 600 km 700 kmPayload 950 kg 985 kg 600 kg 985 kgAccuracy CEP 3 000 m 450 m 700 m 50 mAl Hussein and Iraqi variants Edit Main article Al Hussein missile Main article Al Abbas missile Main article Al Hijarah missile Hwasong 5 Shahab 1 Edit Main article Hwasong 5 Main article Shahab 1 North Korea obtained its first Scud Bs from Egypt in 1979 or 1980 11 These missiles were reverse engineered and reproduced using North Korean infrastructure including the 125 factory at Pyongyang a research and development institute at Sanum dong and the Musudan ri Launch Facility 12 The first prototypes were completed in 1984 and designated Hwasong 5 They were exact replicas of the R 17Es obtained from Egypt The first test flights occurred in April 1984 but the first version saw only limited production and no operational deployment as its purpose was only to validate the production process citation needed Production of the definitive version began at a slow rate in 1985 The type incorporated several minor improvements over the original Soviet design The range was increased by 10 to 15 percent and it could carry High Explosive HE or cluster chemical warheads Throughout the production cycle until it was phased out in favour of the Hwasong 6 in 1989 the DPRK manufacturers are thought to have carried out small enhancements in particular to the guidance system 12 In 1985 Iran acquired 90 to 100 Hwasong 5 missiles from North Korea A production line was also established in Iran where the Hwasong 5 was produced as the Shahab 1 12 Hwasong 6 Shahab 2 Edit Main article Hwasong 6 Main article Shahab 2 The Hwasong 6 was first test flown in June 1990 and entered full scale production the same year or in 1991 until it was superseded by the Rodong 1 It features an improved guidance system a range of 500 km but had its payload reduced to 770 kg though the dimensions are identical to the original Scud Due to difficulties in procuring MAZ 543 TELs the North Koreans had to produce a local copy By 1999 North Korea was estimated to have produced 600 to 1 000 Hwasong 6 missiles of which 25 served for testing 300 to 500 were exported and 300 to 600 are used by the Korean People s Army 13 The Hwasong 6 was exported to Iran where it is known as the Shahab 2 and to Syria where it is manufactured under license with Chinese assistance 13 Also according to SIPRI 150 Scud C were exported to Syria in 1991 96 5 to Libya in 1999 45 to Yemen in 2001 02 14 Hwasong 7 Shahab 3 Edit Main article Hwasong 7 Main article Shahab 3 The Nodong also referred as RoDong Hwasong 7 was the first North Korean missile to feature important modifications from the Scud design 15 Development began in 1988 and the first missile was launched in 1990 but it apparently exploded on its launch pad A second test was carried out in May 1993 successfully 11 13 The main characteristics of the Rodong are a range of 1000 km and a CEP estimated at 2 000 4 000 m giving the North Koreans the ability to strike Japan 16 The missile is substantially larger than the Hwasong series and its Isayev 9D21 engine was upgraded with help from Makeyev OKB Some assistance came also from China and Ukraine while a new TEL was designed using an Italian Iveco truck chassis and an Austrian crane The rapidity with which the Rodong was designed and exported after just two tests came as a surprise for many Western observers and led to some speculation that it was in fact based on a cancelled Soviet project from the Cold War period but this has not been proven 17 Iran is known to have financed much of the Rodong program and in return is allowed to produce the missile as the Shahab 3 While the first prototypes may have been acquired as early as 1992 production began only in 2001 with assistance from Russia citation needed The Rodong has also been exported to Egypt and Libya Hwasong 9 Scud ER Edit The Hwasong 9 18 dubious discuss also called the Scud ER extended range is essentially a North Korean modification of the Hwasong 6 that exchanges payload for greater range estimates range from 700 800 km 430 500 mi to as much as 995 km 618 mi through a reduced payload of 450 500 kg 990 1 100 lb and enlarging the fuel and oxidant tanks along with a slight enlargement of the fuselage The missile is single stage and road mobile employing an HE submunition chemical or potentially miniaturized nuclear warhead with a CEP of 3 km 1 9 mi Its range allows the North Korean military to strike anywhere on the Korean peninsula and threaten areas of Japan 19 20 21 Development of the Hwasong 9 reportedly began in 1991 and production started in 1994 Deployment began in 2003 intelligence imagery first observed it in 2005 and it was only first revealed publicly in 2007 Reports suggest Syria received Scud ER missiles in 2000 giving them the ability to target all of Israel and southeastern Turkey including Ankara Syria reportedly converted its own Hwasong 6 production line in order to make the longer range Hwasong 9 19 20 21 Scud ER Hwasong 9 demonstrated range of 1 000 km with 500 kg payload 22 23 South Korean and United States intelligence made assessment that missile can travel over 1 000 km Japan previously rated its range at 1 000 km in 2015 white paper and considers to increase range estimate in 2016 s white paper 24 The UN confirmed North Korea assisted Syria in development of manoeuvrable vehicle for Scud D since 2008 25 The UN also confirmed that the missile guidance and electronics were upgraded improved 26 Qiam 1 Edit Main article Qiam 1 Iran began development of the indigenous Qiam missile prior to 2010 when it was first publicly tested 27 It is developed from the Shahab 2 Hwasong 6 28 The Qiam 1 has a range of 750 km 470 mi and 10 m 33 ft CEP accuracy 28 The most noticeable difference from the Shahab 2 is a lack of fins which could be used to reduce the missile s radar signature during ascent as fins reflect radar 29 Removing fins from a missile also reduces the structural mass so the payload weight or missile range can be increased 29 28 Without the fins and associated drag the missile can be more responsive to changes in trajectory 29 Iranian sources cite an improved guidance system on the missile and analysts note that adjusting the missile s in flight trajectory without fins requires a highly responsive guidance system 27 28 The Qiam 1 s accuracy is also improved with the addition of a separable warhead 29 Other changes to the warhead include a baby bottle shape possibly to increase drag and thus stability during reentry at the expense of range potentially increasing accuracy The shape can also increase the terminal velocity of the warhead making it harder to intercept 30 28 31 Deliveries began in either 2010 or 2011 32 33 The missile s first combat use was against ISIS militants on 18 June 2017 34 The Burkan 2 H used by the Houthis in Yemen is potentially related or the Qiam 1 has potentially been used by that group 35 36 Burkan 1 Edit Main article Volcano 1 The Houthi forces in Yemen unveiled the Burkan 1 37 also spelled as Borkan 1 and Burqan 1 38 on 2 September 2016 when it was fired toward King Fahd International Airport 39 40 The missile s range is 800 kilometres 500 mi greater than the Soviet made Scud B missiles the Houthi forces took control of in 2015 40 41 Missiles shot down mid flight in October 2016 and July 2017 were claimed to target the holy city of Mecca by Saudi Arabia while the Houthis claimed the targets were airports in the region 42 43 Burkan 2 H Edit Main article Volcano H 2 The Houthi forces in Yemen unveiled the Burkan 2 H 44 also spelled as Borkan H2 and Burqan 2H 38 when it was launched at Saudi Arabia on 22 July 2017 45 Analysts identify it as based on the Iranian Qiam 1 Scud C 46 36 Iranian Shahab 2 Scud C 46 or Scud D 37 missile Pictures indicate a baby bottle re entry vehicle like the Shahab 3 and Qiam 1 missiles The missile s exact range is unknown but is greater than 800 kilometres 500 mi 47 It has been launched in July 2017 and a second launch was claimed on 4 November 2017 with the missile shot down over the Saudi Arabian capital Riyadh 38 According to the US State Department the missile was actually an Iranian Qiam 1 35 Saudi Arabia s Ministry of Culture and Information also supplied the Associated Press with pictures from a military briefing of what it claimed were components from the intercepted missile bearing Iranian markings matching those on other pictures of the Qiam 1 36 Operational use Edit Scud Transporter Erector Launcher TEL with missile in upright position RAF Spadeadam England 2005 An R 17 on a reload transport trailer with a ZIL 131 tractor Tolyatti Technical Museum Tolyatti Russia 2010 The Scud missile family is one of the few ballistic missiles to be extensively used in actual warfare by different forces second only to the V 2 in terms of combat launches The first recorded combat use of the Scud was at the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1973 when three missiles were fired by Egypt against Israeli held Arish and bridgehead on the western bank of the Suez canal 48 Seven Israeli soldiers were killed 49 Libya responded to U S airstrikes in 1986 by firing two Scud missiles at a U S Coast Guard navigation station on the nearby Italian island of Lampedusa which missed their target Scud missiles were used in several regional conflicts that included use by Soviet and Afghan Communist forces in Afghanistan and Iranians and Iraqis against one another in the so called War of the cities during the Iran Iraq War Scuds were used by Iraq during the Gulf War against Israel and coalition targets in Saudi Arabia and Israel citation needed More than a dozen Scuds were fired from Afghanistan at targets in Pakistan in 1988 There were also a small number of Scud missiles used in the 1994 civil war in Yemen as well as by Russian forces in Chechnya in 1996 and onwards The missiles saw some minor use by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi in the Libyan Civil War They have reportedly been used recently in the ongoing Syrian civil war by the Syrian Army 50 Iran Iraq War Edit Further information Iran Iraq War Iraq was the first to use ballistic missiles during the Iran Iraq War firing limited numbers of Frog 7 rockets at the towns of Dezful and Ahvaz On 27 October 1982 Iraq launched its first Scud Bs at Dezful killing 21 civilians and wounding 100 Scud strikes continued during the following years intensifying sharply in 1985 with more than 100 missiles falling inside Iran 51 In response the Iranians searched for a source of ballistic weapons finally meeting success in 1985 when they obtained a small number of Scud Bs from Libya These weapons were assigned to a special unit the Khatam Al Anbya force attached to the Pasdaran On 12 March the first Iranian Scuds fell in Baghdad and Kirkuk The strikes infuriated Saddam Hussein but the Iraqi response was limited by the range of their Scuds that could not reach Tehran After a request for TR 1 Temp SS 12 Scaleboard missiles was refused by the Soviets Iraq turned to developing its own long range version of the Scud missile that became known as the Al Hussein In the meantime both sides quickly ran out of missiles and had to contact their international partners for resupply In 1986 Iraq ordered 300 Scud Bs from the Soviet Union while Iran turned to North Korea for missile deliveries and for assistance in developing a domestic missile industry citation needed By 1988 the fighting along the border had reached a stalemate and both belligerents began employing terror tactics in order to break the deadlock Lasting from 29 February to 20 April this conflict became known as the war of the cities and saw an intensive use of Scud missiles in what became known as the Scud duel The first rounds were fired by Iraq when seven Al Husseins landed in Tehran on 29 February In all Iraq fired 189 missiles mostly of the Al Hussein type of which 135 landed in Tehran 23 in Qom 22 in Isfahan four in Tabriz three in Shiraz and two in Karaj 51 During this episode Iraq s missiles killed 2 000 Iranians injured 6 000 and caused a quarter of Tehran s population of ten million to flee the city 52 The Iranian response included launching 75 to 77 Hwasong 5s a North Korean Scud variant at targets in Iraq mostly in Baghdad 51 Prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq the government of Saddam Hussein had asserted that Iran fired dozens of Scud missiles at the People s Mujahedin MKO in Iraq in 1999 and 2001 with the MKO itself claiming that Iran fired more missiles at Iraq in 2001 than it did during the entire Iran Iraq War 53 54 55 Civil war in Afghanistan Edit The most intensive and less well known use of Scud missiles occurred during the civil war in Afghanistan between 1989 and 1992 As compensation for the withdrawal of Soviet troops in 1989 the USSR agreed to deliver sophisticated weapons to the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan DRA among which were large quantities of Scud Bs and possibly some Scud Cs as well 6 The first 500 were transferred during the early months of 1989 and soon proved to be a critical strategic asset for the DRA Every Scud battery was composed of three TELs three reloading vehicles a mobile meteorological unit one tanker and several command and control trucks 56 During the mujahideen attack against Jalalabad between March and June 1989 three firing batteries manned by Afghan crews advised by Soviets fired approximately 438 missiles in defense of the embattled garrison 57 Soon all the heavily contested areas of Afghanistan such as the Salang Pass and the city of Kandahar were under attack by Scud missiles citation needed Due to its imprecision the Scud was used as an area bombing weapon and its effect was psychological as well as physical the missiles would explode without warning as they travelled faster than the sound they produced in flight At the time reports indicated that Scud attacks had devastating consequences on the morale of the Afghan rebels who eventually learned that by applying guerilla tactics and keeping their forces dispersed and hidden they could minimize casualties from Scud attacks 51 The Scud was also used as a punitive weapon striking areas that were held by the resistance In March 1991 shortly after the town of Khost was captured it was hit by a Scud attack On 20 April 1991 the marketplace of Asadabad was hit by two Scuds which killed 300 and wounded 500 inhabitants Though the exact toll is unknown these attacks resulted in heavy civilian casualties 58 The explosions destroyed the headquarters of Islamic leader Jamil al Rahman and killed a number of his followers 59 In all between October 1988 and February 1992 with 1 700 to 2 000 Scud launches 51 Afghanistan saw the greatest concentration of ballistic weapons fired since World War II 60 After January 1992 the Soviet advisors were withdrawn reducing the Afghan army s ability to use their ballistic missiles On 24 April 1992 the mujahideen forces of Ahmad Shah Massoud captured the main Scud stockpile at Afshur As the communist government collapsed the few remaining Scuds and their TELs were divided among the rival factions fighting for power However the lack of trained personnel prevented a sustained use of such weapons and between April 1992 and 1996 only 44 Scuds were fired in Afghanistan When the Taliban arrived in power in 1996 they captured a few of the remaining Scuds but lack of maintenance had reduced the state of the missile force to such an extent that there were only five Scud firings until 2001 After the U S invasion of Afghanistan the last four surviving Scud launchers were destroyed in 2005 61 Gulf War Edit Scud attacks Edit Damage from an Iraqi scud missile that hit Ramat Gan Israel during the first Gulf War 26 January 1991 At the outbreak of the Gulf War Iraq had an effective if limited ballistic missile force Besides the original Scud B several local variants had been developed These included the Al Hussein developed during the Iran Iraq War the Al Hijarah a shortened Al Hussein and the Al Abbas an extended range Scud fired from fixed launching sites that was never used The Soviet built MAZ 543 vehicle was the prime launcher along with a few locally designed TELs the Al Nida and the Al Waleed citation needed Scuds were responsible for most of the coalition deaths outside Iraq and Kuwait Of a total 88 Scud missiles 46 were fired into Saudi Arabia and 42 into Israel 62 63 Twenty eight members of the Pennsylvania National Guard were killed when a Scud struck a United States Army barracks in Dhahran Saudi Arabia 64 Scud hunting Edit Military personnel examine the remains of a Scud tail assembly during the Gulf War 26 May 1992The United States Air Force organized air patrols over areas where Scud launchers were suspected to operate namely western Iraq near the Jordanian border where the Scuds were fired at Israel and southern Iraq where they were aimed at Saudi Arabia A 10 strike aircraft flew over these zones during the day and F 15Es fitted with LANTIRN pods and synthetic aperture radars patrolled at night However the infrared signatures and radar signatures of the Iraqi TELSs were almost impossible to distinguish from ordinary trucks and from the surrounding electromagnetic clutter During the war while patrolling strike aircraft managed to sight mobile TELs on 42 occasions but only eight times the aircraft were able to locate the targets well enough to release their ordnance 65 In addition the Iraqi missile units dispersed their Scud TELs and hid them in culverts wadis or under highway bridges They also practiced shoot and scoot tactics withdrawing the launcher to a hidden location immediately after it had fired while the launch sequence that usually took 90 minutes was reduced to half an hour This enabled them to preserve their forces despite optimistic claims by the coalition A post war Pentagon study concluded that relatively few launchers had been destroyed by coalition aircraft 65 Ground based special forces from the United Kingdom were covertly inserted into Iraq to locate and destroy Scud launchers either by directing airstrikes or in some cases attacking them directly with MILAN man portable missiles An example was the 8 man SAS patrol designated Bravo Two Zero led by Andy McNab a pseudonym This patrol resulted in the death or capture of all but one of its members Chris Ryan 65 The mobility of Scud TELs allowed for a choice of firing position and increased the survivability of the weapon system to such an extent that of the approximately 100 launchers claimed destroyed by coalition pilots and special forces in the Gulf War not a single destruction could be confirmed afterwards After the war UNSCOM investigations showed that Iraq still had 12 MAZ 543 vehicles as well as seven Al Waleed and Al Nidal launchers and 62 complete Al Hussein missiles 65 1994 Yemen civil war Edit During the 1994 civil war in Yemen South Yemen separatists fired Scud missiles at the Yemeni capital of Sana a 66 67 Chechen Wars Edit A small number of Scuds were used by Russian forces in 1996 during the First Chechen War and in late 1999 early 2000 during the Second Chechen War including during the Battle of Grozny 1999 2000 68 69 Although frequently reported by media as Scuds the majority of the 60 100 SRBMs fired in the Chechen Wars were the OTR 21 Tochka SS 21 Scarab B 69 Libyan Civil War Edit In May 2011 early during the Libyan Civil War it was rumored that Scud B s had been fired by Muammar Gaddafi s forces against anti Gaddafi forces 70 The first confirmed use happened several months later when on 15 August 2011 as anti Gaddafi forces encircled the Gaddafi controlled capital of Tripoli Libyan Army forces near Gaddafi s hometown of Sirte fired a Scud missile toward anti Gaddafi positions in Cyrenaica well over 100 kilometers away The missile struck the desert near Ajdabiya causing no casualties 71 On 22 August 2011 a second Scud B also fired by Gaddafi forces in Sirte On 23 August opposition forces in Misrata reported that four Scud B missiles were fired against the city from Sirte but had caused no damage Initial claims that an Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System equipped US Navy cruiser shot down the missiles over the Gulf of Sidra 72 were later denied by US DoD officials 73 Syrian Civil War Edit On 12 December 2012 it was reported by various outlets that the Syrian Army has begun using short range ballistic missiles against rebels in the Syrian civil war According to NATO officials allied intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance assets had detected the launch of a number later reports said at least 6 of unguided short range ballistic missiles inside Syria The trajectory and distance travelled indicated that they were Scud type missiles although no information on the type of Scud being used was provided at the time An American intelligence official who asked not to be identified confirmed that missiles had been fired from the Damascus area at targets in northern Syria where the majority of the rebels bases and facilities are located 74 75 Three districts in the rebel held eastern part of Aleppo and the nearby city of Tel Rifat were hit by ballistic missiles on 22 February 2013 flattening up to 20 houses in each of the places hit Human Rights Watch inspector Ole Solvang toured the areas targeted by Scuds on 25 February saying that he has never seen such destruction during his past visits to the country According to the New York based organization at least 141 people were killed in the attacks including 71 children The statement added that there was no sign of rebel presence in the areas hit meaning that the attacks were unlawful Syrian Information Minister Omran al Zoabi denied the government was using ballistic weapons even as opposition activists claimed more than 30 had been launched since December 2012 76 77 Yemeni Civil War 2015 present Edit Houthis possessed 300 Scud missiles as of June 2015 although Saudi led air strikes allegedly damaged or destroyed most of them 78 Between 2015 and November 2017 Houthi forces fired more than 170 ballistic missiles at Saudi Arabia including Scud Scarab and modified SA 2 missiles 79 80 As of October 2016 there were 85 confirmed interceptions using Patriot missiles 80 In addition to Scud B missiles there is a report of a single Scud C missile launched on 6 June 2015 at Al Salil Military Base 81 82 Local versions of Scud missiles known as the Burkan 1 and Burkan 2 H have also been displayed and used by the Houthis beginning in September 2016 46 39 Nagorno Karabakh war 2020 Edit On 11 October 2020 a Scud missile was fired from the territory of Nagorno Karabakh at Ganja Azerbaijan the country s second largest city As a result according to Azerbaijan official sources 10 people including four women were killed and 35 people including children were injured 83 84 85 86 On 16 October 2020 Artsakh in Nagorno Karabakh fired another Scud missile at Ganja Officials in Azerbaijan announced that at least 13 people including two infants had been killed with more than 50 others injured 87 88 89 90 91 92 Azerbaijan destroyed at least one Scud missile during the course of the war 93 Operators Edit Map with Scud operators in blue and former operators in red Scud launcher of the Afghan National Army An opposing force Scud launcher in the United States Operators of Scuds or Scud derivatives as of 2022 are 6 Current operators Edit Algeria Scud B Scud D Some sources said that Algeria has received one Scud B or D during the period of 1985 1990 Armenia Scud D 8 launchers 32 missiles 94 95 Democratic Republic of the Congo Scud B 96 Egypt Scud B Hwasong 6 Project T Iran Scud B Hwasong 5 Shahab 1 Shahab 2 Shahab 3 Rodong 1 Qiam 1 Kazakhstan Scud B Libya Scud B Myanmar Hwasong 6 Hwasong 5 97 98 North Korea Scud E Scud B Scud C Hwasong 5 Hwasong 6 Rodong 1 Oman Scud B Syria Scud B Scud C Scud D Hwasong 6 Rodong 1 United States c 30 Scud B missiles and four TELs acquired in 1995 and converted into targets by Lockheed Martin 6 Vietnam Scud B Scud D Scud C Hwasong 5 Hwasong 6 Yemen Scud B Scud C Volcano 1 Volcano H 2 Former operators Edit Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Scud B 4 launchers 50 missiles retired in 2005 61 Democratic Republic of Afghanistan Scud B Scud C 43 launchers 2000 missiles Belarus 60 launchers retired in May 2005 Bulgaria Scud B 36 launchers retired destroyed 99 Czechoslovakia Scud B 30 launchers Czech Republic Scud B 27 launchers retired East Germany Scud A Scud B 24 launchers plus decoys 100 retired 1990 Hungary Scud B 9 launchers retired destroyed in 1995 101 Iraq Scud B Al Hussein Al Abbas 24 36 launchers 102 plus decoys 100 819 missiles 102 plus 11 MAZ 543 launchers for Al Hussein Poland Scud B 30 launchers retired in 1989 Romania Scud B 18 launchers retired Russia Scud C Scud D 300 launchers remaining at the dissolution of the Soviet Union retired South Yemen 6 launchers Soviet Union 660 launchers Slovakia Scud B retired United Arab Emirates 25 Hwasong 5s purchased from North Korea in 1989 The UAE military were not satisfied with the quality of the missiles and they were kept in storage 12 Ukraine 50 launchers and 185 missiles destroyed 103 See also EditList of missiles Shahab 1 An Iranian copy of the Scud B 9K720 Iskander Russian Scud replacementReferences Edit a b Wade Mark R 17 Encyclopedia Astronautica Archived from the original on 19 February 2008 Retrieved 13 February 2008 a b Wade Mark R 11 Encyclopedia Astronautica Archived from the original on 5 February 2008 Retrieved 17 February 2008 Zaloga p 7 Elbrus SS 1C Scud B Archived 16 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Military Today Zaloga p 4 a b c d e f g SS 1 Scud R 11 8K11 R 11FM SS N 1B and R 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Media 17 October 2020 Retrieved 17 October 2020 News Mirage 17 October 2020 Azerbaijan says 13 killed in new Scud missile strike by Armenia Mirage News www miragenews com Retrieved 17 October 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help r KarabakhConflict Russian made SCUD ballistic missile that Armenia dropped to Ganja last night 13 October 2020 retrieved 17 October 2020 Agencies 17 October 2020 Nagorno Karabakh Azerbaijan says 12 civilians killed by shelling in Ganja The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 17 October 2020 The Fight for Nagorno Karabakh Documenting Losses on the Sides of Armenia and Azerbaijan 2020 Gary K Bertsch 2000 Crossroads and conflict security and foreign policy in the Caucasus and Central Asia Routledge p 173 ISBN 0415922747 Obnarodovan ezhegodnyj otchet po eksportu i importu vooruzhenij v Registre obychnyh vooruzhenij OON United Nations Register of Conventional Arms Memo ru Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Iran sold Scud missiles to Congolese By Bill Gertz THE WASHINGTON TIMES 22 November 1999 page 1 Fears Myanmar buying missiles from North Korea raise Canberra s alarm 5 February 2018 Myanmar buying N Korean arms 7 February 2018 Vpros na praznika Koj unishozhi raketniya shit na Blgariya Pan bg 30 December 2015 Archived from the original on 14 May 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2017 a b East German army unit finds skills still in demand after reunification Deutsche Welle 16 August 2010 Archived from the original on 12 September 2013 Retrieved 14 December 2012 Photographic image of Scud B missiles JPG Img index hu 1995 Archived from the original on 31 July 2013 Retrieved 15 January 2017 a b Scud Iraq Special weapons Federation of American Scientists Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 14 November 2015 Edinaya Rossiya SShA pomogli Ukraine utilizirovat 185 raket Skad Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Further reading EditZaloga Steven Illustrated by Jim Laurier and Lee Ray 2006 Scud Ballistic Missile Launch Systems 1955 2005 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 947 9 Yousaf Mohammad Adkin Mark 2001 Afghanistan the bear trap Casemate ISBN 0 9711709 2 4 External links Edit Look up Scud or scud in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scud Jane s Intelligence Review June 1995 Strategic Delivery Systems Federation of American Scientists Retrieved 5 September 2008 Iraq s Scud Ballistic Missiles GulfLink 25 July 2000 Retrieved 12 February 2008 GlobalSecurity org R 11 SS 1b SCUD R 11 SS 1B SCUD A A Lucid Interval Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scud missile amp oldid 1126209202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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