Ukraine has "worked out experimental samples" of missile weapons ranging from 750 to 1000 kilometers. Now mass-producing of these long-range weapons is acute for the country to have a tool to withstand russia’s aggression.
That is according to Mykhailo Podolyak, an advisor to the President's Office,who said this on Ukrainian 24tv, adding that it is planned to attract investment and foreign weapons manufacturers. The existence of work on a missile with a range of even more than 1,000 kilometers was also reported by former Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov.
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It is also extremely important to break down Podolyak's statement into its components, because, first of all, we are talking about "samples", not "sample" and missiles in particular, and not more abstract "long-range" weapons, which also include kamikaze drones.
Secondly, these samples have already been worked out, that is, they have been applied. And the range of 750-1000 km most likely means that there are at least two of these samples - one up to 750 km, the other up to 1000 km.
Of course, we can be on an optimistic note, saying that these are completely new long-range missiles, but if we turn on pragmatism, then most likely we are talking about those things that are already known.
Tu-141 Strizh Soviet-made UAV
We might start with a Tu-141 Strizh soviet-made reconnaissance UAV that was converted into an ersatz cruise missile. It was already used in December last year, and successfully, against the russian air bases Engels and Dyagilevo. The russian federation has officially recognized that three Tu-22M3s were hit at Dyagilevo as a result of the Stryzh strike.
The potentially converted Tu-141 Strizh can have a range of up to 1,000 km and carry, as russia has also reported on the basis of drone wreckage, an OFAB-100-120 bomb, which is installed in it instead of reconnaissance equipment in the middle of the body.
And despite the fact that we are talking about the conversion of existing UAVs, if you look closely at the Tu-141 Strizh, you can see a ready-made ground-launched cruise missile. This drone was designed for low-altitude flight at high speeds along a programmed route, and the only question is whether it should return with intelligence or crash into a target with a warhead,"
Moreover, the production of the Tu-141 Strizh in Soviet times took place at the Kharkiv Aviation Plant. That is, all the design and production documentation for the original drone is available. Of course, this is well known in Moscow, because its production continued in Kharkiv until 1989.
That is, the resumption of production of the Tu-141 Strizh as a full-fledged cruise missile is more realistic than creating a completely new development.
But despite the availability of documentation, there is a rather significant problem: Kharkiv Aviation Plant is the most problematic aviation enterprise in Ukraine, which has been methodically destroyed for three decades and driven to bankruptcy. As a result, even during the ATO, they tried to restore at least some production by producing tractors for armored vehicles.
5V28 missile for S-200 SAM system
The second model may well be the 5V28 convertible anti-aircraft missile for the S-200 system. Its use has already been recorded, for example, in Taganrog. Although the russian federation estimated its range at 600 km, it is quite possible that this parameter is 150 km longer.
Documentation for this missile may also be available in Ukraine because the components of the S-200 were also produced at the Bolshevik plant in Kyiv, which physically ceased to exist in the 2000s and legally in 2021, as well as at the Tochmash plant in Donetsk. The former produced the launcher, the latter the charger.
There are no details on the conversion of the 5B28 into a surface-to-surface missile, although it is a more than difficult job to convert an archaic liquid-fuel missile with a 220 kg warhead into a quasi-ballistic missile for ground strikes.
Mass production of long-range missiles in Ukraine
It is critical to understand that just because you have the original paperwork for a 1970s product does not mean you can immediately rivet items to it. The first question that comes to mind is where to obtain a complete set of the 1970s model. Even on this basis, we are not talking about "one-to-one" reproductions of missiles, but rather advancements based on them.
There are huge gaps in time and money between having a concept, a prototype in metal, a prototype that has been tested, small-scale production, and full-scale mass production.
If Ukraine is now at the stage of prototypes that are ready for mass production, there are still two large-scale tasks ahead. In peacetime, starting small-scale production of weapons such as missiles takes several years. The transition to large-scale production will take another couple of years. And this is in the absence of global problems.
Is it possible to speed it up - yes, but it really should be a strategic state project that can be accelerated by obtaining ready-made main components made to order at foreign sites. And this is what the government is obviously betting on.
The main conclusion is: to have a tool to efficiently withstand russia’s aggression as well as to completely liberate the temporarily occupied territories of the country and restore the internationally recognized borders, Ukraine need missiles with an operational range in 750-1000 km as soon as possible in as many as possible quantity.
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