9K720 Iskander

9K720 Iskander
SS-26 Stone

Russian Iskander missiles on a TEL at the 2010 Victory Day Parade rehearsal
Type Short-range ballistic missile
Place of origin Russia
Service history
In service 2006[1]-Present
Used by Russian Ground Forces
Production history
Manufacturer Votkinsk Plant State Production Association (Votkinsk) - missiles
Production Association Barricades (Volgograd) - ground equipment
KBM (Kolomna) - developer of the system
Specifications
Weight 3,800 kg (8,400 lb) for Iskander-E[2]
Length 7.3 m (24 ft)
Diameter 0.92 m (3 ft 0 in)
Warhead 480-700 kg HE fragmentation, submunition, penetration, fuel-air explosive, EMP for Iskander-E.[3][4]

Engine Single-stage solid propellant
Operational
range
500 km (250-310 miles)[5][6] for Iskander-M
280 km (170 mi) for Iskander-E
Speed 2100 m/s cruising (hypersonic)[7]
Guidance
system
Inertial guidance, optical DSMAC (Iskander-M), TERCOM (Iskander-K), use of GPS / GLONASS in addition to the inertial guidance system[8]
Inertial, use of GPS / GLONASS and optical DSMAC terminal homing for Iskander-E
Accuracy 5–7 m (Iskander-M)
Launch
platform
Mobile TEL

The 9K720 Iskander (Russian: «Искандер»; NATO reporting name SS-26 Stone) is a mobile short-range ballistic missile system produced and deployed by the Russian Federation.

History

The road-mobile Iskander was the second attempt to replace the Scud missile. The first attempt, the Oka, was eliminated under the INF Treaty. The Iskander appears to have several different conventional warheads, including a cluster munitions warhead, a fuel-air explosive enhanced-blast warhead, a high explosive-fragmentation warhead, an earth penetrator for bunker busting and an electromagnetic pulse device for anti-radar missions. The missile can also carry nuclear warheads.[1][9][10] The first successful launch occurred in 1996.[11]

In September 2004, at a meeting with senior defense officials reporting to President Vladimir Putin on the drafting of a defense budget for 2005, the Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov spoke about the completion of static tests of a new tactical missile system called the Iskander. He said that the system would go into quantity production in 2005 and toward the end of that year, Russia would have a brigade armed with it.[1] In March 2005, a source in the Russian defense industry told Interfax-AVN the development of new missiles with a range of 500–600 km, based on existing Iskander-E tactical missile systems, was a possibility. He said, however, that it "may take up to five or six years".[1]

In 2006, serial production of the Iskander-M Tactical Ballistic Missile System launched, and the system was adopted by the Russian army.[1] The cost of the rocket decreased by 30% in 2014.[12] A number of countries were attempting to secure arms deals for the Iskander system, beginning in 2011, with the most likely contenders being China, India and South Korea.[11]

Description

The Iskander ballistic missile is superior to its predecessor, the Oka. The Iskander-M system is equipped with two solid-propellant single-stage guided missiles, model 9M723K1. Each one is controlled throughout the entire flight path and fitted with an inseparable warhead. Each missile in the launch carrier vehicle can be independently targeted in a matter of seconds. The mobility of the Iskander launch platform makes a launch difficult to prevent.

Targets can be located not only by satellite and aircraft but also by a conventional intelligence center, by a soldier who directs artillery fire or from aerial photos scanned into a computer. The missiles can be re-targeted during flight in the case of engaging mobile targets.[9] Another unique feature of Iskander-M (and Iskander-E)[13] is the optically guided warhead, which can also be controlled by encrypted radio transmission, including such as those from AWACS or UAV. The electro-optical guidance system provides a self-homing capability. The missile's on-board computer receives images of the target, then locks onto the target with its sight and descends towards it at supersonic speed.

Boost phase thrust vector control (TVC) is accomplished by graphite vanes similar in layout to the V-2 and Scud series tactical ballistic missiles. In flight, the missile follows a quasi-ballistic path, performing evasive maneuvers in the terminal phase of flight and releasing decoys in order to penetrate missile defense systems. The missile never leaves the atmosphere as it follows a relatively flat trajectory. The missile is controlled during the whole flight with gas-dynamic and aerodynamic control surfaces. It uses a small scattering surface, special coatings and small size projections to reduce its radar signature.[14]

The Russian Iskander-M cruises at hypersonic speed of 2100–2600 m/s (Mach 6–7) at a height of 50 km. The Iskander-M weighs 4615 kg, carries a warhead of 710–800 kg, has a range of 500 km and achieves a CEP (Circular error probable) of 5–7 meters. During flight it can maneuver at different altitudes and trajectories and can turn at up to 20 to 30 G to evade anti-ballistic missiles. For example, in one of the trajectory modes it can dive at the target at 90 degrees at the rate of 700–800 m/s performing anti-ABM maneuvers.[7][15] The missile is controlled in all phases.[16]

Iskander has achieved sufficient accuracy, range and reliability (ability to penetrate defenses) to function as an alternative to precision bombing for air forces that cannot expect to launch bombing or cruise missile fire missions reliably in the face of superior enemy fighters and air defenses. Training and competence requirements are much lower than for normal air force assets such as a fighter bomber squadron utilizing guided bombs.

Iskander is a tactical missile system designed to be used in theater level conflicts.[17] It is intended to use conventional or nuclear warheads for the engagement of small and area targets (both moving and stationary), such as hostile fire weapons, air and antimissile defense weapons, command posts and communications nodes and troops in concentration areas, among others. The system can therefore destroy both active military units and targets to degrade the enemy's capability to wage war.

In 2007, a new missile for the system (and launcher), the R-500 (range of applications up to 2000 km and more[18]) cruise missile, was test fired.[19] Now complex "Iskander-M" is transmitted to the troops complete with cruise and ballistic missiles. In 2013, army missile brigades first received missiles equipped with a new control system.[20]

Uses passive and active jamming system, hidden in the body of the rocket. When approaching the target from the rocket separated false targets and small jammers and so on.[21] The missile uses stealth technology.[18] Iskander-M also carries a complex of Electronic warfare jamming devices for the suppression of the enemy's radar.[22][23]

The system can be transported by any means of transport, not excluding airplanes.[24]

The maximum power for the nuclear warhead is 50 thousand tons of TNT (Iskander-M).[25]

Deployment and combat history

According to the Moscoed reports, the Moscow Defense Brief stated that an Iskander missile was used for a high precision strike on the Georgian Separate Tank Battalion base in Gori, destroying 28 tanks. Russian officials have denied using of the Iskander missile against Georgia but official reports testify to the high effectiveness of the Iskander missiles, as one of the most devastating and accurate weapons in the Russian arsenal.[26] The Dutch government's investigation claims that a single, 5 mm fragment from an anti-personnel sub-munition, that was propelled by an Iskander missile, killed Dutch journalist Stan Storimans in Gori, which was home to various military targets and had been almost completely evacuated before the bombardment.[27]

In November 2008, the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev stated in his first state of the nation speech, that Russia would deploy Iskander missiles to Russia's western district of Kaliningrad "to neutralize, if necessary, a NATO missile defense system."[28][29] On September 17, 2009, US president Barack Obama announced the cancellation of the US missile defense project in Poland and the Czech Republic.[30] Following the announcement, on September 26, Medvedev stated in a press conference that he would in turn cancel the plans to deploy Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad.[31] According to the Stratfor.com e-mails leaked by Wikileaks, there are a number of Iskander brigades operational. The leaked Stratfor.com e-mail was dated 13 December 2009:[32]

On September 29, 2009, the Russian military announced plans to set up an extensive network of Iskander missiles throughout the country as part of the broader military reforms underway. According to General Vladimir Boldyrev (rtd.), Iskander systems would be stationed in every defense district in Russia but not in Kaliningrad.[33] On November 23, 2011, Medvedev again said that Russia may deploy Iskander tactical missiles in the Kaliningrad region as part of Russia’s reaction to the United States' reformulated missile shield plans.[34]

In June 2013, it was revealed that Russia had deployed several Iskander-M ballistic missile systems in Armenia at undisclosed locations throughout the country.[35] In December 2013, Russia disclosed that the Iskander missile system had been deployed in the Western Military District.[36] In March 2015, there were reports in Russian media that Russia had deployed Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad.[37]

Variants

Currently the system includes 5 ballistic and 1 cruise missiles.[43]

Operators

Map with 9K720 operators in blue

Operators

Potential operators

Details

Specifications

System components

An Iskander transporter-erector-launcher
Iskander missiles (right) and an OTR-21 Tochka missile (left) on static display
An Iskander missile in launch position

The full Iskander system includes[62]

Intended targets

The system is intended to use conventional warheads for the engagement of point and area targets, including:[65]

Can hit strongly protected targets (bunkers)[14]

Comparable systems

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 9K720 Iskander-M (SS-26 Stone) – Program GlobalSecurity retrieved on 11-15-08
  2. Iskander / SS-26 specs GlobalSecurity Retrieved on 11-15-08
  3. "Iskander/SS-26", Federation of American Scientists
  4. "Iskander (SS-26)". Missile Threat. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  5. "Iskander M/E (SS-21 / SS-26)". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  6. http://rnns.ru/14897-udarnaja-sila-raketnaja-pautina.html
  7. 1 2 "MilitaryRussia.Ru — отечественная военная техника (после 1945г.) - Статьи". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
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  9. 1 2 9K720 Iskander-M (SS-26 Stone) GlobalSecurity Retrieved on 11-15-08
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  11. 1 2 "Россия модернизирует "Искандер"". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  12. "-". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  13. http://www.kbm.ru/ru/production/otrk/37.html
  14. 1 2 http://rbase.new-factoria.ru/missile/wobb/iscander/iscander.shtml
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  17. Missiles of the world - SS-26
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  22. "- .name". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  23. Алексей Михайлов. ""Искандер" стал неуязвимым для американской ПРО". Известия. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
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  37. http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/03/21/uk-poland-usa-missiles-idUKKBN0MH0N620150321
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  39. INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) INF Treaty. Retrieved 11-18-08.
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  • Russia's Arms Catalog 2004

External links

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