Gulf News

Venezuela holds 5,000 Manpads

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Venezuela possesses 5,000 Russian-made Manpads surface-to-air weapons, according to a military document reviewed by Reuters, the largest known stockpile in Latin America and a source of concern for US officials amid the country’s mounting turmoil.

Venezuela’s socialist government has long used the threat of an ‘imperialis­t’ invasion by the United States to justify an arms build-up. Much of that arsenal was obtained from Russia by Venezuela’s late President Hugo Chavez, whose tenure lasted from 1999 until his death in 2013.

The missiles, which are shoulder-mounted and can be operated by one person, pose a serious threat to commercial and military aircraft. Weapons experts said there have long been fears that the weapons could be stolen, sold or somehow channelled to the wrong hands, concerns exacerbate­d by the current civil unrest in Venezuela and the economic crisis roiling the oil-producing nation.

According to a Venezuelan military presentati­on, the South American country has 5,000 SA-24 Man-Portable Air-Defence System (Manpads) missiles, also known as the Igla-S.

The document provides the most complete count to date of the size of the arms stockpile. Public weapons registries confirm the bulk of the numbers seen on the Venezuelan military presentati­on. Venezuelan government and military officials did not respond to requests for comment about the report.

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