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Encyclopedia > Strela
A soldier posing with a Strela launcher
A soldier posing with a Strela launcher

The 9K32 "Strela-2" (Russian 9К32 "стрела-2" - arrow, NATO reporting name SA-7 "Grail") is a man-portable, shoulder-fired, low-altitude surface-to-air missile (SAM) system similar to the US Army REDEYE, with a high explosive warhead and passive infrared homing guidance. The SA-7 was the first generation of Soviet man portable SAMs, its first version entered service in 1968. Although the SA-7 is limited in range, speed, and altitude, it can force enemy pilots to fly above its effective ceiling, causing increased chance of detection by radar and vulnerability to other air defence systems. The SA-7 is a tail-chase missile system and its effectiveness depends on its ability to lock onto the heat source of low-flying fixed and rotary-wing aircraft.


Development History

In the immediate post-WWII period the Soviet air defence doctrine had placed a heavy emphasis on national air defence against nuclear-armed bombers. Numerous long-range, high-altitude SAM systems were developed to counter this threat, but in the meanwhile relatively little development took place in mobile battlefield air defences able to move with army maneuver elements and defend them against low-altitude air attack in a conventional war.


The Korean war showed that the era of conventional war was far from over, and the Soviet Union responded with a 10-year plan that called for several mobile battlefield air defence systems to create a multi-tier system to cover all altitude ranges. The new doctrine listed 5 new requirements:

  • front-level medium to high altitude area defence system 9M8 Krug (NATO designation SA-4 "Ganef")
  • army-level low to medium-range area defence system 3M9 Kub (NATO desgination SA-6 "Gainful")
  • division-level low altitude short-range system 9K33 Osa (NATO designation SA-8 "Gecko")
  • regimental-level all-weather radar-guided gun system ZSU-23-4 "Shilka"
  • battalion-level very short range systems Strela-1 (NATO designation SA-9 "Gaskin") and Strela-2 (NATO SA-7 "Grail")

Both Strela-1 and Strela-2 were initially intended to be man-portable systems. However, as the Strela-2 proved to be considerably smaller and lighter system, the specifications of the Strela-1 were changed, calling for a heavier vehicle-mounted missile of higher performance to support the ZSU-23-4 gun systems in the regimental air defence role.


As development began in the Turopov OKB (later changed to Kolomna), the detailed information of the US FIM-43 Redeye became available. While it was by no means a simple reverse-engineered copy, in many ways the Strela design borrowed heavily from the Redeye, with which it was developed simultaneously. Development was protracted and many difficulties were face in designing sufficiently small seeker head and rocket. Eventually the designers had to settle for a simpler seeker head than that of the Redeye.


The initial version the 9K32 "Strela-2" (US DoD designation SA-7A, missile round 9M32) finally entered service in 1968, 5 years late of schedule.


The Strela-2 was quickly followed by the slightly improved version "Strela-2M" (US DoD designation SA-7B, missile round 9M32M) in 1970, and then a more radical improvement, the 9K36 "Strela-3" (NATO reporting name SA-14 "Gremlin", missile round 9M36).


There is a naval version of this missile. Its NATO reporting name is SA-N-5.


Espionage History

At least some technical documentation on the Strela-1 system is known to have been passed to the CIA by the Polish Colonel Ryszard_Kuklinski.


Other Versions

  • There is an improved Chinese copy of the Strela called the HN-5 ("Hong Nu" or Red Cherry).
  • The Pakistani version is known as Anza. The Mk. 1 version is inferior to the Strela-1 with a maximum range of only 4 km (2.5 miles) but the Mk. 2 is roughly equivalent with a maximum range of 6 km (3.75 miles) and the Mk. 3 is markedly superior with a maximum range of 15 km (9.3 miles).
  • Egypt reverse-engineered the Strela to create the Ayn as Saqr missile.
  • 9K38 "Igla" (NATO reporting name SA-18 Grouse) and 9K38-M "Igla-1" (NATO reporting name SA-16 Gimlet) are the successors to the "Strela" series.

See also: anti-aircraft, anti-aircraft missile, missile, List of missiles, MANPADS


  Results from FactBites:
 
Strela launcher (852 words)
For its initial test flights, the Strela launcher would utilize the existing launch silos of the UR-100NU rocket in Baikonur Cosmodrome and then fly operational missions from the silos at the retired ICBM base in Svobodny in the Russian Far East.
The payload section of the Strela booster with the mockup of the Condor spacecraft, carrying optical remote-sensing payload.
The Condor-E spacecraft with the radar payload was considered a main payload for the Strela launcher.
ESA - ESA Permanent Mission in Russia - Strela (167 words)
Strela was converted into a launch vehicle from the RS-18 ICBM’s prototype, the UR-100N (SS-19) missile, by NPO Mashinostoyeniya with a minimum of changes.
Similar in performance to Rockot, Strela can be launched from Baikonur or Svobodny, while Rockot is launched from Plesetsk and may in the future be launched from Baikonur.
Strela can put satellites into orbits with an inclination of 63 degrees from Baikonur and into orbits with inclinations in the range 52 to 61 and 90 to 104 degrees from Svobodny.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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