Security

Destruction of Iran's S-300s could disappoint Russia's arms customers

Moscow's allies, including China and Belarus, and its biggest arms customers, including India, Vietnam and Algeria, use both the S-300 and S-400 systems -- now proven to be vulnerable.

S-300 at a parade in Moscow in 2009. [Vitaly Kuzmin]
S-300 at a parade in Moscow in 2009. [Vitaly Kuzmin]

By Kontur and AFP |

The destruction of Iran's Russia-made S-300 air defense systems by Israeli air strikes is the latest sign that Russian military equipment performs poorly in real life, away from arms shows.

Israel struck several military facilities in Iran on October 26, marking the latest exchange of fire in a conflict that has simmered for months.

The strikes "hit Iran's defense capabilities and missile production," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said later.

Israel's strikes were in retaliation for an October 1 attack by Iran, when Tehran fired about 200 missiles at Israel, though Israeli aerial defense systems downed most of them.

A general view of Tehran after Israel destroyed a number of S-300 air defense systems on October 26. [Atta Kenare/AFP]
A general view of Tehran after Israel destroyed a number of S-300 air defense systems on October 26. [Atta Kenare/AFP]

Israel was much more successful than Iran was.

Iran's Russian-made air-defense equipment stopped few, if any, of the missiles fired by 100 Israeli jet fighters, according to US and Israeli officials cited by the Wall Street Journal October 28.

Iran's destroyed equipment included its three Russian S-300 air-defense systems. Israel earlier this year hit Iran's only other S-300.

The Israeli show of force has left Iran more vulnerable, said Joost Hiltermann, Middle East program director at the International Crisis Group.

"The importance of attacking Iran's air defenses is that in a next round Iran would be largely undefended," he told AFP.

The S-300

The S-300, which has been steadily updated since its introduction in the late 1970s, can be a significant threat, especially if used as part of a layered air defense system, according to The War Zone.

Iran had one of the more modern iterations of the S-300, namely the S-300PMU-2 Favorit, which was introduced in 1997.

The most modern S-300s have a range of 350km, according to Russian state-run media outlets. The system can allocate up to 12 missiles to up to six different targets.

The different versions of the system can engage ballistic missiles as well as aircraft. It can also destroy land targets.

Israel's strikes come amid similar attacks on S-300s by Ukrainian forces fighting Russia.

Kyiv has hit more advanced S-400 air defense systems, including strikes in May and in August, the Journal reported.

Moscow's allies, including China and Belarus, and its biggest arms customers, including India, Vietnam and Algeria, use both the S-300 and S-400.

Lost faith

Since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russia has lost more than 9,000 tanks, 18,000 armored combat vehicles, 19,900 artillery systems and 369 aircraft, according to the Ukrainian general staff.

The invasion "has been a public-relations disaster for [Russia's] defense industry," Ian Storey, a senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, a think tank in Singapore, told the Journal.

"Russia's traditional customers have lost faith in the country's defense industry and are looking for new suppliers," he said.

Russia's arms exports have dropped significantly since its large-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, as Moscow uses every piece of equipment it can produce.

Those exports fell 52% last year from 2022, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), based on its own calculations of export values.

A low volume of outstanding orders "suggests that Russian arms exports are likely to remain well below the level reached in 2014-18, for at least the short term," said a SIPRI report published in March.

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