Los Angeles Times: Stinger Missiles Not Top U.S. Threat
[url]http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/sns-ap-attacks-stingers0924sep23.story?coll=sns%2Dap%2Dnation%2Dheadlines[/url]
Stinger Missiles Not Top U.S. Threat
By JOHN J. LUMPKIN
Associated Press Writer
September 23 2001, 10:45 PM PDT
WASHINGTON -- American-made Stinger surface-to-air missiles remain in small
numbers in Afghanistan, left over from when the United States supported rebels
fighting the Soviet Union more than a decade ago.
The shoulder-fired, heat-seeking Stinger is capable of bringing down a
low-flying plane or a helicopter.
Both Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia and the rebels of the Northern
Alliance are believed to have a small supply of the missiles. Experts said it is
unlikely they will present a great threat to U.S. aircraft flying over the
country.
During the late 1980s, the CIA, through Pakistan, supplied hundreds of missiles
and launchers to the Afghani rebels, the mujahedin. The rebels used the Stingers
effectively, bringing down scores of Soviet helicopter gunships.
The introduction of Stingers into the conflict is widely regarded as a turning
point in the war, as it gave the rebels a high-tech weapon to oppose the
Soviets. The Soviets left Afghanistan in 1989, and the communist government
there fell a short time later.
The missiles still in Afghanistan are at least a decade old and have not been
properly maintained. U.S. aircraft and helicopters have newer countermeasures
and flares to spoof the missiles.
Stingers also are more effective in daylight, when a gunner can examine his
target before firing. U.S. helicopters carrying special forces will probably
operate only at night, said John Pike, director of GlobalSecurity.org, a think
tank in Alexandria, Va.
"You think about American forces -- we own the night," he said.
Vincent Cannistraro, a former CIA counterterrorism chief, said the Stingers
supplied to Afghanistan also had "friend-or-foe" receivers that only let them be
fired at Soviet aircraft. Those can be removed by a clever engineer, he said.
"The Stinger weapons are kind of obsolete weapons at this point," Cannistraro
said. "They have a mythological status."
Several Taliban soldiers were seen toting Stingers in a recent military parade
in Kabul. The missiles still see action from time to time in Afghanistan's
ongoing civil war.
In 1999, a Stinger fired by the Northern Alliance brought down a Taliban Su-22
fighter-bomber. At the time, it was estimated that between 50 and 100 Stingers
remained in the country.
Several years ago, the United States launched a buyback program, offering to
purchase remaining Stinger missiles for $80,000. Washington said it feared the
missiles could be used by terrorists against civilian aircraft.
The missiles, built by Hughes Missile Systems in Tucson, Ariz., have a range of
about two miles and can hit targets at altitudes around 12,000 feet.
Copyright 2001 Associated Press