Analysis: Review of combat capabilities of weapons delivered by US and allies in Europe to Ukraine


Army Recognition editorial team explains all the weapons delivered to the Armed Forces of Ukraine by the United States and allies in Europe following the deployment of Russian troops along the border of Ukraine and the possibility of Ukraine's invasion by Russia. In this article, we also provide an overview of each weapon as well as its use on the battlefield and technical data. Weapons delivered to Ukraine: FGM-148 Javelin Anti-Tank missile system, Stinger FIM-92 MANPADS, NLAW light anti-tank missile, Carl Gustaf M4 anti-tank weapon system, and SMAW-D M141 Bunker Defeat Munition rocket launcher. 
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Weapons delivered to Ukraine include FGM-148 Javelin Anti-Tank missile system, Stinger FIM-92 MANPADS, NLAW light anti-tank missile, Carl Gustaf anti-tank weapon system, and SMAW--D M141 Bunker Defeat Munition rocket launcher. 


JAVELIN FGM-148 Anti-Tank Weapon System

The Javelin FGM-148 system was developed and is built by a joint venture formed by Raytheon and Lockheed Martin. The FGM-148 Javelin is an American-made man-portable anti-tank guided missile and employable fire-and-forget medium-range missile system.

The Javelin system consists of the CLU (Command Launch Unit) and the missile. The CLU, with a carry weight of 6.4kg, incorporates a passive target acquisition and fire control unit with an integrated day sight and a thermal imaging sight.
The Javelin missile is equipped with a high-explosive anti-tank warhead which is able to penetrate armor equivalent to 600 to 800 mm RHA. The Javelin missile system is operated by a crew of two.

The Javelin missile has fire-and-forget capability which means that the missile guidance does not require further guidance after the launch such as illumination of the target or wire guidance, and can hit its target without the launcher being in line-of-sight of the target.


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Javelin FGM-148 anti-tank guided missile weapon system (Picture source U.S. DoD)


Stinger FIM-92 MANPADS

The FIM-92 Stinger is a man-portable surface-to-air missile system (MANPADS) that was designed and manufactured by the American Defense Industry. The Stinger was the successor to the Redeye Weapon System, the Stinger missile provides forward, short-range air defense against low-altitude airborne targets.

The FIM-92 Stinger missile launch unit contains the AIM-92 missile. The Stinger weapon round is shipped from the ammunition supply point in a crush-resistant, hardened, reusable aluminum box. It is certified for immediate firing. Stinger is effective against helicopters, unmanned aerial vehicles, and observation and transport aircraft.

The "fire-and-forget" Stinger FIM-92 missile employs a passive infrared seeker to home in on its airborne target. The warhead is a 3 kg penetrating hit-to-kill warhead type with an impact fuze and a self-destruct timer.

The Stinger missile can hit targets flying of 3,500 m and has a firing range of around 8 km. Stinger missiles use passive IR/UV sensors. The missiles look for the infrared light (heat) produced by the target airplane's engines and track the airplane by following that light.


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Stinger FIM-92 MANPADS Man-Portable surface-to-air defense missile system. (Picture source U.S. DoD)


NLAW

The NLAW (Next generation Light Anti-tank Weapon) also called MBT LAW or RB-57 is a man-portable anti-tank missile weapon system developed and manufactured by the Swedish company SAAB.

The NLAW is a man-portable fire-and-forget missile system consisting of an anti-tank missile stored in a 115/150mm caliber launcher tube built in composite material. The launcher is fitted with the gunner’s optical sight, a foldaway launch device, handles and firing mechanism, a battery package, carrying straps, and firing support. The missile has been optimized from the outset to combat tanks and other armored vehicles.

The NLAW missile has a length of 1.02 m and has a weight of 12.5 kg. It is fitted with an armor-piercing warhead that can destroy heavily protected MBTs in a single shot.

The effective range of the missile is from 20 to 600 meters or up to 400 meters for moving targets. It has a flight time of less than two seconds out to 400 meters and can be launched at 45°, up or down. It can be fired safely from within enclosed spaces, such as rooms, even with other soldiers present.


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NLAW MBT LAW man-portable anti-tank missile (Picture source UK MoD)


Carl Gustaf M4

The Carl-Gustaf M4 (CGM4), also called M3E1 in the U.S. Army, is the latest generation of multi-role anti-tank weapon systems in the family of Carl-Gustaf developed and manufactured by the Swedish company Saab.

The Carl Gustaf consists of a launcher tube with the breech-mounted Venturi recoil damper, with two grips near the front, a shoulder mount, and a sight mounted on the left side of the weapon.

The Carl-Gustaf M4 system is able to fire a wide range of 84mm caliber ammunition including anti-armor, anti-structure, multi-role, anti-personnel, and support rounds. The HEAT (High-Explosive Anti-Tank) ammunition can penetrate up to 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor.

The ammunition has an effective range of up to 400 m against tanks and 700 m against buildings and stationary targets. Some types of ammunition have a rocket booster to extend the range to up to 1,000 m.


Review of combat capabilities of weapons delivered by US and allies in Europe to Ukraine Carl Gustaf M4 925 001
Carl Gustaf M4 anti-tank weapon system. (Picture source U.S. DoD)


SMAW-D / M141 BDM

The M141 BDM (Bunker Defeat Munition) is a US-made single-use anti-structure rocket launcher designed to defeat hardened structures. The BDM (Bunker Defeat Munition) is produced by the Finnish company Nammo. The rocket is packaged in a rugged, compact telescoping, a disposable launcher that has all gunner controls needed to aim and fire the weapon.

The SMAW-D operates on the principle that the recoil created by launching the rocket is counteracted by a "backblast" of gases fired from the rear of the weapon. This makes the SMAW-D inherently dangerous, especially in confined, urban areas, as is with all weapons of this design.

The M141 has two configurations: A carry mode in which the launcher is 810 mm (32 in) long, and a ready to fire mode in which the launcher is extended to its full length of 1,400 mm (55 in). The rocket is equipped with a High Explosive, Dual Purpose (HEDP) warhead which is effective against masonry and concrete bunkers as well as lightly armored vehicles. The projectile is capable of penetrating up to 200 mm of armor, 300 mm of bricks, or 2.1 m of sandbags.


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SMAW-D M141 BDM Bunker Defeat Munition rocket launcher. (Picture source U.S. MNET)


Defense News January 2022