Daily News (Los Angeles)

3 weapons that may have bolstered Ukraine in war

- By Brad Lendon CNN

he is able to run for cover while the missile finds its way to the target.

This was particular­ly important in the early days of the war as the Russians tended to stay in columns when trying to enter urban areas. A Javelin operator could fire from a building or behind a tree and be gone before the Russians could fire back.

The Javelin is also good at targeting the weak spot of the Russian tanks — their horizontal surfaces — because its trajectory after launch sees it curve upward, then fall on the target from above, according to Lockheed Martin.

This could be seen in images early in the war of Russian tanks with their turrets blown off.

Indeed, so great was the Javelins' impact that 21/2 months into the war, President Joe Biden visited the Alabama plant where they are made to praise the workforce for its help in defending Ukraine.

.There was one other advantage to the Javelins, particular­ly pertinent at the start of the war: They were politicall­y acceptable.

“Their low cost and defensive usage make them politicall­y easier for other countries to provide,” Michael Armstrong, an associate professor at Brock University in Ontario, wrote on the Conversati­on.

“By contrast, government­s disagree about sending more expensive offensive weapons like warplanes.”

That's a mouthful, but to put it more plainly, HIMARS is a 5-ton truck carrying a pod that can launch six rockets almost simultaneo­usly, sending their explosive warheads well beyond the battlefiel­d's front lines, and then quickly change positions to avoid a counterstr­ike.

“If Javelin was the iconic weapon of the early phases of the war, HIMARS is the iconic weapon of the later phases,” Mark Cancian, senior adviser for the Internatio­nal Security Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal studies, wrote in January.

HIMARS fires munitions called the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System that have a range of about 50 miles.

And their GPS guidance systems make them extremely accurate, within about 33 feet of their intended target.

Last July, Russian reporter Roman Sapenkov said he witnessed a HIMARS strike on a Russian base at Kherson's airport in territory Moscow's forces had occupied at the time.

“I was struck by the fact that the whole packet, five or six rockets, landed practicall­y on a penny,” he wrote.

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