More details have appeared about
the Syrian Air Defense Forces’ Pantsir-S short to medium range air defense system, which was destroyed by Israel during
the May 10 encounter.
The picture from the site where the air defense system was destroyed allowed to get a more precise picture of the May 10 incident. It appears that the Pantsir-S was not in a combat position, including radar, after it had fired all of its missiles at some targets. The position of hydrostructs allows to suggest that the system was preparing to move for reloading.
It should be noted that initially multiple pro-opposition sources used the Israeli video of the Pantsir-S destruction to mock the Syrian Air Defense Forces as unprofessional. Now, when more details have appeared, such statements look much more questionable.
Business Insider just Posted this article - I'm beginning to wonder, if Business Insider is just another Israeli mouth piece?
Monday 5.14.2018 - Russian air defenses were caught on video getting beaten badly by Israeli forces in Syria — here are Russia's excuses
Russian air defenses were beaten badly by Israeli forces in Syria on video — here are its excuses
Moscow has offered two explanations for why the Russian-made Pantsir-S1 missile defense system took a direct hit during an Israeli airstrike in Syria last week.
- "One is that it had already used up its ammunition reserve," Aytech Bizhev, a former deputy commander-in-chief of Russia's air force, told the Russian state-run news agency RT. "The other is that it was simply turned off; it wasn't battle ready."
- Whatever the reason, the incident wasn't good advertising for the Russian system.
Moscow has offered two explanations for why the Russian-made Pantsir-S1 missile defense system
took a direct hit during an Israeli airstrike in Syria last week.
"One is that it had already used up its ammunition reserve," Aytech Bizhev, a former deputy commander-in-chief of Russia's air force, told the Russian state-run news agency RT. "The other is that it was simply turned off; it wasn't battle ready."
Israeli fighter jets struck dozens of Iranian military sites in Syria on Thursday, killing
at least 23 people, including five Syrian soldiers, according to the Syria Observatory for Human Rights.
Israel, which
released footage of the Pantsir-S1 system being hit, said it launched the attack after Iranian forces fired 20 rockets toward the Golan Heights on Wednesday, some of which were shot down.
But the day before that attack, Israel carried out strikes near the Syrian capital of Damascus, shortly after it determined "abnormal movements of Iranian forces" in Syria and after President Donald Trump announced the US would pull out of the Iran nuclear deal.
As for the destruction of the Pantsir-S1, there "can be no third option, as it wouldn't have let itself to be destroyed," Bizhev told RT, adding: "When it's battle ready, it performs constant surveillance of enemy aircraft and has a very fast reaction time. It would've brought down those cruise missiles with either its cannons or own missiles."
Mikhail Khodorenok, a retired Russian colonel, also told RT that the Pantsir-S1 wasn't camouflaged, meaning it "wasn't ready for engagement." He added that the incident didn't "question the high combat capabilities" of the system.
There are other possible reasons the Pantsir-S1 took a direct hit.
It could be that its radar was turned off to avoid anti-radiation missiles — it was most likely hit by a
Delilah anti-radar cruise missile— or that the Syrian operators simply bungled the incident.
Bizhev said the Israeli jets had a geographic advantage in that they fired their missiles "without entering the [Syrian] air defense area." He told RT that "they approached at low altitudes, then bounced from behind the Golan Heights, carried out the attack, and left."
The Pantsir-S1 "requires between three to five minutes to go operational," Bizhev said, adding that it's exhausting for the crew to keep the system on at all times.
But questions remain — for example, why the system would have been turned off and not strategically placed or camouflaged, given the back-and-forth strikes in the previous two days.
Also, did the Pantsir-S1 run out of ammunition before the strike or during it? The latter doesn't seem to jibe with Russia's excuses. The former also appears strange, considering the operators would want a loaded system, as Israeli and Iranian forces had been trading strikes.
Whatever the reason the Pantsir-S1 took a direct hit, it wasn't good advertising for the Russian system, as Moscow heavily depends on foreign military sales to boost its flagging economy.
Thursday May. 10, 2018 - Israel just released footage of one of its missiles hitting an air-defense system in Syria
Israel just released footage of one of its missiles hitting an air-defense system in Syria
Israel just released video of a Delilah cruise missile taking out a Pantsir-S1 self-propelled combined gun-missile system during its strike on Iranian Quds targets on Wednesday in Syria.
- Israel says the strike was in response to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard in Syria shooting 20 rockets toward IDF posts in the Golan Heights on the same day.
- The Delilah is a cruise missile developed in Israel by Israel Military Industries (IMI), built to target moving and relocatable targets with a CEP of 1 metre (3 feet 3 inches) at a max range of 250 km.
On May 9, 2018, the Quds force, a special force wing of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, stationed in Syria, shot 20 rockets towards IDF posts in the Golan Heights. The IDF intercepted four of the rockets, preventing casualties and damage. This is the first time that Iranian forces have directly fired at Israeli troops.
In response, in the night on May 10, IDF fighter jets (mainly
F-16I Sufa aircraft according to most sources even though the official IAF website's release on the attack shows also a file photo of an F-15I) struck several military targets in Syria that belonged to Iran's Quds force. "The IDF's wide-scale attack included Iranian intelligence sites, the Quds force logistics headquarters, an Iranian military compound in Syria, observation and military posts, et cetera. In spite of a warning from Israel, Syrian aerial defense forces fired towards the IAF aircraft as they conducted the strikes. In response, the IAF targeted several aerial interception systems (SA5, SA2, SA22, SA17) which belong to the Syrian Armed Forces. All of the IDF's fighter jets returned to their bases safely."
Among the targets hit by the Israeli combat planes there is also a Pantsir-S1 (SA-22 according to the NATO designation) as shown in the following footage.
The Pantsir-S1 is a Russian-built advanced, self-propelled combined gun/missile system that is made mobile on 8×8 trucks. The transportable gun/SAM system includes up to 12 surface-to-air missiles arranged into two 6-tube groups on the turret, and a pair of 30mm cannon.
The SA-22 was destroyed from what, based on the type of aircraft reportedly involved in the air strikes, the range of the missile and
similar footage available online, seems to be a Delilah missile (actually, there is someone that
suggested the missile might have been a
Spike NLOS, but the use of a standoff missile seems much more likely).
The Delilah is a cruise missile developed in Israel by Israel Military Industries (IMI), built to target moving and re-locatable targets with a CEP of 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) at a maximum range of 250 km.
The best description of the cruise missile comes from the
IAF website: (Note: Author provides long description quote)
Anyway, here's the footage: (Note: Link not given but below, this message ... it states "Read the
original article on
The Aviationist. Copyright 2018. Follow The Aviationist on
Twitter. ")
As said, the Delilah is a standoff weapon: it means the aircraft can use it while remaining at safe distance.
As a side note, according to our sources, a KC-707 tanker that supported the F-16I. Yesterday, more or less when the jets were attacking the targets in Syria, a KC-707 was operating in the southern part of Israel.
We can't be sure the tanker was supporting the raid (the fact an Israeli aircraft
could be tracked online during a combat mission is somehow surprising), still worth a mention.
14/05/2018 - Satellite images show alleged aftermath of Israeli attack on Syria (Image frames)
Satellite images show alleged aftermath of Israeli attack on Syria
The Israeli Air Force hit multiple targets in Syria late last week in what it said was a ‘retaliatory’ measure amid an alleged Iranian military buildup in the Arab Republic.
The images provided by satellite imaging company ImageSat International (ISI), yet to be independently verified, offer an overview of some of the damage caused by Israeli bombing of what are claimed to be Iranian military positions.
imagesatintl @imagesatint
#Syria: Aftermath of the
#Israeli #attack on
#Damascus international airport.
#ImageSat #Syriastrike
12:59 PM - May 13, 2018
ISI’s ‘preliminary damage assessment’ seemingly shows destruction at the Damascus International Airport, including the ruins of a 30×15 meter storage structure. Satellite images also show an evacuated ‘Glasshouse’, the nickname for what Israeli analysts claim is Damascus-based headquarters for Iran’s military operation in Syria.
The satellite images follow the release of aerial images by the Israeli Defense Forces of what it claimed were “Iranian sites in Syria.”
Israel launched a massive airstrike against what it said were 60 ‘Iranian’ military targets in Syria late last week, calling the measure retaliation for the firing of nearly two dozen rockets into the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. According to Israeli media, none of the rockets reportedly made it into Israeli territory. According to the IDF, all the targets in the May 10 attack consisted of Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force troops.
According to the Israeli military, its targets included intelligence, logistics and weapons storage facilities, a military compound, as well as targets in the buffer zone (i.e. the territory between Israeli and Syrian forces) along the border between the two countries.
Tel Aviv has accused Tehran of expanding its military presence in Syria as a means to threaten and stage attacks against Israel. Iran has denied that it has an extensive military presence in Syria, saying its contingent is limited to military advisers, who are in the country to help the Syrian army ongoing fight against terrorism. The Iranian mission has the approval of Syria’s internationally recognized government.
Conflicting reports have emerged regarding the effectiveness of the Israeli Air Force’s attack. According to the Russian military, Syrian air defenses downed “over half” of the missiles launched by Israeli F-15s and F-16s. For its part, the Russian foreign ministry has voiced its concern over the Israeli attack, and called on all sides to exercise restraint.
14/05/2018 - Hezbollah chief hails Syrian response to Israeli attack, calls reports of 23 dead ‘lies’
Hezbollah chief hails Syrian response to Israeli attack, calls reports of 23 dead 'lies'
Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah hailed the Syrian military’s response to the Israeli attack on Thursday, stating that this was a clear ‘message’ to Israel about attacking Syria’s sovereignty.
“For the first time, the occupation forces’ installations in the occupied Golan Heights were targeted with such an attack. Israel claims that only 20 missiles were fired and some of them were downed, but the truth is that 55 missiles, some of which of heavy-caliber, were fired at a number of military installations, creating huge explosions, which forced residents in the Golan Heights and some in northern Israel to seek refuge in bomb shelters in panic,”
In response to reports of 23 Syrians and Iranians killed by the Israeli attack, Sayyed Nasrallah denied these claims, calling these rumors nothing more than a disinformation campaign started by Gulf media outlets.
Sayyed Nasrallah stated that the Syrian media reports about four Syrians killed were more accurate.
The Hezbollah chief then touched on the message this Syrian response sent to the Israeli military, including how his forces are monitoring everything being said.
“This is only a partial response to Israel’s attacks on Syria. The message that the enemy received was resounding and we are following the Israeli media outlets. The message is that you are mistaken if you think that you can continue to kill and bomb as you please,” Nasrallah said.
“The other parties will respond at the appropriate time and place and with the appropriate method. You as an enemy can no longer continue to violate Syria’s sovereignty and attack it without facing a response or punishment. This landmark rocket attack has launched a new phase,” Nasrallah concluded.
14/05/2018 - New Syrian Army missile launcher eliminates scores of ISIS terrorists (video)
New Syrian Army missile launcher eliminates scores of ISIS terrorists (video)
The Syrian military recently produced a new missile launcher that has enhanced their striking capabilities against enemy forces.
The missile launcher is called the Golan-1000 IRAM and it is currently used by the Syrian Arab Army’s 4th Division across the country.
As shown in the video below, the Syrian Army’s 4th Division can be seen using the Golan-1000 IRAM against the Islamic State (ISIS) forces inside the southern part of Damascus.
New Syrian Army missile launcher eliminates scores of ISIS terrorists (video - 3:04 min.)
The Golan-1000 can launch three 500mm missiles at once, which is a big boost for their armed forces.