- A Serious Threat to the American Air Force
- By Allister Maunk, AIA - May 23, 2005
Iran mullahs a purchase of the Russian air-defense S-300 system,
Iranian ambassador in Moscow said, sources in Tehran report. Ambassador
Gholam Reza Shafei noted, that such a deal would be important
for developing of the military-technological cooperation between
the countries.
S-300PMU surface to air missile - NATO code named SA-10C Grumble
(nick-named in Russia "Favorit"), is a new and highly capable
version of the older long-range all-altitude SA-10, at least 2
or 3 of which Tehran purchased in the late eighties.
There were reports that as early as 1994 Iran ordered six SA-10
batteries [96 missiles] from Russia, but as of 2005 no deliveries
had taken place. In February 1997 a $90 million sale of three
older SA-10 SAM systems and 36 missiles to Iran, made up of components
from Russia, Croatia, and Kazakhstan, was canceled. On 30 December
2000 Iranians asked Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev again
to sell the S-300 anti-missile system. In March 2001 the first
reports appeared that the Russians are close to sign a deal with
Iran on advanced S-300PMU missiles. Later that year Pentagon officials
quietly confirmed that Russia has sold S-300 missiles to Iran.
According to defense intelligence officials, joint Russian / Iranian
crews manned two S-300 units just outside of Tehran and Iranian
soldiers undergo operational training on the advanced missile
system in Russia. Now the rumors say that Iran is going to purchase
at least 18 new systems.
The S-300 was originally designed in the sixties by the Soviet
Almaz Scientific Production Association, to shoot down low-altitude
targets, including cruise missiles and aircrafts. Even in the
early days its phased-array fire control radar was capable of
tracking up to six targets simultaneously, while its single-state,
solid-fuel propelled missile sported aerodynamic control surfaces
and thrust vectoring. The first S-300 missile had a range of 70
kilometers and could successfully engage its incoming targets
20-25 kilometers high. The very latest version of this missiles,
the S-300PMU-2, which is larger, faster and more efficient has
a radar range of 300 kilometers, with the ability to acquire and
shot down targets flying as low as 15 meters.
The S-300PMU is considered the best Russian air defense missile
available, easily surpassing the U.S. Army Patriot PAC-2, and
it can destroy any current western fighter aircraft including
B2 bomber.
Such kind of SAM systems constitutes a huge threat to the American
Air Force in case of the military operation in Iran. Pentagon
officials quietly assert that that America currently does not
have the air power to counter the S-300 missile.
Jamestown defense analyst Richard Fisher noted that in 1999
U.S. defense officials feared that Serbia had obtained old S-300
missiles from Russia and might use them to ambush NATO fighter
jets in SAM traps.
"If the Serbs had the S-300 it would have been a very different
air war," Fisher stated.
"Over the Persian Gulf, the S-300 will significantly raise the
cost of combat to opposing Arab air forces, and make future U.S.
air operations far more difficult."
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