Ukrainian forces obliterate Russian air defense with M30A1 rockets
Ukrainians are methodically working to reduce Russian potential by eliminating key targets, which include self-propelled anti-aircraft systems. For such valuable targets, Ukrainians will utilize precious M30A1 GMLRS rockets. Here are their performances.
3:42 PM EDT, July 21, 2024
Both Ukrainians and Russians have issues with air defense, making every anti-aircraft system a valuable target. The Buk-M1-2 system visible in the video below is a solution from the late 1990s, intended to combat aircraft at distances up to 25 miles or ballistic missiles within 12 miles.
However, these capabilities did not save it from the GMLRS rocket, which most likely came from behind or the sides, beyond the detection capabilities of Buk's sector radar. The footage shows an explosion in the air, indicating an M30A1 rocket, showering the Buk with a volley of tungsten fragments and causing the transported missiles to explode.
M30A1 GMLRS rockets - A hail of 182,000 deadly fragments from the USA
Produced since 2015, the M30A1 rockets, with a range of up to 50 miles, are designed to offer comparable area-targeting capabilities to the controversial M30 version with a cluster warhead without its main drawback. This drawback refers to leaving unexploded ordnance, which poses a huge threat even decades after the war.
For this purpose, a new warhead called AW (short for Alternative Warhead) was developed. It contains an explosive charge surrounded by 182,000 tungsten balls and is designed to explode about 33 feet above the ground. The result is a hail of fragments with enough energy to pierce even thin steel armor, not to mention rocket bodies or soldiers' bulletproof vests and helmets.
Interestingly, a tungsten fragment has kinetic energy like a hardened steel core bullet fired from an AKM or AK-74 rifle.