Russia set to test first serial S-400 SAM system next week
14:46 | 05/ 07/ 2007
MOSCOW, July 5 (RIA Novosti) – Russia will conduct the first tests of
its new S-400 Triumf air defense complex next week prior to its
commissioning with the Air Force, an AF air defense chief said
Thursday.
"The first serial [S-400] complex will be tested next week," Lieutenant
General Alexander Gorkov said. "It has been transported to a testing
ground together with crews."
The S-400 (NATO codename SA-21 Growler) is a new air defense missile
system developed by the Almaz Central Design Bureau as an upgrade of
the S-300 family.
It has been designed to intercept and destroy airborne targets at a
distance of up to 400 kilometers (250 miles), or twice the range of the
U.S. MIM-104 Patriot, and 2.5 times that of the S-300PMU-2.
"The first S-400 system, which will be put on combat duty near Moscow
shortly after the test, will feature missiles with enhanced technical
characteristics to sharply increase the combat capabilities of air
defense around the Russian capital," Gorkov said.
The general said Russia planned to deploy new air defense systems
primarily around all strategically important administrative and
political centers in two stages by 2015.
During the second stage, which starts in 2010, Russia will add
modernized versions of the S-400 with enhanced characteristics in
comparison to the current model, he said.
In April, Colonel General Yury Solovyov, commander of the Air Defense
Forces Special Command (former Moscow Military District Air Defense
Command), said the Triumf could be used for limited purposes in missile
and space defense, but that it is not designed to destroy
intercontinental ballistic missiles.
However, he said the system is highly capable of destroying stealth
aircraft, cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles with an effective
range of up to 3,500 kilometers (2,200 miles) and a speed of up to 4.8
kilometers (3 miles) per second.
The Russian Air Defense Forces, which are part of the Air Force,
currently deploy more than 30 regiments equipped with S-300 (NATO
reporting name SA-10 Grumble) missile complexes, which will be
gradually replaced with S-400 systems.