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Guided missiles were a product of post-World War II developments in electronics, computers, sensors, avionics, and, to only a slightly lesser degree, rocket and turbojet propulsion and aerodynamics. Although tactical, or battlefield, guided missiles were designed to perform many different roles, they were bound together as a class of weapon by similarities in sensor, guidance, and control systems. Control over a missile’s direction was most commonly achieved by the deflection of aerodynamic surfaces such as tail fins; reaction jets or rockets and thrust-vectoring were also employed. But it was in their guidance systems that these missiles gained their distinction, since the ability to make down-course corrections in order to seek or “home” onto a target separated guided missiles from purely ballistic weapons such as free-flight rockets and artillery shells.

Guidance methods

The earliest guided missiles used simple command guidance, but within 20 years of World War II virtually all guidance systems contained autopilots or autostabilization systems, frequently in combination with memory circuits and sophisticated navigation sensors and computers. Five basic guidance methods came to be used, either alone or in combination: command, inertial, active, semiactive, and passive.

Command

Command guidance involved tracking the projectile from the launch site or platform and transmitting commands by radio, radar, or laser impulses or along thin wires or optical fibres. Tracking might be accomplished by radar or optical instruments from the launch site or by radar or television imagery relayed from the missile. The earliest command-guided air-to-surface and antitank munitions were tracked by eye and controlled by hand; later the naked eye gave way to enhanced optics and television tracking, which often operated in the infrared range and issued commands generated automatically by computerized fire-control systems. Another early command guidance method was beam riding, in which the missile sensed a radar beam pointed at the target and automatically corrected back to it. Laser beams were later used for the same purpose. Also using a form of command guidance were television-guided missiles, in which a small television camera mounted in the nose of the weapon beamed a picture of the target back to an operator who sent commands to keep the target centred in the tracking screen until impact. A form of command guidance used from the 1980s by the U.S. Patriot surface-to-air system was called track-via-missile. In this system a radar unit in the missile tracked the target and transmitted relative bearing and velocity information to the launch site, where control systems computed the optimal trajectory for intercepting the target and sent appropriate commands back to the missile.

Inertial

Inertial guidance was installed in long-range ballistic missiles in the 1950s, but, with advances in miniaturized circuitry, microcomputers, and inertial sensors, it became common in tactical weapons after the 1970s. Inertial systems involved the use of small, highly accurate gyroscopic platforms to continuously determine the position of the missile in space. These provided inputs to guidance computers, which used the position information in addition to inputs from accelerometers or integrating circuits to calculate velocity and direction. The guidance computer, which was programmed with the desired flight path, then generated commands to maintain the course.

An advantage of inertial guidance was that it required no electronic emissions from the missile or launch platform that could be picked up by the enemy. Many antiship missiles and some long-range air-to-air missiles, therefore, used inertial guidance to reach the general vicinity of their targets and then active radar guidance for terminal homing. Passive-homing antiradiation missiles, designed to destroy radar installations, generally combined inertial guidance with memory-equipped autopilots to maintain their trajectory toward the target in case the radar stopped transmitting.

Active

With active guidance, the missile would track its target by means of emissions that it generated itself. Active guidance was commonly used for terminal homing. Examples were antiship, surface-to-air, and air-to-air missiles that used self-contained radar systems to track their targets. Active guidance had the disadvantage of depending on emissions that could be tracked, jammed, or tricked by decoys.

Semiactive

Semiactive guidance involved illuminating or designating the target with energy emitted from a source other than the missile; a seeker in the projectile that was sensitive to the reflected energy then homed onto the target. Like active guidance, semiactive guidance was commonly used for terminal homing. In the U.S. Hawk and Soviet SA-6 Gainful antiaircraft systems, for example, the missile homed in on radar emissions transmitted from the launch site and reflected off the target, measuring the Doppler shift in the reflected emissions to assist in computing the intercept trajectory. (SA-6 Gainful is a designation given by NATO to the Soviet missile system. In this section, missile systems and aircraft of the former Soviet Union are referred to by their NATO designations.) The AIM-7 Sparrow air-to-air missile of the U.S. Air Force used a similar semiactive radar guidance method. Laser-guided missiles also could use semiactive methods by illuminating the target with a small spot of laser light and homing onto that precise light frequency through a seeker head in the missile.

With semiactive homing the designator or illuminator might be remote from the launch platform. The U.S. Hellfire antitank missile, for example, used laser designation by an air or ground observer who could be situated many miles from the launching helicopter.

Passive

Passive guidance systems neither emitted energy nor received commands from an external source; rather, they “locked” onto an electronic emission coming from the target itself. The earliest successful passive homing munitions were “heat-seeking” air-to-air missiles that homed onto the infrared emissions of jet engine exhausts. The first such missile to achieve wide success was the AIM-9 Sidewinder developed by the U.S. Navy in the 1950s. Many later passive homing air-to-air missiles homed onto ultraviolet radiation as well, using on-board guidance computers and accelerometers to compute optimal intercept trajectories. Among the most advanced passive homing systems were optically tracking munitions that could “see” a visual or infrared image in much the same way as the human eye does, memorize it by means of computer logic, and home onto it. Many passive homing systems required target identification and lock-on by a human operator prior to launch. With infrared antiaircraft missiles, a successful lock-on was indicated by an audible tone in the pilot’s or operator’s headset; with television or imaging infrared systems, the operator or pilot acquired the target on a screen, which relayed data from the missile’s seeker head, and then locked on manually.

Passive guidance systems benefited enormously from a miniaturization of electronic components and from advances in seeker-head technology. Small, heat-seeking, shoulder-fired antiaircraft missiles first became a major factor in land warfare during the final stages of the Vietnam War, with the Soviet SA-7 Grail playing a major role in neutralizing the South Vietnamese Air Force in the final communist offensive in 1975. Ten years later the U.S. Stinger and British Blowpipe proved effective against Soviet aircraft and helicopters in Afghanistan, as did the U.S. Redeye in Central America.

Guided-missile systems

The principal categories of tactical guided missiles are antitank and assault, air-to-surface, air-to-air, antiship, and surface-to-air. Distinctions between these categories were not always clear, the launching of both antitank and infantry antiaircraft missiles from helicopters being a case in point.

Antitank and guided assault

One of the most important categories of guided missile to emerge after World War II was the antitank, or antiarmour, missile. The guided assault missile, for use against bunkers and structures, was closely related. A logical extension of unguided infantry antitank weapons carrying shaped-charge warheads for penetrating armour, guided antitank missiles acquired considerably more range and power than their shoulder-fired predecessors. While originally intended for issue to infantry formations for self-protection, the tactical flexibility and utility of guided antitank missiles led to their installation on light trucks, on armoured personnel carriers, and, most important, on antitank helicopters.

The first guided antitank missiles were controlled by electronic commands transmitted along extremely thin wires played out from a spool on the rear of the missile. Propelled by solid-fuel sustainer rockets, these missiles used aerodynamic fins for lift and control. Tracking was visual, by means of a flare in the missile’s tail, and guidance commands were generated by a hand-operated joystick. In operating these missiles, the gunner simply superimposed the tracking flare on the target and waited for impact. The missiles were typically designed to be fired from their carrying containers, with the total package small enough to be carried by one or two men. Germany was developing weapons of this kind at the end of World War II and may have fired some in battle.

After the war French engineers adapted the German technology and developed the SS-10/SS-11 family of missiles. The SS-11 was adopted by the United States as an interim helicopter-fired antitank missile pending the development of the TOW (for tube-launched, optically tracked, wire-guided) missile. Because it was designed for greater range and hitting power, TOW was mounted primarily on vehicles and, particularly, on attack helicopters. Helicopter-fired antitank missiles were first used in combat when the U.S. Army deployed several TOW-equipped UH-1 “Hueys” to Vietnam in response to the 1972 communist Easter offensive. TOW was the principal U.S. antiarmour munition until Hellfire, a more sophisticated helicopter-fired missile with semiactive laser and passive infrared homing, was mounted on the Hughes AH-64 Apache attack helicopter in the 1980s.

The British Swingfire and the French-designed, internationally marketed MILAN (missile d’infanterie léger antichar, or “light infantry antitank missile”) and HOT (haut subsonique optiquement téléguidé tiré d’un tube, or “high-subsonic, optically teleguided, tube-fired”) were similar in concept and capability to TOW.

The Soviets developed an entire family of antitank guided missiles beginning with the AT-1 Snapper, the AT-2 Swatter, and the AT-3 Sagger. The Sagger, a relatively small missile designed for infantry use on the lines of the original German concept, saw use in Vietnam and was used with conspicuous success by Egyptian infantry in the Suez Canal crossing of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War. The AT-6 Spiral, a Soviet version of TOW and Hellfire, became the principal antiarmour munition of Soviet attack helicopters.

Many antitank missile systems of later generations transmitted guidance commands by radio rather than by wire, and semiactive laser designation and passive infrared homing also became common. Guidance and control methods were more sophisticated than the original visual tracking and manual commands. TOW, for example, required the gunner simply to centre the reticle of his optical sight on the target, and the missile was tracked and guided automatically. Extremely thin optical fibres began to replace wires as a guidance link in the 1980s.

Air-to-surface

The United States began to deploy tactical air-to-surface guided missiles as a standard aerial munition in the late 1950s. The first of these was the AGM-12 (for aerial guided munition) Bullpup, a rocket-powered weapon that employed visual tracking and radio-transmitted command guidance. The pilot controlled the missile by means of a small side-mounted joystick and guided it toward the target by observing a small flare in its tail. Though Bullpup was simple and accurate, the delivery aircraft had to continue flying toward the target until the weapon struck—a vulnerable maneuver. The 250-pound (115-kilogram) warhead on the initial version of Bullpup proved inadequate for “hard” targets such as reinforced concrete bridges in Vietnam, and later versions had a 1,000-pound warhead. The rocket-powered AGM-45 Shrike antiradiation missile was used in Vietnam to attack enemy radar and surface-to-air sites by passively homing onto their radar emissions. The first missile of its kind used in combat, the Shrike had to be tuned to the desired radar frequency before flight. Because it had no memory circuits and required continuous emissions for homing, it could be defeated by simply turning off the target radar. Following the Shrike was the AGM-78 Standard ARM (antiradiation munition), a larger and more expensive weapon that incorporated memory circuits and could be tuned to any of several frequencies in flight. Also rocket-propelled, it had a range of about 35 miles (55 kilometres). Faster and more sophisticated still was the AGM-88 HARM (high-speed antiradiation missile), introduced into service in 1983.

Replacing the Bullpup as an optically tracked missile was the AGM-64/65 Maverick family of rocket-powered missiles. Early versions used television tracking, while later versions employed infrared, permitting the fixing of targets at longer ranges and at night. The self-contained guidance system incorporated computer logic that enabled the missile to lock onto an image of the target once the operator had identified it on his cockpit television monitor. Warheads varied from a 125-pound shaped charge for use against armour to high-explosive blast charges of 300 pounds.

Though less was known about them, the Soviets fielded an extensive array of air-to-surface missiles equivalent to the Bullpup and Maverick and to the Hellfire antitank missile. Notable among these was the radio-command-guided AS-7 Kerry, the antiradar AS-8 and AS-9, and the television-guided AS-10 Karen and AS-14 Kedge (the last with a range of about 25 miles). These missiles were fired from tactical fighters such as the MiG-27 Flogger and attack helicopters such as the Mi-24 Hind and Mi-28 Havoc.

Air-to-air

Developed in 1947, the radar-guided, subsonic Firebird was the first U.S. guided air-to-air missile. It was rendered obsolete within a few years by supersonic missiles such as the AIM-4 (for air-intercept missile) Falcon, the AIM-9 Sidewinder, and the AIM-7 Sparrow. The widely imitated Sidewinder was particularly influential. Early versions, which homed onto the infrared emissions from jet engine tailpipes, could approach only from the target’s rear quadrants. Later versions, beginning with the AIM-9L, were fitted with more sophisticated seekers sensitive to a broader spectrum of radiation. These gave the missile the capability of sensing exhaust emissions from the side or front of the target aircraft. Driven by the requirements of supersonic combat during the 1960s, the ranges of such missiles as the Sidewinder increased from about two miles to 10–15 miles. The AIM-54 Phoenix, a semiactive radar missile with active radar terminal homing introduced by the U.S. Navy in 1974, was capable of ranges in excess of 100 miles. Fired from the F-14 Tomcat, it was controlled by an acquisition, tracking, and guidance system that could engage up to six targets simultaneously. Combat experience in Southeast Asia and the Middle East produced increased tactical sophistication, so that fighter aircraft were routinely armed with several kinds of missile to deal with a variety of situations. U.S. carrier-based fighters, for instance, carried both heat-seeking Sidewinders and radar-homing Sparrows. Meanwhile, the Europeans developed such infrared-homing missiles as the British Red Top and the French Magic, the latter being a short-range (one-quarter to four miles) highly maneuverable equivalent of the Sidewinder.

The Soviets fielded an extended series of air-to-air missiles, beginning in the 1960s with the AA-1 Alkali, a relatively primitive semiactive radar missile, the AA-2 Atoll, an infrared missile closely modeled after the Sidewinder, and the AA-3 Anab, a long-range, semiactive radar-homing missile carried by air-defense fighters. The AA-5 Ash was a large, medium-range radar-guided missile, while the AA-6 Acrid was similar to the Anab but larger and with greater range. The AA-7 Apex, a Sparrow equivalent, and the AA-8 Aphid, a relatively small missile for close-in use, were introduced during the 1970s. Both used semiactive radar guidance, though the Aphid was apparently produced in an infrared-homing version as well. The long-range, semiactive radar-guided AA-9 Amos appeared in the mid-1980s; it was associated with the MiG-31 Foxhound interceptor, much as the U.S. Phoenix was associated with the F-14. The Foxhound/Amos combination may have been fitted with a look-down/shoot-down capability, enabling it to engage low-flying targets while looking downward against a cluttered radar background. The AA-10 Alamo, a medium-range missile similar to the Amos, apparently had passive radar guidance designed to home onto carrier-wave emissions from U.S. aircraft firing the semiactive radar-homing Sparrow. The AA-11 Archer was a short-range missile used in combination with the Amos and Alamo.

Improvements in air-to-air missiles included the combined use of several methods of guidance for greater flexibility and lethality. Active radar or infrared terminal homing, for example, were often used with semiactive radar guidance in midcourse. Also, passive radar homing, which became an important means of air-to-air guidance, was backed up by inertial guidance for mid-course and by an alternate terminal homing method in case the target aircraft shut off its radar. Sophisticated optical and laser proximity fuzes became common; these were used with directional warheads that focused their blast effects toward the target. Tactical demands combined with advancing technology to channel the development of air-to-air missiles into three increasingly specialized categories: large, highly sophisticated long-range air-intercept missiles, such as the Phoenix and Amos, capable of ranges from 40 to 125 miles; short-range, highly maneuverable (and less expensive) “dogfighter” missiles with maximum ranges of six to nine miles; and medium-range missiles, mostly using semiactive radar homing, with maximum ranges of 20 to 25 miles. Representative of the third category was the AIM-120 AMRAAM (for advanced medium-range air-to-air missile), jointly developed by the U.S. Air Force and Navy for use with NATO aircraft. AMRAAM combined inertial mid-course guidance with active radar homing.

Antiship

Despite their different methods of delivery, antiship missiles formed a coherent class largely because they were designed to penetrate the heavy defenses of warships.

The Hs-293 missiles developed by Germany during World War II were the first guided antiship missiles. Though accurate, they required the delivery aircraft to stay on the same line of sight as the weapon and target; the resultant flight paths were predictable and highly vulnerable, and the Allies quickly developed effective defenses.

Partly because Britain and the United States relied on carrier-based aircraft armed with conventional torpedoes, bombs, and unguided rockets to attack naval targets, antiship missiles at first received little emphasis in the West after the war. The Soviets, however, saw antiship missiles as a counter to Western naval superiority and developed an extensive range of air- and surface-launched antiship missiles, beginning with the AS-1 Kennel. The destruction of an Israeli destroyer by two SS-N-2 Styx missiles fired by Soviet-supplied Egyptian missile boats in October 1967 demonstrated the effectiveness of the Soviet systems, and the Western powers developed their own guided missiles. The resultant systems began entering service in the 1970s and first saw combat in 1982, during the Falkland Islands War. In that conflict the British Sea Skua, a small, rocket-powered, sea-skimming missile with semiactive radar homing, weighing about 325 pounds, was fired successfully from helicopters, while the Argentines sank a destroyer and a containership and damaged another destroyer with the solid-rocket-powered, active radar-homing French Exocet, fired from both aircraft and ground launchers. The Exocet weighed about 1,500 pounds and had an effective range of 35 to 40 miles.

The Exocet was one of a number of Western antiship missiles of the same general kind. Guidance was mostly by active radar, often supplemented in mid-course by inertial autopilots and in terminal flight by passive radar and infrared homing. Although designed for use from carrier-based attack aircraft, missiles of this sort were also carried by bombers and coastal patrol aircraft and were mounted on ship- and land-based launchers. The most important U.S. antiship missile was the turbojet-powered Harpoon, which weighed about 1,200 pounds in its air-launched version and had a 420-pound warhead. Employing both active and passive radar homing, this missile could be programmed for sea-skimming attack or a “pop-up and dive” maneuver to evade a ship’s close-in defense systems. The turbojet-powered British Sea Eagle weighed somewhat more than the Harpoon and employed active radar homing. The West German Kormoran was also an air-launched missile. The Norwegian Penguin, a rocket-powered missile weighing between 700 and 820 pounds and employing technology derived from the U.S. Maverick air-to-surface missile, had a range of about 17 miles and supplemented its active radar guidance with passive infrared homing. The Penguin was exported widely for fighter-bomber, attack boat, and helicopter use. The Israeli Gabriel, a 1,325-pound missile with a 330-pound warhead launched from both aircraft and ships, employed active radar homing and had a range of 20 miles.

The U.S. Navy Tomahawk defined a separate category of antiship missile: it was a long-range, turbofan-powered cruise missile first developed as a strategic nuclear delivery system (see below Strategic missiles). Tomahawk was carried by surface vessels and submarines in both ground-attack and antiship versions. The antiship version, equipped with a modified Harpoon guidance system, had a range of 275 miles. Only 20 feet long and 20.5 inches (53 centimetres) in diameter, the Tomahawk was fired from its launch tubes by a solid-fueled booster and cruised at subsonic speeds on flip-out wings.

For short-range antiship warfare, the Soviet Union deployed its AS series, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 14 air-to-surface missiles. Long-range antiship missiles designed for use from bomber and patrol aircraft included the 50-foot, swept-wing AS-3 Kangaroo, introduced in 1961 with a range exceeding 400 miles. The AS-4 Kitchen, a Mach-2 (twice the speed of sound) rocket-powered missile with a range of about 250 miles, also was introduced in 1961, and the liquid-fuel, rocket-powered Mach-1.5 AS-5 Kelt was first deployed in 1966. The Mach-3 AS-6 Kingfish, introduced in 1970, could travel 250 miles.

Ship-based Soviet systems included the SS-N-2 Styx, a subsonic aerodynamic missile first deployed in 1959–60 with a range of 25 miles, and the SS-N-3 Shaddock, a much larger system resembling a swept-wing fighter aircraft with a range of 280 miles. The SS-N-12 Sandbox, introduced in the 1970s on the Kiev-class antisubmarine carriers, was apparently an improved Shaddock. The SS-N-19 Shipwreck, a small, vertically launched, flip-out wing supersonic missile with a range of about 390 miles, appeared in the 1980s.

To defend against antiship missiles, navies employed towed or helicopter-borne decoys. Sometimes chaff (strips of foil or clusters of fine glass or wire) would be released in the air to create false radar targets. Defenses included long-range chaff rockets to mask a vessel from the radar of distant ships, close-in quick-blooming chaff flares to confuse active radar homers on missiles, and radar jamming to defeat acquisition and tracking radars and confuse missile seeker systems. For close-in defense, combatant ships were fitted with high-performance, short-range missiles such as the British Seawolf and automatic gun systems such as the U.S. 20-millimetre Phalanx. Advances in missile-defense systems had to keep up with the natural affinity of antiship missiles for stealth technology: the visual and infrared signatures and radar cross sections of Western antiship missiles became so small that relatively minor modifications in shape and modest applications of radar-absorptive materials could make them difficult to detect with radar and electro-optical systems, except at short ranges.

Surface-to-air

Guided surface-to-air missiles, or SAMs, were under development when World War II ended, notably by the Germans, but were not sufficiently perfected to be used in combat. This changed in the 1950s and ’60s with the rapid development of sophisticated SAM systems in the Soviet Union, the United States, Great Britain, and France. With other industrialized nations following suit, surface-to-air missiles of indigenous design, particularly in the smaller categories, were fielded by many armies and navies.

The Soviet Union committed more technical and fiscal resources to the development of guided-missile air-defense systems than any other nation. Beginning with the SA-1 Guild, developed in the immediate postwar period, the Soviets steadily fielded SAMs of growing sophistication. These fell into two categories: systems such as the Guild, the SA-3 Goa, the SA-5 Gammon, and the SA-10 Grumble, which were deployed in defense of fixed installations; and mobile tactical systems capable of accompanying land forces. Most of the tactical systems had naval versions. The SA-2 Guideline, introduced in 1958, was the most widely deployed of the early SAMs and was the first surface-to-air guided-missile system used in combat. This two-stage missile with a solid booster and a liquid-propellant (kerosene and nitric acid) sustainer, could engage targets at ranges of 28 miles and as high as 60,000 feet. Equipped with an array of van-mounted radars for target acquisition and tracking and for missile tracking and command guidance, Guideline proved effective in Vietnam. With adequate warning, U.S. fighters could outmaneuver the relatively large missiles, called “flying telephone poles” by pilots, and electronic countermeasures (ECM) reduced the effectiveness of the tracking radars; but, while these SAMs inflicted relatively few losses, they forced U.S. aircraft down to low altitudes, where antiaircraft artillery and small arms exacted a heavy toll. Later versions of the SA-2 were equipped with optical tracking to counter the effects of ECM; this became a standard feature on SAM systems. After retirement from first-line Soviet service, the SA-2 remained in use in the Third World.

The SA-3 Goa, derived from the Guideline but modified for use against low-altitude targets, was first deployed in 1963—primarily in defense of fixed installations. The SA-N-1 was a similar naval missile.

The SA-4 Ganef was a long-range mobile system first deployed in the mid-1960s; the missiles, carried in pairs on a tracked launcher, used drop-off solid-fuel boosters and a ramjet sustainer motor. Employing a combination of radar command guidance and active radar homing, and supported by an array of mobile radars for target acquisition, tracking, and guidance, they could engage targets over the horizon. (Because the SA-4 strongly resembled the earlier British Bloodhound, NATO assigned it the code name Ganef, meaning “Thief” in Hebrew.) Beginning in the late 1980s, the SA-4 was replaced by the SA-12 Gladiator, a more compact and capable system.

The SA-5 Gammon was a high- and medium-altitude strategic missile system with a range of 185 miles; it was exported to Syria and Libya. The SA-6 Gainful was a mobile tactical system with a range of two to 35 miles and a ceiling of 50,000 feet. Three 19-foot missiles were carried in canisters atop a tracked transporter-erector-launcher, or TEL, and the radar and fire-control systems were mounted on a similar vehicle, each of which supported four TELs. The missiles used semiactive radar homing and were powered by a combination of solid-rocket and ramjet propulsion. (The SA-N-3 Goblet was a similar naval system.) Gainful, the first truly mobile land-based SAM system, was first used in combat during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War and was highly effective at first against Israeli fighters. The Mach-3 missile proved virtually impossible to outmaneuver, forcing the fighters to descend below effective radar coverage, where antiaircraft guns such as the ZSU 23-4 mobile system were particularly lethal. (Similar factors prevailed in the 1982 Falklands conflict, where long-range British Sea Dart missiles achieved relatively few kills but forced Argentine aircraft down to wave-top level.) The SA-6 was replaced by the SA-11 Gadfly beginning in the 1980s.

The SA-8 Gecko, first deployed in the mid-1970s, was a fully mobile system mounted on a novel six-wheeled amphibious vehicle. Each vehicle carried four canister-launched, semiactive radar homing missiles, with a range of about 7.5 miles, plus guidance and tracking equipment in a rotating turret. It had excellent performance but, in Syrian hands during the 1982 conflict in Lebanon, proved vulnerable to Israeli electronic countermeasures. The equivalent naval system was the widely deployed SA-N-4 Goblet.

The SA-7 Grail shoulder-fired, infrared-homing missile was first deployed outside the Soviet Union in the final stages of the Vietnam War; it also saw extensive action in the Middle East. The SA-9 Gaskin carried four infrared-homing missiles on a turreted mount atop a four-wheeled vehicle. Its missiles were larger than the SA-7 and had more sophisticated seeker and guidance systems.

The first generation of American SAMs included the Army Nike Ajax, a two-stage, liquid-fueled missile that became operational in 1953, and the rocket-boosted, ramjet-powered Navy Talos. Both used radar tracking and target acquisition and radio command guidance. The later Nike Hercules, also command-guided, had a range of 85 miles. After 1956 the Talos was supplemented by the Terrier, a radar-beam rider, and the Tartar, a semiactive radar homing missile. These were replaced in the late 1960s by the Standard semiactive radar homing system. The solid-fueled, Mach-2 Standard missiles were deployed in medium-range (MR) and two-stage extended-range (ER) versions capable, respectively, of about 15 miles and 35 miles. Within 10 years a second generation of Standard missiles doubled the range of both versions. These newer missiles contained an inertial-guidance system that, by electronically communicating with the Aegis radar fire-control system, allowed corrections to be made in mid-course before the semiactive terminal homing took over.

For 20 years, the most important land-based American SAM was the Hawk, a sophisticated system employing semiactive radar guidance. From the mid-1960s the Hawk provided the backbone of U.S. surface-based air defenses in Europe and South Korea and was exported to many allies. In Israeli use, Hawk missiles proved highly effective against low-flying aircraft. The longer-ranged Patriot missile system began entering service in 1985 as a partial replacement for the Hawk. Like the Hawk, the Patriot was semimobile; that is, the system components were not mounted permanently on vehicles and so had to be removed from their transport for firing. For target acquisition and identification, as well as for tracking and guidance, the Patriot system used a single phased-array radar, which controlled the direction of the beam by electronically varying the signals at several antennas rather than pivoting a single large antenna. The single-stage, solid-fueled Patriot missile was controlled by command guidance and employed track-via-missile homing, in which information from the radar in the missile itself was used by the launch site fire-control system.

The shoulder-fired Redeye, an infrared-homing missile that was also deployed on truck-mounted launchers, was fielded in the 1960s to provide U.S. Army units close-in protection against air attack. After 1980 the Redeye was replaced by the Stinger, a lighter system whose missile accelerated faster and whose more advanced seeker head could detect the hot exhaust of approaching aircraft even four miles away and up to 5,000 feet in altitude.

Western European mobile SAM systems include the German-designed Roland, an SA-8 equivalent fired from a variety of tracked and wheeled vehicles, and the French Crotale, an SA-6 equivalent that used a combination of radar command guidance and infrared terminal homing. Both systems were widely exported. Less directly comparable to Soviet systems was the British Rapier, a short-range, semimobile system intended primarily for airfield defense. The Rapier missile was fired from a small, rotating launcher that was transported by trailer. In the initial version, deployed in the early 1970s and used with some success in 1982 in the Falklands conflict, the target aircraft was tracked by a gunner using an optical sight. A television camera in the tracker measured differences between the missile’s flight path and the path to the target, and microwave radio signals issued guidance corrections. The Rapier had a combat range of one-quarter to four miles and a ceiling of 10,000 feet. Later versions used radar tracking and guidance for all-weather engagements.

A new generation of Soviet SAM systems entered service in the 1980s. These included the SA-10 Grumble, a Mach-6 mobile system with a 60-mile range deployed in both strategic and tactical versions; the SA-11 Gadfly, a Mach-3 semiactive radar homing system with a range of 17 miles; the SA-12 Gladiator, a track-mobile replacement of Ganef; the SA-13 Gopher, a replacement for Gaskin; and the SA-14, a shoulder-fired Grail replacement. Both Grumble and Gadfly had naval equivalents, the SA-N-6 and SA-N-7. The Gladiator might have been designed with an antimissile capability, making it an element of the antiballistic missile defense around Moscow.

John F. Guilmartin