Charles Recknagel
Russia's S-300 missile system could dramatically change the stakes in
the Syrian conflict if it is sent to Damascus, which Russia has signed a
contract to do. RFE/RL lays out five things to know about the
air-defense system.
What are the capabilities of the S-300 system?
The S-300 missile system is designed to shoot down aircraft and
missiles at a range of 5-to-150 kilometers. That gives it the ability to
destroy not only attackers in Syrian airspace but also any attackers
inside Israel.
It can track and strike multiple targets simultaneously at altitudes ranging from 10 meters to 27,000 meters.
"The S-300 is Russia's top-of-the-range air-defense system," says
Robert Hewson, the London-based editor of "IHS Jane's Air-Launched
Weapons." "It is a surface-to-air missile system that's capable of
shooting down any modern combat aircraft or missiles, including cruise
missiles. In a way, it is the Russian equivalent to the U.S. Patriot
system. And what it does for Syria is it adds a whole new level of
capability on top of the existing Syrian air defenses. Syria already has
a lot of Russian [surface-to-air] missiles, but the S-300 would be the
most advanced."
How much would a deployed S-300 system complicate a decision by the international community to create no-fly zones in Syria?
The deployment of the S-300 system would greatly complicate any such measures in Syria.
It would similarly complicate Israel’s policy of striking targets in
Syria to prevent transfers of sophisticated weapons from Damascus to the
Lebanese Hizballah, Israel’s sworn enemy.
NATO used no-fly zones in 2011 to end the conflict in Libya. The
zones protected civilians and allowed allied planes to destroy Libyan
government units who were using force against populated areas.
When might Russia deliver the S-300 system to Syria?
That is the big unknown. Moscow and Damascus signed the deal roughly a
year before civil unrest against the Syrian regime erupted in March
2011. A firm delivery date has yet to be set.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said on May 30 that the systems were
on the way but that report was contradicted by Russian defense analysts
speaking anonymously to Russian media.
One defense source told Russia's "Kommersant" daily that the weapons
contract requires Moscow to deliver the S-300 system by spring 2014.
Russian officials have refused to speak publicly about a time frame.
Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told reporters this week, "I can
only say that we won't cancel the contracts."
Are there reasons to suspect Russia is bluffing when it says it will send the missiles?
In truth, delivering the missiles could bring huge risks for Moscow.
That is because the batteries likely would have to be operated by
Russian crews before Syrian teams could be completely trained in their
use.
"It is standard Russian practice to send your own military advisers
to go in with a new customer and help train them up," Hewson says. "And
one risk in attacking [the new] S-300 -- were that to happen and if the
missiles had just arrived in Syria -- is that you would hit Russian
personnel that are with them."
Israel, a U.S. ally, has threatened to destroy the missiles if they
are deployed. If it did and caused Russian casualties, there would be a
grave risk the conflict could escalate into a superpower confrontation.
Michael Elleman, a missile expert at the International Institute for
Strategic Studies' Middle East office in Bahrain, says promising to send
the new missiles likely serves Moscow's purposes better than actually
delivering them.
"Ultimately for Russia, I think the threat of transferring the S-300,
the ambiguity as to whether it has been sent or not, probably is their
best-case scenario," Elleman says. "Whereas if they do transfer it, bad
things might happen and escalation is something that I don't think
anyone would really like to see."
Could foreign powers find ways to circumvent the S-300 system if it were deployed?
One way to circumvent air-defense systems is to try to disrupt their
operations through electronic techniques rather than attack them
directly. But Elleman says it is an open question whether the S-300
could be blocked this way.
"Electronic warfare and spoofing of systems in quite common," he
says, "but one must keep in mind that the S-300 is a very sophisticated
piece of weaponry. And I am not convinced that the West, Israel, or
Turkey could reliably neutralize the system without taking some kind of
kinetic action -- in other words, going after some of the radar or some
of the interceptors [with force]. So, in terms of circumventing, I think
it would be very difficult and very risky."
Source: http://www.rferl.org/content/explainer-russia-syria-s-300-missile-system-/25003647.html
Copyright (c) 2013. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington
DC 20036.
No comments:
Post a Comment