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Georgia's Air Defense in the War with
South Ossetia
Said Aminov, Editor of the Air Defense News
website: www.pvo.su
The Georgian air-defense
system represents a symbiosis of what it inherited from
the collapse of the Soviet Union and new acquisitions
from former Warsaw Pact and Soviet successor states.
During Soviet times, the 19th Tbilisi
Air-Defense Army of the Soviet Air-Defence Troops was
deployed in Georgia (reduced to an Air-Defense Corps in
1991). It included three SAM brigades in Tbilisi, Poti,
and Echmiadzin, armed with S-75 (SA-2) and S-125 (SA-3)
SAM systems, a separate SAM regiment armed with S-75 SAM
systems (SA-2, deployed in Gudauta, Abkhazia), and a
separate SAM regiment near Tbilisi, equipped with S-200
(SA-5) long-range SAM systems, as well as two radar
brigades. However, after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, some of the Soviet Armed Forces, including air
defense, did not fall under Georgian jurisdiction, but
remained under Russian control. During the early 1990s,
all of the aforementioned air-defense divisions on
Georgian territory were dismantled and their equipment
transferred to Russia for scrapping. Nonetheless,
Georgian forces seized some air-defense equipment from
the Russian military, including at least one S-75 and
two S-125 SAM battalions, as well as a few P-18 Spoon
Rest radars. These systems were put into service to form
the base of the air defenses of the Georgian armed
forces. The Georgians used the S-75 SAM battalions in
the war with Abkhazia in 1992-1993 and shot down a
Russian Su-27 fighter near Gudauta on March 19,
1993.
The S-75 battalion was removed from service in
Georgia, but the two S-125 Neva-M low- to high-altitude
SAM systems battalions was deployed in Tbilisi and Poti
(a total of seven quadruple rail launchers) and those in
service with the Georgian Air Force had been modernized
by Ukrainian specialists by 2005.
Georgian Army received several short-range
air-defense systems in the first half of the 1990s from
the arsenals of the former Soviet Army located in
Georgia but transferred to Russian jurisdiction. These
included KS-19 100-mm anti-aircraft guns, S-60 57-mm
anti-aircraft guns, ZU-23-2 twin 23-mm anti-aircraft
guns, ZSU-23-4 Shilka quad 23-mm self-propelled
anti-aircraft gun systems, Strela-2M (SA-7), Strela-3
(SA-14), and Igla-1 (SA-16) man-portable SAM systems
(MANPADS). However, a significant proportion of these
arms was lost by Georgia during its unsuccessful war
with Abkhazia. Some of the ZU-23-2 anti-aircraft guns
were mounted on MT-LB armored multipurpose tracked
vehicles.
With Mikhail Saakashvili's assumption of power in
2003, Georgia began the rapid development of its
military capacities with the aim of acquiring the means
to regain the separatist Abkhazian and South Ossetian
regions. To neutralize Russia's potential to interfere
in its operations against Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
Georgia began to purchase modern air-defense
systems.
First, Georgia acquired a 9Ê37Ì1 Buk-M1 (SA-11)
battalion of low- to high-altitude self-propelled SAM
systems composed of three batteries (each battery
includes two self-propelled launcher mounts and one
self-propelled loader-launcher) from Ukraine in 2007.
These were delivered together with 48 9Ì38Ì1
surface-to-air missiles.
Georgia noted this transfer in its official report
for 2007 to the UN Register of Conventional Arms. Other
than Russia and Ukraine, only Finland, Cyprus, and Egypt
possess Buk systems in several different versions. The
Russian army is currently acquiring the latest version,
the Buk-M2 (SA-17), and a large export contract of
Buk-M2E to Syria is in the pipeline. According to
subsequent internet reports from Ukraine, the Buk-M1
systems were delivered by sea to Georgia on June 7,
2007. In July 16, 2008, photos of Georgian Buk-M1
systems used during tactical training in Western Georgia
dating from August 2007 appeared on the Internet.
According to a Ukrainian source, on June 12, 2008,
another battery of Buk-M1 systems was delivered to
Georgia.
Second, Ukraine delivered eight self-propelled
launcher vehicles 9Ê33Ì2 Osa-AK (SA-8B) low-altitude SAM
systems (two batteries) and six (ten, according to some
sources) 9Ê33Ì3 Osa-ÀKM self-propelled launcher vehicles
update SAM systems. The Buk-M1 and Osa-AK/AKM systems
were deployed by the Georgian Air Force in Gori, Senaki,
and Kutaisi.
Third, Ukraine sold Georgia two modern 36D6-M radars
that were deployed in Tbilisi and Savshevebi near Gori.
The 36D6-Ì is a mobile, 3-D air surveillance radar,
developed by the Iskra company in Zaporizhzhya, Ukraine.
The 36D6-M radar is a deep modernization of the ST-68U
(19Zh6) Tin Shield radar, taken into service in 1980 and
used with the S-300P (SA-10) SAM system. The 36D6-M
radar has a range of up to 360 km.
Fourth, Ukraine delivered at least one Kolchuga-M
passive electronic monitoring radar system, capable of
passively detecting modern aircraft, including those
using stealth technology. According to information
published recently in Ukraine, it is possible that
another four Kolchuga-M and one Mandat electronic
warfare systems, all produced in Donetsk at the SKB RTU
and the Topaz Company, were delivered to Georgia in May
of 2008. Earlier, Ukraine was severely criticized by the
United States for having sold Kolchuga systems to China,
Iraq, and Iran.
Fifth, the Ukrainian company Aerotekhnika upgraded
the obsolete Georgian P-18 Spoon Rest radars to the
P-180U version, which amounts to a qualitatively new and
modern 2-D air surveillance radar system. At the time
when it attacked South Ossetia, the Georgian Air Force
had four P-180U radars deployed in Alekseyevka (near
Tbilisi), Marneuli, Poti, and Batumi.
In 2006, company Aerotekhnika united Georgian
military and four civilian air-traffic-control radars
and the Kolchuga-M system into a single Air Sovereignty
Operations Center (ASOC) early warning and command
control tactical system. The central command center of
the ASOC was located in Tbilisi, and as of 2008 was
connected to a NATO Air Situation Data Exchange (ASDE)
through Turkey, which allowed Georgia to receive data
directly from the unified NATO air-defense system.
According to the Russian Defense Ministry, Ukraine
either delivered or planned to deliver 50 9K310 Igla-1
(SA-16) man-portable SAM systems and 400 9Ì313
surface-to-air missiles, with missile seekers, upgraded
by the Ukrainian Arsenal plant.
Several East European states also participated in the
renewal of the Georgian air defense system. According to
the Russian Defense Ministry, Bulgaria delivered 12
ZU-23-2Ì twin 23-mm anti-aircraft guns and 500 9Ì313
surface-to-air missiles for Igla-1 man-portable SAM
systems. According to the UN Register of Conventional
Arms, Poland delivered 30 Grom man-portable SAM systems
(a improved Igla-1) and 100 surface-to-air missiles, and
it is possible that such deliveries took place in 2008
as well. Reports have circulated that Georgia acquired
Soviet era man-portable SAM systems from other countries
as well.
Finally, there are reports that Georgia acquired one
battery of the new Israeli Spyder-SR short-range
self-propelled SAM system in 2008. The Spyder-SR SAM
system, developed by Rafael company, uses Python 5 and
Derby air-to-air missiles in a surface-to-air role.
There has been no official confirmation of any such
deliveries to Georgia, but Jane's Missiles & Rockets
magazin cited a Rafael representative to report that the
“Spyder-SR has been ordered by two export customers, one
of whom now has the system operational.”
The Russian Ministry of Defense also reported that
the Georgian Army acquired the Skywatcher army
air-defense early-warning and command control tactical
system produced by the Turkish Aselsan Company in
2008.
Thus, by the time Georgia invaded South Ossetia, its
air defenses had acquired significant capability to
detect, locate, and destroy air targets. The Georgian
forces that advanced into South Ossetia were the
equivalent of about a large division (nine light
infantry and five tank battalions, up to eight artillery
battalions, plus special forces and Ministry of the
Internal Affairs troops), were protected by an air
defense echelon that included one Buk-M1 SAM system
battalion, up to three Osa-AK/AKM SAM system batteries,
a large number of man-portable SAM systems, as well as a
few Ñ-60 57-mm anti-aircraft guns, ZU-23-2 twin 23-mm
anti-aircraft guns, and ZSU-23-4 Shilka quad 23-mm
self-propelled anti-aircraft gun systems. Thus, the
air-defense system of Georgian attack groups was about
the equivalent of a best frontline Soviet divisions
during the late 1980s - early 1990s.
The confrontation with Georgia's air-defense system
proved to be a serious trial for Russia's military
aviation, especially since it seems that its
capabilities were initially underestimated. Meanwhile,
Georgia's air defenses reportedly relied on data
received from the Kolchuga-M passive electronic
monitoring radar systems, minimizing the use of active
radar, while the Georgian Buk-M1 and Osa-AK/AKM
self-propelled SAM systems used ambush tactics. This
made it more difficult to defeat the Georgian
air-defense systems. According to unofficial reports,
the Georgian Buk-M1 SAM systems shot down four Russian
aircraft on the first day of battle on August 8: three
Su-25 Frogfoot attack planes and one Tu-22M3 Backfire
long-range bomber.
Moreover, according to unofficial sources, Russia
lost another three airplanes (one Su-24MR Fencer E
reconnaissance plane on August 8, one Su-24M Fencer
frontal bomber on August 10 or 11, and one Su-25 attack
plane on August 9) as well as perhaps one Mi-24 attack
helicopter.
Both Su-24 were probably shot down by Georgian
Osa-AK/AKM SAM systems or man-portable SAM systems, and
the Su-25, according to several reports, fell victim to
friendly fire from a MANPAD wielded by Russian
servicemen. Añcording to the Sukhoi Company, three
Russian Su-25s also was hit by Georgian SAM and MANPAD
missiles but was able to return safely to base. For
their part, Russian Army air-defense forces claimed shot
down three Georgian Su-25 attack planes.
From the crews of the downed planes, two Russian
pilots (of the Su-24MR and the Tu-22M3) were taken
hostage, and exchanged for Georgian prisoners on August
19. According to unofficial reports, another five
Russian pilots (of the Su-25 shot by friendly fire, the
navigator of the Su-24MR, and three crew from the
Tu-22M3) died.
At the time of writing, the Russian Defense Ministry
officially recognized the loss of only three Su-25
attack planes and one Tu-22M3 long-range bomber, and
considered them defeated by Buk-M1 SAM systems. The
training of Georgian personnel in the use of the Buk-M1
SAM systems took place in Ukraine, and Ukrainian
military instructors may have supervised their use in
combat.
Although the Russian press and even high-level
Russian military officials have made statements about
the possible transfer of S-200 long range SAM systems
and modern Tor (SA-15) low-to-medium altitude
self-propelled SAM systems, such reports have not been
confirmed.
One can conclude that following the unpleasant
surprise arising from Georgia's effective use of
Soviet-made SAM systems on August 8, the Russian armed
forces threw all of the resources at their disposal
against Georgia's SAM and radar systems. Both S-125M SAM
battalions, the majority of Georgia's military and
civilian radars, as well as the most part Buk-M1 and
Osa-AK/AKM SAM systems were destroyed. It would appear
that the only remaining threat to Russian planes and
helicopters in the last days of combat came from
Georgian MANPADs.
Russian forces were able to seize five Osa-AKM
self-propelled launch vehicles, a few ZU-23-2
anti-aircraft guns and a few ZSU-23-4 Shilka
self-propelled anti-aircraft gun systems as trophies
from the retreating Georgian forces. Near Gali and
Senaki, Abkhaz and Russian forces captured minimum one
Buk-M1 battery, as witnessed by published photos.
According to one unofficial source, Russian forces were
able to capture or destroy almost all of the
self-propelled launcher mounts for the Georgian Buk-M1
SAM systems.
The war in South Ossetia marked the first time when
air power faced off against new-generation SAM systems,
like the Buk-M1, which were brought into service in the
1980s. In all previous military campaigns, such as the
War in Vietnam, the Arab-Israeli Wars of 1967, 1973, and
1982, combat actions in Chad and Libya in the 1980s, the
NATO campaigns in the former Yugoslavia of 1994 and
1999, and the Wars in the Persian Gulf of 1991 and 2003,
the air-defense systems in question were all designed in
the 1950s and 1960s (this excludes, of course, the use
of modern MANPADs). Moreover, in Georgia, the Russian
Air Force for the first time in its history fought
against modern air-defense systems, and relatively
modern and numerous SAM systems at that.
This unprecedented experience of Russian aviation
over a territory protected by a range of air-defense
systems will be studied in detail, and should serve as a
stimulus for the cardinal modernization of the Russian
armed forces. It is obvious that the Russian Air Force
must devote greater attention to the suppression of
enemy air defenses (SEAD), including the renewal of
tactics, electronic weapons and increased military
training in this area.
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