• Russia Had Five S-400 Air-Defense Batteries In Crimea. In Three Weeks,

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 16 10:59:21 2023
    XPost: sci.military.naval, soc.history.war.misc

    from https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2023/09/14/russia-had-five-s-400-air-defense-batteries-in-crimea-in-three-weeks-ukraine-blew-up-two/?sh=3d23ace216fc

    Russia Had Five S-400 Air-Defense Batteries In Crimea. In Three Weeks,
    Ukraine Blew Up Two.
    David Axe
    Forbes Staff
    I write about ships, planes, tanks, drones, missiles and satellites.
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    Sep 14, 2023,09:42pm EDT
    The S-400 battery in Yevpatoriya explodes.
    The S-400 battery in Yevpatoriya explodes.VIA SOCIAL MEDIA
    In the years prior to its wider war on Ukraine, the Russian air force
    deployed five batteries of its best S-400 surface-to-air missiles, plus
    their radars, to occupied Crimea.

    In less than a month, the Ukrainian navy has destroyed two of them.
    Every S-400 battery the Ukrainians knock out is one fewer S-400 battery defending the Russian Black Sea Fleet at its anchorage in Sevastopol.

    The first raid on an S-400, on Aug. 23, targeted the battery in Cape
    Tarkhankut on the Crimean Peninsula’s northwest coast. The second, on Thursday, struck a battery 36 miles south in Yevpatoriya.

    Both strikes reportedly involved the latest version of the Ukrainian
    navy’s Neptune ground-launched anti-ship cruise missile. The original
    model, with which the Ukrainians sank the Black Sea Fleet cruiser Moskva
    in April 2022, traveled 190 miles with a 330-pound warhead. The new
    version travels 225 miles with a 770-pound warhead.

    Ukraine’s Luch Design Bureau from the outset designed the Neptune with a GPS-aided radar seeker. Basically, the missile navigates to GPS
    coordinates. Once it gets there, the radar looks for something shaped
    like a worthwhile target.

    This combination of GPS and radar makes the Neptune equally adept at
    striking targets at sea and on land, although Luch officials have said
    they tweaked the guidance in the missile’s newer model. That could mean
    the addition of an infrared seeker.

    In any event, the Neptune works. And so does the intelligence-gathering apparatus that feeds the navy targets for its Neptune batteries. Russian air-defenses, by contrast, don’t work—at least not against a low-flying cruise missile.

    The S-400 is Russia’s best long-range SAM system. It’s supposed to shoot down missiles like the Neptune. Instead, it’s getting destroyed by the Neptune. And every missile raid makes the next raid more likely to
    succeed as the mutually-supporting network of radars and missiles
    collapses. “There may be systemic tactical failures with Russian
    air-defense systems in occupied Crimea,” the Institute for the Study of
    War in Washington, D.C. noted.

    The Ukrainian navy’s short-term goal is obvious: to clear the way for
    the Ukrainian air force to strike the Black Sea Fleet in occupied
    Sevastopol. A barrage of British-made Storm Shadow cruise missiles,
    launched by air force Sukhoi Su-24 bombers on Wednesday, struck a
    drydock in Sevastopol and burned the two warships inside: a
    Ropucha-class landing ship and a Kilo-class submarine.

    It’s unlikely the Ukrainians are done. The Black Sea Fleet still has a
    couple of dozen large warships left—and they’re no less vulnerable to air-launched cruise missiles than that Ropucha and Kilo were. And now
    there’s one less S-400 battery to protect the ships than there was on Wednesday.

    The Russian air force may still have another three S-400 batteries in
    Crimea, plus additional batteries in reserve in Russia proper. But if
    the Russians shift the deployed batteries, or bring in fresh batteries,
    in the hope of plugging gaps in their air-defenses, these replacement
    batteries might just suffer the same fate as their predecessors. Plinked
    by Neptunes.

    The Kremlin’s options aren’t great. In the 19 months of Russia’s wider war on Ukraine, Ukrainian commanders steadily have built up a fearsome deep-strike complex, and now they’re using it to dismantle Russian
    forces in Crimea.

    In the words of Ben Hodges, a retired U.S. Army general and the former commander of Army forces in Europe, “the Ukrainian general staff is
    running rings around the Russian general staff.”

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    David Axe
    David Axe
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    I'm a journalist, author and filmmaker based in Columbia, South Carolina.

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    MyForbes User
    1 day ago

    Great news! It is widely known that the Israelis worked out how to
    bypass ruzzian air defenses a long time ago. I am sure that "knowledge"
    has been passed on to the Ukrainians...


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    danvolodar
    1 day ago

    I think it might be prudent to look up what comprises a S-400 battery
    before writing about how significant any damage to it may be. Like, for starters, how many TELs one includes, and how many the Ukrainians can so
    far claim destroyed.


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    Belashenko
    1 day ago

    Reportedly the 96L6 radar - the heart of the system - was one of the
    components destroyed. Without the radar the TEL's aren't worth much.


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