9M133 Kornet

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Kornet

Type anti-tank missile
Service history
In service 1994
Production history
Manufacturer KBP Instrument Design Bureau
Specifications
Weight 27 kg
Length 120 cm
Diameter 15.2 cm

Warhead shaped-charge HEAT tandem warhead, with armour penetration of about 1200 mm of RHA behind ERA. Thermobaric anti-personnel/anti-material warhead is also available.

Engine solid-fuel rocket
Operational
range
0.1 - 5 km
Guidance
system
SACLOS laser beam riding

The 9M133 Kornet (Russian for "Cornet") is a Russian anti-tank guided missile (ATGM). "9M133" is the GRAU designation of the missile. Its NATO reporting name is AT-14 Spriggan.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The KBP Instrument Design Bureau unveiled the Kornet in October 1994, and it is believed the missile entered service in the Russian army the same year. It is a heavy ATGM intended to replace the earlier 9K111 Fagot (NATO: AT-4 Spigot) and 9K113 Konkurs (NATO: AT-5 Spandrel) wire-guided ATGMs in both vehicle and tripod mounts. The missile is capable of engaging helicopters. A variant with a thermobaric warhead is produced for use against soft-skinned vehicles, exposed personnel and fortifications.

[edit] Combat history

During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Kornets were initially rumoured to have been used by Iraqi forces to destroy American M1 Abrams tanks, but later studies revealed that the tanks had been hit by either friendly fire or Iraqi rocket propelled grenades. No evidence of the use or presence of Kornet missiles in Iraq has been found.[citation needed] GlobalSecurity.org claims that at least two M1 Abrams tanks and one M2 Bradley infantry fighting vehicle were disabled by Kornets.[1] The US Army however has stated that no Kornet ATGMs were found in Iraq.[citation needed]

The first verified episode of Kornet ATGM combat use occurred during the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict, where the missiles, reportedly supplied by Syria, were successfully used by Hezbollah fighters to destroy and damage Israeli Merkava tanks.[citation needed]

One of the first detailed accounts of IDF's successful capture of Kornet ATGMs on Hezbollah positions in the village of Ghandouriyeh appeared in the Daily Telegraph article, which also reported that the boxes were marked with "Customer: Ministry of Defense of Syria. Supplier: KBP, Tula, Russia."[2] Several months after the cease-fire, reports have provided sufficient photographic evidence that Kornet ATGMs were indeed both in possession of, and used by, Hezbollah in this area.[3][4]

Reports of the Kornet use earlier in the war [5][6] could not be verified and are possibly cases of misidentification.

Israel's claim that Russian weapons were smuggled to Hezbollah by Syria, and Israel has sent a team of officials to Moscow to show Russia the evidence of what they say can only be Syrian weapons transfers.[7] Despite initial public denials by the Russian officials that any proof of actual use of Kornet by Hezbollah has been presented[8][9], the Russian government in fact has moved to tighten control over the use of Russian-made weapons by the importing states, suggesting that the visit of the Israeli delegation did bear fruit, although it might have nothing to do with Kornet.[10]

[edit] Users

Known users include Russia, India, Algeria, Greece, Morocco, Syria, Hezbollah , Peru, Turkey and Jordan

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links