Syria - Pentagon Hides Attack Failure - 70+ Cruise Missiles Shot Down
15
April, 2018
The
U.S. military seems to hide that its attack on Syria last Saturday
largely failed. We checked the numbers and sources and said so in
our weekly
review published
yesterday. This post is extending yesterday's analysis.
The
U.S. attack on Saturday was launched as revenge for an alleged
'chemical attack' by the Syrian government forces against the then
'rebel' held Damascus suburb Douma. The alleged 'chemical
attack' neverhappened but
was theater staged by the 'rebels' and their supporters.
There
is a very large discrepancy between the Russian Ministry of
Defense report
of the strike as
well as other sources and the description in the Pentagon briefing on
the strike. According to the Pentagon only three places related to a
nonexistent Syrian chemical weapon program were targeted:
This combined military strike was directed against three distinct Syrian chemical weapons program targets.
...
We are confident that all of our missiles reached their targets.
...
In summary, in a powerful show of allied unity, we deployed 105 weapons against three targets.
One
hundred and five weapons against three targets would be a remarkable
overkill. Just consider that the U.S. Tomahawk and JASSM cruise
missiles and the British Skalp EG cruise missiles used in these
attacks carry 450 kilogram (~1,000 pounds) of high explosives each.
Did the U.S. military really plan to use 15 metric tons of high
explosives against each target. That would be enough to blow up a
whole town.
The
U.S. claims it sent 76 cruise missiles against the non-hardened,
non-defended Barzeh
research center.
This was a small two story building complex and had just recently
been declared
free of
chemical weapons and weapon research by the OPCW.
Barzeh Research center before and after - bigger
Sure,
the facility is destroyed. But by 34 tons of high explosives? Or by
maybe 2 tons?
The
Barzeh center was a civilian facility next to a densely populated
suburb of Damascus. It was concerned with agricultural and medical
research, not with chemical weapons. The U.S. certainly knew that
from the recent OPCW report. The U.S. claim that it was a chemical
weapons facility is ridiculous as it would (hopefully) never consider
attacking a real chemical weapons facility in the middle of a
civilian population center. That would be mass murder and a serious
war crime.
The
Pentagon also claims it hit two undefended military storage
facilities near the Lebanese border. It says that those three were
the only targets of its attack.
But
on April 12, two days before the strikes, CNBC reported that
the Pentagon planned to attack eight
targets:
[A] source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told CNBC the U.S. was considering striking eight potential targets. Those targets include two Syrian airfields, a research center and a chemical weapons facility.
The
strikes commenced on April 14 between about 1:00 and 2:30 UTC, 4.00am
to 5:30am local time in Damascus. At 7:00am local time (4:00 UTC)
journalist Danny Makki reported from Damascus:
Danny Makki @Dannymakkisyria - 4:06 UTC - 14 Apr 2018
Thread: Here’s how the U.S led strikes on #Syria developed from here in the Capital #Damascus in the early hours of this morning
At around 4.30 Damascus time I awoke to initial large sounds of over 10 rocket attacks, it immediately was clear from the types of missile being heard that it was a Western Attack conducted by the #U.S #France & #U.K
The strikes were heard clearly in all parts of the Capital and continued on and off for a duration of 50 minutes, Syrian state media reported the strikes but didn’t provide information as to the locations
All In all over 50 different strikes were heard or reported in different locations around #Damascus
The strikes had targeted a number of military sites across Damascus and further north in #Syria reportedly in #Hama & #Homs
Barzeh research facility which sits on the Eastern stretch of #Damascus was hit by numerous missiles
#Jamraya was reportedly hit as well, from my current location which is quite close to the site its clear something big was hit in Western #Damascus , the last barrage shook the neighborhood im In to the core
Mezzeh Military airport was reportedly struck as well (...)
A research facility in #Masyaf was reportedly attacked as well
Also, a number of sources in #Homs have reported strikes with additional information that Russia air defenses participated in countering the strikes in #Homs
A string of other locations have been cited as being targeted by U.S led strikes, its not clear at the moment, but it seems this attack was limited to a number of locations
...
It
seems clear that Mr. Makki refers to more than three attacked sites.
The
Syrian opposition outlet SOHR in Britain, which works from local
sources, reports a
multitude of targets:
[T]he Trio Coalition “the USA, Britain and France”, .. targeted .. the scientific research centers in Jamraya north of Damascus, and Barzeh in the north-west of the capital Damascus, arsenals of the 4th Division and the Republic Guards in the area of Al-Mazza Military Airbase, the arsenals of Al-Kiswah area in the southern countryside of the capital, and the scientific research center in the outskirts of Homs city, where the missiles fired on the latter position, fell away from the target, also violent explosions heard in the Eastern Qalamoun, while no missiles fell on Al-Dumayr and Al-Naseriyah Military Airbases.
Those
are 8 targeted places or installations.
SOHR
also reports that more than 65 of the 105 missiles failed to hit
their targets:
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights managed to monitored interception by the regime forces to tens of missiles which targeted their positions and military bases in the Syrian territory, where several intersected sources confirmed to the Syrian Observatory, that the number missiles that were downed, exceeded 65 missiles, of the total number of missiles fired by the Trio Coalition, while the air and rocket strikes, caused great material damage, while no information about casualties was reported yet.
The
report of the Russian Ministry of Defense quoted below is consistent
with the multitude of independent sources quoted above. The Russian
briefing (video with
English subtitles) was held at noon Damascus time, hours before the
Pentagon issued its report. It mentions 103 cruise missiles against
eight targets:
Target map from the Russian briefing - bigger
In total, 71 cruise missiles have been intercepted.
...
Four missiles targeted the Damascus International Airport; 12 missiles – the Al-Dumayr airdrome, all the missiles have been shot down.
18 missiles targeted the Blai airdrome, all the missiles shot down.
12 missiles targeted the Shayrat air base, all the missiles shot down. Air bases were not affected by the strike.
Five out of nine missiles were shot down targeting the unoccupied Mazzeh airdrome.
Thirteen out of sixteen missiles were shot down targeting the Homs airdrome. There are no heavy destructions.
In total 30 missiles targeted facilities near Barzah and Jaramana. Seven of them have been shot down.
Another
Russian military briefing (Ru)
(added: English
transcript)
given today claims the following success numbers for each type of
air-defense systems the Syrian army used. It lists the numbers of
cruise missiles shot down by each versus the number targeted:
- Pantsir - 23 hits with 25 engagements,
- Buk-M2 - 24 of 29,
- Osa - 5 of 13,
- S-125 - 5 of 13,
- Strela-10 - 3 of 5,
- Kvadrat - 11 of 21,
- S-200 - 0 hits with 8 launched missiles.
Pantsir
and Buk-M2 are new systems, the Osa, S-125, Strela, Kvadrat and S-200
are Soviet era systems, some of which might have been partially
upgraded.
Some
'expert' claims that
the high number of hits the Russians assert are impossible as the
systems would be overwhelmed with such a large attack. The 'expert'
obviously didn't consider the relevant facts:
- Eight geographically distinct places were targeted. The research lab had no short-range point-defense but was only covered by the older medium-range area-defense systems S-125 and S-200. The attacked storage areas had no point-defense. The military airports all had point-defense systems especially the impressive new Pantsir-1S (video) of which Syria recently received 40 units.
- At least two Pansir-1S are stationed near each Syrian military airport. Each Pantsir has 12 missiles ready to fire and two machine cannons with 700 shots each.
- Cruise missiles, developed from the German V-1 (vid) used in World War II, are small compared to fighter planes. But they fly relatively straight, slow and low. They are easy targets for any newer point-defense systems.
Therefore
the number of eliminated cruise missiles the Russians and others
claim have been downed is completely plausible.
Had
the Russian air-defense area around its bases in Latakia been
attacked, the excellent electronic warfare systems of the Russian
military would have provided an additional layer of defense. These
systems can divert cruise missiles from their path by messing up
their electronic systems. The Syrian army has, to my best knowledge,
no such capabilities.
The
Pentagon had planned to hit eight targets in Syria two of which were
research labs. Six airports or storage areas were targeted according
to the Russian and other reports.
The
Pentagon reports no strike on Syrian airports but claims to have
launched a way too high number of cruise missiles for each of the
claimed three targets it hit. Its claim that 76 missiles were used
against Barzeh alone is ridiculous. The generals just added up all
the failed and downed cruise missiles targeted at the well defended
airfields and attributed them to Barzeh.
At
least three other sources confirm the Russian version of events. The
Pentagon is lying. The attack was a U.S. attempt to disable the
Syrian air force by destroying its airports. It failed miserably and
the Pentagon is hiding this failure by claiming that all its cruise
missiles hit the undefended targets some of its missiles reached.
The
Russian briefing
today (Ru)
(added: English
transcript)
puts the finger into that wound. Will any of U.S. media follow up on
it?
Maybe the Pentagon is just inflating the number of missiles used so that the bill is huge for MBS?
ReplyDeleteYou aren't very smart are you?
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