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RAAD (anti-tank guided missile)


FieldValue
nameRAAD
imageDefense Industries Organization tour (14).jpg
captionRAAD-T
originIran
typeAnti-tank missile
is_explosiveyes
is_missileyes
service1988–present
used_bySee Operators
wars2006 Lebanon War
Syrian Civil War
Iraqi Civil War
designerKBM
manufacturerParchin Missile Industries
number4,500 (2015)
variantsSee Variants
weight10.9 kg (RAAD/I-RAAD)
23 kg (guidance System)
length83 cm (RAAD/I-RAAD)
98 cm (RAAD-T/I-RAAD-T)
rate2 missiles/minute
range400–3,000 m
sightslicense-built 9S415 guidance unit (MCLOS) or SACLOS guidance
fillingHEAT
yield400 mm RHA (I-RAAD-T)
speed120 m/s
guidanceMCLOS or SACLOS

Syrian Civil War Iraqi Civil War 23 kg (guidance System) 98 cm (RAAD-T/I-RAAD-T)

The Raad (, 'thunder') or RAAD is an Iranian wire-guided anti-tank guided missile based on the Soviet 9M14M Malyutka (AT-3b Sagger) missile. The Raad began mass production in 1988 and was publicly unveiled in 1997. It is manufactured by Parchin Missile Industries, a subsidiary of Iran's Defense Industries Organization.

The Raad family comes in four variants: the base RAAD missile, a clone of the 9M14M Malyutka-M (AT-3b Sagger); the I-RAAD, with SACLOS guidance, the RAAD-T, with a tandem warhead, and the I-RAAD-T, with both a tandem warhead and SACLOS guidance.

RAAD means thunder in Persian. It is not an acronym and many sources do not capitalize the name.

History

During the Iran-Iraq War, Iran had an acute need for anti-tank missiles, necessitating the country to buy AT-3 Sagger missiles. Iran also acquired the HJ-73, the Chinese version of the Sagger.

Indigenous manufacturing work began in the tail end of the war and mass production began in 1998, with the Raad being the first anti-tank guided weapon to be built by Iran. The RAAD was obtained with Russian assistance.

The weapon was unveiled on April 30, 1997. The RAAD has almost identical components with 9M14 Malyutka, from the battery to the guidance unit.

According to SIPRI, 1500 RAAD/Sagger missiles were built or imported by Iran between 1996 and 2001 and 2,250 from 1996 to 2004.

As of 2015, 4,500 RAADs were made in Iran.

Combat use

Iran supplied Hezbollah with the Raad in the early 2000s and Hezbollah used Raad missiles in the 2006 Lebanon War. Israel captured ten baseline RAAD missiles on the Karine A in January 2002.

The Raad has been used in the Syrian Civil War by Hezbollah fighters, and the Syrian Army. I-RAAD missiles have been used by ISIL fighters in Iraq.

On October 7, 2023, Al-Quds Brigades militants used a RAAD-T during the raid on Israel from Gaza.

Variants

RAAD

The RAAD is an identical copy of the 9M14M Malyutka-M (NATO AT-3b "Sagger").

RAAD-T

The first improvement of the RAAD missile, the RAAD-T has a tandem warhead to defeat explosive Reactive Armor. However, the RAAD-T still uses the obsolete MCLOS guidance of the original RAAD. According to its export material, the RAAD-T has improved maneuverability over the base RAAD and has 400 mm RHA penetration after reactive armor.

I-RAAD

For Improved RAAD, the I-RAAD has a different launcher with a tripod-mounted SACLOS guidance system that makes the missile much easier to aim. The specific SACLOS method is a TV differential tracker. The guidance unit is similar to that of the Chinese HJ-73 system, and possibly the HJ-73C model in particular. First seen in 1998. RAAD missiles can be used by I-RAAD launchers.

It's used to defeat ERA armor.

I-RAAD-T

The I-RAAD-T system combines the tandem-warhead of the RAAD-T missile with the SACLOS guidance system of the I-RAAD launcher. RAAD and I-RAAD missiles can be retrofitted to the I-RAAD-T standard. The I-RAAD-T also includes a simulator that allows operators to be trained on the system without actually firing a missile. 400 mm RHA penetration after reactive armor.

The front end can be used on other RAAD or 9M14 Malyutka missiles.

Operators

  • Iran
  • Syria

Non-State actors

  • Al-Quds Brigades
  • InfoboxHez.PNG Hezbollah
  • Islamic State: Acquired I-RAADs.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (2008-10-15). "Parchin".
  2. "Iran to continue local production of Russian anti-tank missiles 9M11 and 9M113 TASS 10603161 | March 2016 Global Defense Security news industry | Defense Security global news industry army 2016 | Archive News year".
  3. Parchin Missile Industries, I-RAAD-T brochure
  4. (28 July 2021). "This Iranian Missile Launcher is a World of Trouble".
  5. [https://www.nti.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/iran_missile.pdf Iran missile] nti.org September 2021
  6. (2008-07-02). "AIO Raad Anti-Tank Guided Weapon (Iran), Vehicle-mounted anti-tank guided weapons". [[Jane's Information Group]].
  7. "Przeciwpancerne pociski kierowane Iranu cz. 1".
  8. (16 July 2012). "آشنایی با موشک‌های ضد زره ایران".
  9. (24 February 1988). "Arms Deliveries to Iran and Self-Sufficiency". Defense Intelligence Agency.
  10. (19 October 2015). "The Arab-U.S. Strategic Partnership and the Changing Security Balance in the Gulf".
  11. (February 2006). "Missile Chronology, 1997". [[Nuclear Threat Initiative]].
  12. link. (2002-12-19). War Online
  13. "Transfers and licensed production of major conventional weapons: Imports sorted by recipient. Deals with deliveries or orders made 1994-2004".
  14. Riad Kahwaji. (2006-08-20). "Arab States Eye Better Spec Ops, Missiles". Ocnus.Net.
  15. Kirill & Oleg Granovsky. (2002-07-20). "Weapons Found on 'Karine-A' and 'Santorini'".
  16. "Observations on Hizbollah Weaponry".
  17. "As ISIS Continues to Gain Ground, Here's What the Militants Have in Their Arsenal".
  18. (21 October 2023). "Al Quds Brigade Deploys from Gaza Iranian-made RAAD-T Anti-Tank Missil".
  19. "AT - 3 SAGGER / HJ-73 Hongjian (Red Arrow) Anti-Tank Guided Missile".
  20. Terrorism: Documents of International and Local Control, Volume 92. Oceana Publications, 2008. p. 211
  21. (February 2019). "The Military Balance 2019". [[International Institute for Strategic Studies]].
  22. (17 August 2016). "Common ATGMs in the Syrian Civil War". Medium.
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