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War, War, War
See other War, War, War Articles

Title: Heritage: Iran Announces Acquisition of S-300 Air Defense Systems
Source: Heritage Foundation
URL Source: http://blog.heritage.org/2010/08/05 ... -of-s-300-air-defense-systems/
Published: Aug 7, 2010
Author: Nick Krueger
Post Date: 2010-08-07 20:33:03 by randge
Keywords: Iran, S-300, Missle defence
Views: 161
Comments: 10

Iran Announces Acquisition of S-300 Air Defense Systems

According to Iran’s Fars news agency, Iran has obtained four S-300PT air-defense missile systems. Fars claimed that this report was first revealed last year by another news agency—one linked to Hezbollah—and that Iran never disputed the story. The report claimed that two of the four systems came from Belarus; details about the source of the other two systems were not provided and have not been reported elsewhere since the Fars claim. Belarus has denied any involvement in such a deal.

In fact, the story begins well before last year. According to a report by Mark Harrington from February 2008 in Jane’s International Defence Review, Belarus and Iran were then finalizing a major arms deal, conceived at an exhibition in Minsk in May 2007 attended by Iranian President Ahmadinejad and other senior Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps leaders.

Harrington’s sources enumerated many details. For instance, Iran was to purchase two surplus S-300PT (also known as SA-10 “Grumble”) systems, composed of two types of Fakel-class missiles, which had been recently deployed around Minsk. These were to be broken down and transported by air to Iran, covered as ordinary cargo, along with a full complement of spare parts and Belarussian training and maintenance personnel. In addition, at the time of Harrington’s report, Belarussian personnel had already completed the repair and upgrade of two other S-300PT systems already possessed by Iran since the late 1990s. Belarus’ asking price for the entire package totaled $140 million USD. All this was supposedly done without the knowledge of Russia, the original manufacturer.

U.S. intelligence is aware of the threat of the emergence of Iranian S-300 systems. Another Jane’s report highlighted a November 2008 conference at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, titled “Iranian Surface-to-Air Missile Systems.” Though the content of that meeting is classified, one day of the conference was devoted to a case-by-case review of Iranian systems, which included a 45-minute session titled “SA-20 SAM Systems.” The SA-20 is a more modern, longer-range variant of the S-300 system. Its inclusion in a briefing otherwise focused on known Iranian systems is indicative of a belief—already present in 2008—that the advanced system was likely to soon become operational.

The Heritage Foundation’s Ariel Cohen has explained that Iranian deployment of the S-300 system would be a “game-changer in the Middle East.” Iran’s existing air defense system is outdated and unable to defend against airstrikes targeting its nuclear facilities, but an Iranian-manned S-300 network could significantly restrict the West’s military options—even more than they already are. For example, Israel does not possess aircraft with stealth technology; the S-300 system was designed to defend against primarily conventional warplanes, and its possession by Iran could severely hamper Israel’s ability to strike effectively.

Iran’s announcement creates more questions than answers. If Iran has obtained even the early SA-10 variant of the S-300 system, its air defense capabilities have evolved considerably almost overnight. If Iran obtains the more modern SA-20 variant, American contingency strike plans will surely become even more limited because of that system’s greatly enhanced range, survivability, and capability. However, the intelligence on this subject remains patchy, and in the past, Western planners have demonstrated a great capability to overwhelm Soviet- and Russian- made anti-aircraft missile systems.

Nick Krueger is the Jordan Saunders Intern in the Young Leaders Program at the Heritage Foundation. For more information on interning at Heritage, please visit: http://www.heritage.org/about/departments/ylp.cfm.

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Poster Comment:

This is the first story that has put some meat on the bones of this story.

I'm giving it some credence on the basis of the fact that Heritage, as a big neocon megaphone, would be the last perhaps to bolster Iranian assertions or propaganda.

If there is any truth to this story, it may be a "game changer" as suggested in this article. I have no love for imams or mullahs or what have you, but if this blunts Netanyahu's drive to bull us into his war, I'm going to sleep a little bit better at night.

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#1. To: randge (#0)

Is that the same system that the Israelis blew buy when they did the hit on the North Korean nuke plant in Syria a few years back?

Obnoxicated  posted on  2010-08-07   20:41:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Obnoxicated (#1)

No.

It's reputed to be superior to the Patriot system.

There is no long form.

randge  posted on  2010-08-07   20:53:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: randge (#0)

The article was written by a summer intern. Yada.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-08   7:39:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: TooConservative (#3)

That may be. That doesn't kill the story. I'm not saying that I vouch for this, but there are some interesting tidbits here.

The leader of the opposition in Belarus, by the way, maintains that his government has cut the backdoor deal with Iran.

There is no long form.

randge  posted on  2010-08-08   8:46:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: randge (#4)

The leader of the opposition in Belarus, by the way, maintains that his government has cut the backdoor deal with Iran.

Belarus would jeopardize its own future procurements if they break protocol with Moscow over resale of advanced technology.

This story just doesn't add up on many fronts.

Unless Iran has the means to produce substantial numbers of knockoff S-300 missiles in a relatively short time (months or a few years), this puny purchase of 4 missiles doesn't do them good. Especially if these are the very limited first-gen S-300s. Iran does have a decent missile program and might be able to pull it off but I wouldn't bet on it. They would need at least several hundred of these missiles to be effective against an Israeli strike. They'd need several thousand to make even a basic defense against a determined NATO/American attack.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-08   9:56:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: TooConservative (#5)

Belarus would jeopardize its own future procurements if they break protocol with Moscow over resale of advanced technology.

Unless, of course, if a backdoor sale was being done with a wink and a nod from Moscow.

This story just doesn't add up on many fronts.

You're absolutely right about that. That's why I posted this. There is little out there of substance on this other than the claims and counterclaims by the parties involved. I was curious to see what other posters here have to say on this story. There's a lot that is unlikely about Iranian assertions with regard to acquisition of these systems, and it's hard to see why they would make such claims unless maybe it's all just for domestic consumption.

Unless Iran has the means to produce substantial numbers of knockoff S-300 missiles in a relatively short time (months or a few years), this puny purchase of 4 missiles doesn't do them good.

Producing knockoffs would be difficult. The firmware would be the hard part. Iran is signifcantly behind Israel and China in that kind of expertise, and it would probably take them five to ten years of development to reverse engineer a system of the S-300's complexity.

It's an interesting story at any rate, and another move on the n-dimensional chessboard as move forward toward yet another war. God help us.

There is no long form.

randge  posted on  2010-08-08   10:34:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: randge (#6)

Unless, of course, if a backdoor sale was being done with a wink and a nod from Moscow.

Perhaps. Moscow does value those concessions that Obummer made on Af-Pak, the Russian air freight contracts, the free hand in the Caucusus from NATO, the generous terms of the new nuke treaty.

I doubt the Russians think anyone will be fooled by a Belorussian sale. Russia will get the blame anyway.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-08   15:05:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: TooConservative (#7)

I doubt the Russians think anyone will be fooled by a Belorussian sale. Russia will get the blame anyway.

Again, you are right. But the consequences of that blame might pale in comparison with the reaction to the monumentally rash actions contemplated in Tel Aviv and within the Beltway.

There is no long form.

randge  posted on  2010-08-08   15:29:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: randge, 4 (#8)

Like most here, I pray that it's true, and not Saddam-like posturing.

Anything that stops the insane bibi from killing us all.

Lod  posted on  2010-08-08   15:50:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Lod (#9)

It seems that whatever Iran has done to prepare for what might well be coming might as well be set in stone.

The moment some outside power decides to shower Iran with the latest technology will be the the tripswitch for bibi and his psychotic crew.

There is no long form.

randge  posted on  2010-08-08   16:00:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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