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  • Joint CIS air-defense system going strong

    JOINT CIS AIR-DEFENSE SYSTEM GOING STRONG

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Feb 17 2005


    MOSCOW, (RIA Novosti military commentator Viktor Litovkin)

    The joint air-defense system is perhaps the only CIS military
    organization that has not experienced any serious problems or
    contradictions since it was established in 1995. "Due to a lack of
    discipline among pilots, we register thousands of CIS air-traffic
    violations, but CIS air space is violated very rarely," General of
    the Army Vladimir Mikhailov, the Russian Air Force commander, told
    RIA Novosti at a press conference devoted to the tenth anniversary of
    establishing the joint CIS air-defense system. The general also chairs
    the coordinating committee for air-defense issues of the Council of
    CIS Defense Ministers.

    The CIS air-defense system was established on February 10, 1995,
    and comprises ten countries: Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
    Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine.
    Although Georgian, Uzbek and Turkmen commanders did not attend the
    Moscow celebrations, the joint system's heads had a great deal to
    tell reporters.

    "First of all, we have restored complete radar surveillance outside
    Russia," General Mikhailov's deputy, Lieutenant General Aitech Bizhev
    told RIA Novosti. "Now, we scan 800-1,500km of air space outside our
    external perimeter. Potential violators know this and do not risk
    violating our country's sovereignty and that of other CIS countries.
    The only time this has happened was last year, when an American
    light plane became lost over Mongolia and entered Russian air space.
    Fighters escorted it to Chita airport, where it made an emergency
    landing."

    General Bizhev continued that the Council of CIS Heads of State had
    allocated two billion rubles on joint financing for CIS air defense,
    which meant forces received state-of-the-art combat hardware and
    equipment, including radars, surface-to-air missiles and aircraft.
    The forces wield Osa, Buk, S-75, S-125, S-200 and S-300 SAM complexes,
    and modified versions. Their fighter units fly modified versions of
    the MiG-23, MiG-29, MiG-31 and Sukhoi Su-27. Apart from radars, CIS
    electronic units are equipped with radio-electronic warfare systems.

    In all, the joint CIS air-defense system comprises 19 fighter
    regiments (11 Russian and two Belarussian), 29 SAM regiments (11
    Russian), and 22 radar units (nine Russian and two other Russian
    radio-electronic warfare battalions). Moreover, Russian air-defense
    units are stationed in Armenia (102nd base), Tajikistan (as part of the
    201st mechanized-infantry division, which has now been converted into
    a Russian military base) and at the Kant air-force base in Kyrgyzstan.

    Nonetheless, Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are
    the only countries to implement fully automated combat-duty programs
    between national command centers, but interaction remains to be
    streamlined in other CIS countries. According to General Bizhev,
    these countries can buy and install new automated control systems at
    domestic Russian prices. The coordinating committee for air-defense
    issues is now tackling these problems.

    Russian and Belarussian units and weapons have now been placed on joint
    combat duty owing to the committee's efforts and after the Council
    of CIS Heads of State issued the relevant decision. An agreement on
    joint combat duty operations by Russian, Kazakh and Kyrgyz air-defense
    units has been signed. Armenian, Belarussian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz and
    Uzbek air-defense forces implement joint combat-duty programs. This
    area of cooperation will continue to develop.

    There are plans to set up regional air-defense systems in the
    near future. In particular, the Russian-Belarussian air-defense
    system will become the mainstay of the Eastern European theater
    air-defense system. Russian and Kazakh forces will become the main
    element of the Central Asian theater air-defense system. Meanwhile
    Armenian air-defense units, the 3,624th Russian Air Force group,
    a Russian SAM regiment featuring S-300V SAM complexes (partof the
    102nd Russian military base in Gyumri) will be the Caucasian theater
    air-defense system.

    CIS air-defense units continue to streamline their interaction not
    only during joint combat-duty programs and information exchanges about
    national air-space situation reports and foreign air space. They also
    do so during regular tactical exercises, headquarters exercises and
    tactical war games with live ammunition. These exercises, codenamed
    Boevoye Sodruzhestvo (Combat Cohesion), are regularly organized at
    the Ashuluk firing range near Astrakhan. They involve virtually all
    members of the air-defense system. Seventy SAM divisions, as well
    as 60 fighter, bomber and ground-attack plane crews, have conducted
    live target practice there since 1995. Dozens of electronic units
    have facilitated their combat missions and missile launches.

    The exercises will be expanded this year. Now, they will also be held
    near Vorkuta above the Polar Circle, where combat hardware will be
    tested in adverse conditions. Moreover, CIS units will train at the
    Sary-Shagan firing range in Kazakhstan, where Russia's S-300 Triumph
    SAMs, developed by the Almaz-Antei concern, will be launched and
    their maximum range evaluated. Ukrainian air-defense units will also
    test-fire their missiles at Sary-Shagan, if Kiev and Astana sign the
    appropriate agreement. The point is that S-200 system, with its long
    range of 300km, cannot be tested in the Crimea, which is why Ukraine
    is keen to attend the exercise in Kazakhstan.

    Besides, the Sary-Shagan firing range, which was where Soviet
    anti-aircraft weapons and ABM complexes (including those around Moscow)
    were once tested, allows missiles to be launched against different
    aerial targets, aircraft included, and the most difficult combat
    environments simulated. It is unique in this respect.

    Radio-electronic warfare systems will be used in April this year at
    the test-firing exercises to create a difficult jamming environment.
    SAM complexes will targetstrategic bombers, long-range cruise missiles
    and unmanned air vehicles. Radio-electronic units will jam radars,
    communications, reconnaissance and target-acquisition networks. Highly
    effective, powerful and heterogeneous air-force units will "attack"
    CIS air-defense units. So, how will the latter cope? General Bizhev
    is highly optimistic: "I think we will prove the joint CIS air-defense
    system's reliability once again."
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