October 17, 2007:
Kuwait
is buying the U.S. Patriot anti-aircraft missile system. The Patriot PAC 2
missiles cost about $3.3 million each and have a range of 70 kilometers. The
Patriot launchers also fire the smaller (in diameter) PAC 3 anti-missile
missiles. A Patriot launcher can hold sixteen PAC 3 missiles, versus four PAC
2s. A PAC 2 missile weighs about a ton, a PAC 3 weighs about a third of that.
The PAC 3 has a shorter range, of about 20 kilometers.
Each Patriot battalion has
12-24 launchers (3-6 batteries). The PAC 3 was used for the first time during
the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The Iraqis fired eleven long range missiles at
American targets (usually headquarters) and PAC 3 missiles took down eight of
them. During the 1991 Gulf War, the larger, anti-aircraft version of the
Patriot missile, modified for use against missiles, knocked down about 70 percent of the missiles
the Iraqis fired. There is still some dispute over this, largely because the
Iraqis had modified their SCUD missiles to give them longer range. This
involved installing larger fuel tanks, resulting in longer missiles. This
change in the shape and internal strength of the missiles, caused many to come
apart as they plunged earthward. That is, the warhead section broke apart from
the fuselage. This reduced the accuracy of the missile, but also provided
interceptor missiles with two or more incoming targets. The Patriot missiles
would often hit something, but it was difficult to tell if the target hit was
the warhead or fuselage. That's one reason why two PAC 3s are fired at each
target. In any event, the longer range SCUDs are so inaccurate that, unless
they are being fired at a large target (like a city) they are unlikely to hit
anything valuable. The Iraqis made the increased range modification during
their 1980s war with Iran, when the missiles were fired at the Iranian capital,
Tehran. It's still unclear if the Iraqis even knew of the "breaking up on
re-entry" problem, not that it mattered. As long as their missile hit somewhere
inside Tehran, it was a success.
At the time, Iran did not
modify its missiles, because their main target, Baghdad, was close to the
Iranian border. But Iran has longer range ballistic missiles now, and some of
the less sophisticated ones may suffer from "breaking up on re-entry" problem.
Kuwait wants the Patriot mainly for protection from Iranian aircraft and
missiles. Patriot has also shot down several aircraft, most of them in friendly
fire incidents (brought about by electronic hardware problems, usually in the
aircraft).