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News ID: 126633
Publish Date : 26 April 2024 - 22:06

Report: Portable Missiles Proliferating in Mideast, North Africa

PARIS (AFP) – Armed groups in the Middle East and North Africa have little difficulty getting their hands on portable surface-to-air missiles despite a campaign to prevent their proliferation, according to a report published Friday.
Shoulder-fired missiles -- also known as man-portable air-defence systems, or MANPADS -- in the hands of militants are seen as a threat because of their ability to target military aircraft, but also passenger planes.
“Despite long-standing international efforts to curb the illicit proliferation of MANPADS, armed groups in the MENA region continue to acquire and use these systems,” the Small Arms Survey, an independent research group based in Geneva, said in a new report.
Both older versions and advanced systems, which have more accurate targeting, are available in the region. Easy to transport and use, they are particularly attractive to non-state armed groups.
The group identified reports of 12 different models of illicit MANPADS in the arsenals of armed groups in 13 of the 26 countries in the region from 2015 to mid-2023.
“Chinese-designed MANPADS are gradually supplanting Soviet/Russian models,” the organization said, adding that most of them arrive in the region via third-party importing states.
Shoulder-fired missiles of North Korean design are also circulating in the region, particularly in Syria.
“First-generation Strela-2-pattern MANPADS remain the most widely proliferated systems,” said the Survey, adding that it found reports of the Soviet-designed systems or their components in 13 of the affected MENA countries.
The research group pointed to “successful launches” of decades-old Strela-2 systems in the Gaza Strip and Iraq.
Armed groups in at least nine countries in the region had access to advanced shoulder-fired missiles during the time period studied by the group.
“This is notable because advanced MANPADS are significantly more capable than older systems,” the Survey said.
Illicit users include Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the Daesh terrorist group and its affiliates, the Libyan National Army (LNA) and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party.