Tag Archives: HIMARS

Russian troops in deadly HIMARS attack flouted ‘military 101:’ experts – Business Insider

  1. Russian troops in deadly HIMARS attack flouted ‘military 101:’ experts Business Insider
  2. Ukraine released footage of a HIMARS strike on Russians gathering out in the open on a beach, saying it took out 200 troops Yahoo News
  3. Video of Russian Soldier Caught in Anti-Tank Missile Strike Goes Viral Newsweek
  4. Ukraine released footage of a HIMARS strike on Russians gathering out in the open on a beach, saying it took o Business Insider India
  5. Russian FPV-Drone Bombs Ukrainian Stronghold; Putin’s Men ‘Kill’ 800 Soldiers Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Russian Troops in Deadly HIMARS Attack Flouted ‘Military 101:’ Experts – Business Insider

  1. Russian Troops in Deadly HIMARS Attack Flouted ‘Military 101:’ Experts Business Insider
  2. Russian Tanks & Howitzers Make Ukrainian Soldiers Flee From Battleground | Watch Dramatic Footage Hindustan Times
  3. Ukraine released footage of a HIMARS strike on Russians gathering out in the open on a beach, saying it took out 200 troops Yahoo News
  4. How ‘Reckless’ Russian Command Led to Mass Casualty HIMARS Strike on Beach Newsweek
  5. Ukraine released footage of a HIMARS strike on Russians gathering out in the open on a beach, saying it took o Business Insider India
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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After US Smart Bombs, Russian Jammers Make HIMARS Miss Targets On Ukraine Battlefield? – CRUX

  1. After US Smart Bombs, Russian Jammers Make HIMARS Miss Targets On Ukraine Battlefield? CRUX
  2. Ukrainian troops helpless as Russian jammers render American HIMARS ‘useless’ | Report Hindustan Times
  3. Russia’s ‘On-Point Jamming’ Has Made Life Miserable For HIMARS, EW Attacks Cause It To Miss Its Target – US Report EurAsian Times
  4. Russia’s newest weapon is changing the course of Ukraine war The Telegraph
  5. ‘Russian Air Force Can Destroy Ukraine’: Putin’s aerial superiority worries United States Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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VIDEO: HIMARS missiles destroy officers’ quarters at Russian base in Ukraine – Business Insider

  1. VIDEO: HIMARS missiles destroy officers’ quarters at Russian base in Ukraine Business Insider
  2. Russian Brigades Keep Sending Tanks Into The Same Drone Kill Zone Near Donetsk Forbes
  3. War Trophy? Russian Troops ‘Raid, Seize & Flaunt’ US M113 Armored Personnel Carrier Vehicle Delivered To Ukraine EurAsian Times
  4. Video shows Ukrainian gunners using American-made howitzer to bombard Russian forces near Bakhmut NBC News
  5. Ukrainian Marines Are Shooting Laser-Guided Rockets At Russian Troops Six Miles Away Forbes
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rheinmetall eyes boost in munitions output, HIMARS production in Germany

DUESSELDORF, Jan 29 (Reuters) – German arms-maker Rheinmetall is ready to greatly boost the output of tank and artillery munitions to satisfy strong demand in Ukraine and the West, and may start producing HIMARS multiple rocket launchers in Germany, CEO Armin Papperger told Reuters.

He spoke days before Germany’s defence industry bosses are due to meet new defence minister Boris Pistorius for the first time, though the exact date has yet to be announced.

With the meeting, Pistorius aims to kick off talks on how to speed up weapons procurement and boost ammunitions supplies in the long term after almost a year of arms donations to Ukraine has depleted the German military’s stocks.

Rheinmetall (RHMG.DE) makes a range of defence products but is probably most famous for manufacturing the 120mm gun of the Leopard 2 tank.

“We can produce 240,000 rounds of tank ammunition (120mm) per year, which is more than the entire world needs,” Papperger said in an interview with Reuters.

The capacity for the production of 155mm artillery rounds can be ramped up to 450,000 to 500,000 per year, he added, which would make Rheinmetall the biggest producer for both kinds of ammunition.

In 2022, Rheinmetall made some 60,000 to 70,000 rounds each of tank and artillery shells, according to Papperger, who said production could be boosted immediately.

Demand for these munitions has soared since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last February, not only due to their massive use on the battlefield but also as Western militaries backfill their own stocks, bracing for what they see as a heightened threat from Moscow.

Papperger said a new production line for medium calibre ammunition, used by German-built Gepard anti-aircraft tanks in Ukraine for example, would go live by mid-year.

Germany has been trying for months to find new munitions for the Gepard that its own military had decomissioned in 2010.

HIMARS PRODUCTION LINE IN GERMANY?

At the same time, Rheinmetall is in talks with Lockheed Martin(LMT.N), the U.S. company manufacturing the HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) multiple rocket launchers in heavy use with Ukrainian troops, Papperger said.

“At the Munich Security Conference, we aim to strike an agreement with Lockheed Martin to kick off a HIMARS production (in Germany),” he said, referring to an annual gathering of political and defence leaders in mid-February.

“We have the technology for the production of the warheads as well as for the rocket motors – and we have the trucks to mount the launchers upon,” Papperger said, adding a deal may prompt investments of several hundred million euros of which Rheinmetall would finance a major part.

Rheinmetall also eyes the operation of a new powder plant, possibly in the eastern German state of Saxony, but the investment of 700 to 800 million euros would have to be footed by the government in Berlin, he said.

“The state has to invest, and we contribute our technological know-how. In return, the state gets a share of the plant and the profits it makes,” Papperger suggested.

“This is an investment that is not feasible for the industry on its own. It is an investment into national security, and therefore we need the federal state,” he said.

The plant is needed as shortages in the production of special powders could turn out to be a bottleneck, hampering efforts to boost the output of tank and artillery shells, he noted.

A few days before the meeting with the new defence minister, Papperger pushed for an increase of Germany’s defence budget.

“The 51 billion euros in the defence budget will not suffice to purchase everything that is needed. And the money in the 100 billion euro special funds has already been earmarked – and partially been eaten up by inflation,” he said.

“100 billion euros sounds like a giant sum but we would actually need a 300 billion euro package to order everything that’s needed,” he added, noting that the 100 billion special fund does not include ammunitions purchases.

Even before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Germany was 20 billion euros short of reaching NATO’s target for ammunitions stockpiling, according to a defence source.

To plug the munitions gap alone, Papperger estimates the Bundeswehr (German armed forces) would need to invest three to four billion euros per year.

In the talks with the minister, the defence boss hopes for a turn towards a more sustainable long-term planning in German procurement, stretching several years into the future, as the industry needed to be able to make its arrangements in time.

“What we are doing at the moment is actually war stocking: Last year, we prefinanced 600 to 700 million euros for goods,” Papperger said. “We must move away from this crisis management – it is crisis management when you buy (raw materials and other things) without having a contract – and get into a regular routine.”

Reporting by Sabine Siebold, Editing by Angus MacSwan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Himars Transform the Battle for Ukraine—and Modern Warfare

MYKOLAIV REGION, Ukraine—A global revolution in warfare is dramatically tipping the scales of the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, putting in the hands of front-line troops the kind of lethality that until recently required aircraft, ships or lumbering tracked vehicles. It also has the capacity to change battlefields far from Eastern Europe.

Able to pick off Russian military bases, ammunition depots and infrastructure far behind front lines, Ukraine’s 16 Himars helped its troops this summer halt a bloody Russian advance. Since last month, Ukrainians have seized back swaths of territory in their country’s east and ground down Russian troops in the south. Washington recently pledged to deliver another 18 Himars.

Within Kyiv’s arsenal, Himars offer a unique combination of range, precision and mobility that allows them to do the job traditionally handled by dozens of launchers firing thousands of shells.

By shrinking launchers and nearly guaranteeing hits on targets, Himars and the other equipment are upending century-old assumptions about how wars must be fought—and particularly about military supplies. Himars’s vastly improved accuracy also collapses the massive logistical trail that modern infantry has demanded.

“Himars is one part of a precision revolution that turns heavily equipped armies into something light and mobile,” said

Robert Scales,

a retired U.S. Army major general who was among the first to envision Himars in the 1970s.

Last month The Wall Street Journal gained rare access to a front-line Himars unit.

Lt. Valentyn Koval said the four Himars vehicles in his unit have destroyed about 20 Russian antiaircraft batteries.

Before a rocket hits its target the men can be on their way back to camp.

One evening at dusk the men in this unit were making dinner when orders for their fifth mission of the day arrived: to target Russian barracks and a river barge ferrying munitions and tanks 40 miles away.

Six men piled into their two Himars: a driver, targeter and commander in each, accompanied by the battery commander and a security detail in an armored personnel carrier. The commander plugged coordinate data into a tablet computer to determine the safest location for firing.

Within minutes, the two Himars rumbled out from cover under an apricot grove toward the launch spot in a nearby sunflower field. Thirty seconds after arriving, they fired seven missiles in quick succession. Before the projectiles hit their targets, the trucks were returning to base camp.

Ten minutes later came another pair of targets: Soviet-era rocket launchers some 44 miles away. Off rolled the Himars again and fired another barrage of missiles.

Soon after, the soldiers were back at camp and finishing their dinner. Some pulled up videos on Telegram showing the fruit of their labor: burning Russian barracks.

Ukraine’s Himars rockets, which can fly 50 miles, have hit hundreds of Russian targets, including command centers, ammunition depots, refueling stations and bridges, choking off supplies to front-line units. Since stopping Russia’s spring advance across Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, they are now targeting retreating Russian forces.

Ukrainian commanders estimate that Himars are responsible for 70% of military advances on the Kherson front, the unit’s commander, Lt.

Valentyn Koval,

said. The four vehicles in his unit have killed hundreds of Russians and destroyed about 20 antiaircraft batteries, he said.

Lt. Koval poses next to a Himars.

Russian artillery—like most such systems since World War I—lacks precision. To destroy a target, troops generally level everything around it. Gunners following maps rain shells in a grid pattern that aims to leave no terrain in a quadrant untouched. Russian forces in Ukraine are lobbing dozens of shells per acre to hit one objective, analysts say.

Himars can do the job with one rocket carrying a 200-pound explosive warhead. Each Ukrainian Himars carries one six-rocket pod that can effectively land the punch of more than 100,000 lbs. of traditional artillery.

Artillery is cumbersome. During Operation Desert Storm in Iraq in 1991, it accounted for more than 60% of a U.S. division’s weight. Moving it demands soldiers, trucks, fuel and time, plus additional soldiers and vehicles to protect those supply operations.

All that support sucks resources and makes a juicy target, as the world saw in the opening days of the Ukraine war, when a Russian supply convoy halted by Ukrainian attacks outside Kyiv became a 40-mile-long sitting duck.

“It’s not just the precision of Himars that’s revolutionary,” said Gen. Scales. “It’s the ability to reduce the tonnage requirements by an order of magnitude or better.”

A sergeant dismounts from the Himars vehicle he commands.

Ukrainian soldiers prepare to load Himars munitions.

The supply chain for Himars units consists of factory-packaged rocket pods stashed at pickup points in the nearby countryside and usually hidden by foliage. A cargo truck deposits the camouflage-green pods—each a little bigger than a single bed—at a string of designated locations, not unlike a commercial delivery route.

Himars teams drive to the ammo drop spots, where a waiting three-man loading team removes spent pods and swaps in full ones within five minutes, using a crane integrated into the vehicle.

“Himars is one of, if not the most, efficient type of weapons on the battlefield,” said Lt. Koval, a jocular 22-year-old with a Pokémon ringtone on his cellphone. “This gives us an opportunity to react quickly, hit in one place, move to another, and destroy effectively.”

Russia’s best truck-based rocket launchers, by contrast, can require around 20 minutes to set up in the launch spot and 40 minutes to reload—critical time when the enemy tries to return fire. The Himars can drive faster and has an armored crew cabin.

Ukrainian Himars teams stay lean by spending weeks in the field without returning to a larger base. Lt. Koval’s unit, which received the first Himars in June, has spent the past three months sleeping in tents beside the launchers or inside nearby support vehicles.

Soldiers prepare food and coffee while waiting for the call to file more rockets.



Photo:

Adrienne Surprenant/MYOP for The Wall Street Journal

The men, trained by U.S. instructors outside Ukraine, remain on standby for new targets, switching into action and just as casually returning to mundane activities like making coffee or playing cards.

On the front armor of one Himars, the soldiers painted a white grin below the Ukrainian word for “workhorse.” On the other, whose odometer shows it has traveled over 13,000 miles, they stenciled 69 black skulls, commemorating significant confirmed hits.

Mission details arrive as geographic coordinates, with a target description and instructions on whether to use explosive missiles for armored targets or fragment charges for hitting personnel. Targeting tips come from sources including U.S. intelligence and partisans in occupied territories.

The Himars commanders then pick a suitable launch location and guide the vehicles into place. Inside the cab, the vehicle commander sits between the driver and the targeter, who feeds the mission data into a computer. When the vehicle reaches the launch site, the targeter presses one button to angle the missiles skyward and another button to fire.

The missiles roar into the night sky with a burst of flame, leaving a cloud of smoke over the field. The launcher is lowered and the vehicle speeds back to its tree cover.

“We are the juiciest target in the region,” said Lt. Koval. “So we need to maneuver to survive.”

A Himars on the road to an operating position in a field.

Smoke lingers in a sunflower field after a Himars fired a rocket.

Maneuverability is exactly why Himars was created as a downsized version of a tank-like weapon, the Multiple Launch Rocket System, which has also been provided to Ukraine by the U.K. and Germany. First used in Desert Storm, before the advent of precision artillery, massed batteries of the 12-rocket vehicles unleashed so much explosive force and shrapnel that Iraqi troops dubbed it “steel rain.”

MLRS’s heft means that only the largest military cargo jets can airlift it and they land far from the fighting. To move distances on land requires a flatbed truck. Himars was envisioned as a lighter, more agile version.

The push for nimble units equipped with lightweight gear became part of a broader effort to streamline the U.S. military after the Cold War that reached its peak under Defense Secretary

Donald Rumsfeld

starting in 2001, but was sidetracked by wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.


Max speed:

Firing range:

Weight:

In service:

Origin:

52.8 mph

19.9 to 186.4 miles

10.88 tons

2005

U.S.

6 MLRS series rockets

or 1 ATACMS missile

Max speed:

Firing range:

Weight:

In service:

Origin:

52.8 mph

19.9 to 186.4 miles

10.88 tons

2005

U.S.

6 MLRS series

rockets or 1

ATACMS missile

Max speed:

Firing range:

Weight:

In service:

Origin:

52.8 mph

19.9 to 186.4 m

10.88 tons

2005

U.S.

6 MLRS series

rockets or 1

ATACMS

missile

Himars, on wheels and with only six rockets, was a project that stayed on track. One initial shortcoming, the Pentagon discovered, was that six cluster bombs didn’t pack enough punch to destroy many targets. GPS-guided artillery, rolled out in the mid-1990s, gave Himars new life. Precision meant the rockets didn’t need to explode together for a giant blast. They could each pick off a different geolocated target.

“The precision revolution changes everything,” said Gen. Scales, who considers the transformation to be the kind of epoch-making military shift that redefines warfare and will now tip battlefield advantage from massed armies to small infantry units.

Such shifts were rare in the past, including the eclipse of infantry by horse-mounted warriors around the fourth century and the introduction of gunpowder to Europe a millennium later, said Gen. Scales, a military historian who served as commandant of the U.S. Army War College.

Others came around the U.S. Civil War with the introduction of precise rifles and artillery and machine guns, which proved so deadly in World War I, and at the start of World War II, when the German blitzkrieg merged motorized transportation with radio coordination of troops.

Now, inexpensive microprocessors are putting what Gen. Scales dubs “cheap precision” in the hands of Ukrainian soldiers.

“If I enter the coordinates of this hole,” said Lt. Koval, standing by a molehill the size of a shoebox, “it will hit this hole.”

One Himars has 69 skulls stenciled on it, one for every verified hit.

On one particularly busy day in late August, the two Himars under Lt. Koval’s command worked in tandem with two others. When his pair ran out of ammunition, they dropped back to reload while the other duo advanced to fire. Lt. Koval said they tag-teamed for 37 hours without stopping to sleep and hit roughly 120 targets, enabling Ukrainian infantry to break Russian lines around the southern city of Kherson.

Washington was initially reluctant to provide Ukraine with Himars, fearing such a move could cause Moscow to retaliate against the U.S. or its allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It has declined to supply more powerful rockets which can be fired up to 185 miles and would enable Ukraine to destroy sturdier targets, like concrete bridges that they have so far only been able to blow holes through.

In a sign that Ukraine’s additional firepower is taking a toll on Moscow’s forces, Russian Defense Minister

Sergei Shoigu

has told Russian troops to make Ukraine’s long-range weaponry a priority target.

Himars operators say the biggest threat comes from Russia’s kamikaze drones, buttressed recently by more effective Iranian systems, but they feel well protected by Ukrainian anti-air systems and special forces. Lt. Koval’s crew abandoned two firing missions this summer out of caution when a drone was spotted nearby, but he said no Himars have been hit.

“We’re always on the move,” said Lt. Koval.

So far no Himars have been hit by enemy fire, Lt. Koval said.

Write to Stephen Kalin at stephen.kalin@wsj.com and Daniel Michaels at daniel.michaels@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Pentagon will double HIMARS artillery for Ukraine

The United States will more than double its commitment of long-range rocket artillery systems for Ukraine, the Pentagon said Wednesday, part of a long-term strategy by the United States and its partners to ramp up weapons production in response to Russia’s invasion.

The $1.1 billion package will include 18 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) launchers, the weapons that have wreaked havoc on command posts and logistical hubs behind Russian lines. The United States already has delivered 16 of the systems, capable of delivering precision munitions from up to 50 miles away, from existing stocks.

This new tranche will take a “few years” to build and deliver, a senior U.S. defense official told reporters, underscoring efforts to provide for Ukraine’s long-term defense infrastructure while allies and partners speed tailored packages of equipment and ammunition for the most urgent needs. The HIMARS represents a “core component of Ukraine’s fighting force in the future,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon.

The Russian men fleeing mobilization, and leaving everything behind

Separately, the Pentagon said Wednesday that the United States intends to increase production of “ground-based long range fires, air defense systems, air-to-ground munitions, and other capabilities” needed to sustain Ukraine’s military for the long haul. In a statement, defense officials said that nearly 20 other nations also agreed to expand their industrial base and accelerate the production of arms that can replace Ukraine’s Russian and Soviet-era equipment with modern systems used by NATO.

The announcements come as Russia presses as many as 300,000 conscripts into service to replace and reinforce beleaguered troops driven back by Ukrainian offensives in the east and south. Readying those new troops will be challenging for the Kremlin, a second U.S. official told reporters, given the logistics necessary to supply and train them. Many of the Russian troops who would train conscripts already “are in Ukraine,” the official said.

The most recent arms package includes weapons and equipment that will take between six months and two years to deliver and require defense contractors to restart or intensify manufacturing, the first defense official said.

Ukraine also will receive 150 additional armored Humvees, which will allow troops to transport foot soldiers and maneuver around the battlefield during offensive operations, and more than 200 vehicles that will help them haul heavy equipment, a logistical challenge that comes with supplying large amounts of heavy weapons.

The package also includes systems designed to mitigate weapons the Russians have used effectively, including radars that can detect incoming artillery and drones.

War in Ukraine: What you need to know

The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” of troops in an address to the nation on Sept. 21, framing the move as an attempt to defend Russian sovereignty against a West that seeks to use Ukraine as a tool to “divide and destroy Russia.” Follow our live updates here.

The fight: A successful Ukrainian counteroffensive has forced a major Russian retreat in the northeastern Kharkiv region in recent days, as troops fled cities and villages they had occupied since the early days of the war and abandoned large amounts of military equipment.

Annexation referendums: Staged referendums, which would be illegal under international law, are set to take place from Sept. 23 to 27 in the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk regions of eastern Ukraine, according to Russian news agencies. Another staged referendum will be held by the Moscow-appointed administration in Kherson starting Friday.

Photos: Washington Post photographers have been on the ground from the beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work.

How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating.

Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video.

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The US Army Is Looking for Ways to Build Hundreds More HIMARS

  • US-made High-Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems have helped Ukraine turn the tide against Russia.
  • The success of HIMARS will likely drive up demand for the weapon — Taiwan already wants to buy more.
  • Now the US Army is looking for companies that can build up to 100 HIMARS launchers a year.

The US Army is looking for companies that can build up to 100 HIMARS multiple rocket launchers a year.

The Army’s request for information (RFI) comes as Ukraine uses its new US-supplied M142 High-Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS, to conduct devastating strikes against Russian forces.

What’s interesting is that the Army lay outs a five-year schedule that calls for almost 500 new HIMARS, which are currently built by Lockheed Martin. Between fiscal years 2024 and 2028, the Army is contemplating a minimum of 24 new launchers a year and a maximum of 96, totaling between 120 to 480 over five years.

“The total quantities for HIMARS include all potential variants,” the Army said. “Additional supporting efforts include, but are not limited to: recurring production, obsolescence, engineering changes, system engineering and program management (SEPM), integrated logistics support (ILS), spares, New Equipment Training, and other support equipment.”

Whether those new HIMARS are actually built depends on funding, Congressional politics, and changes in the international situation and military technology. “The information provided may be used by the Army in developing its acquisition strategy,” noted Redstone Arsenal, which issued the RFI.

A Wisconsin Army National Guard HIMARS on Sweden’s Gotland Island in October 2021.

US Army/Sgt. Patrik Orcutt


Adding 480 new launchers would almost double the world’s supply of HIMARS.

The US Army has 363 and the Marine Corps another 47. The Army said in 2021 — before Russia attacked Ukraine — that it would seek to increase its force to 547 HIMARS. Romania has 18 HIMARS and US approval to purchase up to 54. Singapore has 18 launchers and Jordan 12.

Next to Ukraine, perhaps the most notable buyer would be Taiwan, which now plans to order 29 HIMARS.

Taiwan originally planned to order just 11 HIMARS along with 40 M109A6 Paladin self-propelled 155-mm howitzers, but it now wants to cancel the Paladin order in favor of more HIMARS, which have a longer firing range. Taiwan’s army believes HIMARS would more effective in countering an amphibious landing.

Indeed, given the publicity HIMARS has in the Ukraine war — where it has been called “a game changer” — its cachet alone will probably increase sales.

The HIMARS is designed to be a lightweight truck-mounted multiple rocket launcher, alongside the heavier, armored M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System. While HIMARS can fire long-range Army Tactical Missile System, Ukraine’s vehicles are armed with a Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System pod, which can shoot six GPS-guided rockets out to 50 miles.

Ukraine has used HIMARS for pinpoint strikes to destroy Russian targets such as ammunition dumps, command posts, and even bridges.



A Ukrainian unit commander shows the rockets on a HIMARS vehicle in eastern Ukraine on July 1.

Anastasia Vlasova for The Washington Post via Getty Images


The long reach of HIMARS is particularly appreciated by Ukrainian forces. When Russia launched its attack in February, the Soviet-era artillery used by Ukraine’s military was outranged by newer Russian weapons such as the BM-30 Smerch multiple rocket launcher, which has a firing range of 45 miles.

This enabled Russian artillery to destroy Ukrainian guns while remaining safely out of range of counter-fire. Because HIMARS is truck-mounted, it can also employ scoot-and-shoot tactics to quickly relocated after firing.

However, ramping up production of HIMARS won’t be easy. Covid-19 and other supply-chain woes have created procurement backlogs across the civilian and military worlds. In the best of times, boosting manufacturing capacity for weapons is difficult — even expanding production lines for old-fashioned, unguided 155-mm howitzer shells can take more than a year.

Manufacturers may be reluctant to invest for fear that changes in Pentagon priorities and Congressional funding will stick them with unused capacity. Exports of HIMARS and other weapons to other nations are also hostage to an ever-fluid global politics and the US’s byzantine Foreign Military Sales process.

Nonetheless, HIMARS appears likely to become a desired weapon. Given sufficient demand, the US defense industry will build more.

Michael Peck is a defense writer whose work has appeared in Forbes, Defense News, Foreign Policy magazine, and other publications. He holds a master’s in political science. Follow him on Twitter and LinkedIn.



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Ukraine HIMARS Strike Russian Bases During Major Counter-Attack

Ukrainian forces struck a number of targets around the occupied city of Kherson, in southern Ukraine, on the night of August 2-3.

According to local media, several Russian bases and arms warehouses were attacked in the Kherson Oblast using U.S.-provided HIMARS advanced multiple-rocket launchers.

Ukrainian news site Obozrevatel reports a Russian base was hit in Chornobaivka, on the outskirts of occupied Kherson.

This was confirmed on Facebook by the Ukrainian military’s official “Operation Command South” page, which said the target was struck with “rocket and artillery” fire.

Ukrainian troops fire a U.S.-made M777 howitzer from their position on the front line in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine on August 1, 2022. Ukrainian forces have also been using HIMARS (not pictured) to hit Russian targets.
SERGEY BOBOK/GETTY

Video posted on Telegram, which has not been independently verified by Newsweek, reportedly shows Russia’s Chornobaivka base coming under fire.

In a separate incident, Ukrainian forces said they hit an ammunition warehouse in Berislav, further up the Dnipro river from Kherson.

According to Obozrevatel the target was successfully destroyed, with multiple secondary explosions as stored ammunition detonated.

The Ukrainians also reported three strikes on Russian “strongholds” in the Berislavsky and Bashtansky districts, along with another on an ammunition dump in the same area.

Ukrainian forces are laying the groundwork for an operation to liberate Kherson, occupied by Russian troops in the first few days of the war, with President Volodymyr Zelensky saying they are making “step by step” progress.

The recapture of Kherson would help secure Odesa, Ukraine’s most important Black Sea port and an obvious Russian target.

If the entire Kherson Oblast can be recaptured it will break the land bridge between Crimea, which Russia seized in 2014, and both Russian occupied parts of eastern Ukraine and Russia itself.

On Monday U.S. National Security Council Coordinator John Kirby announced Washington will provide Ukraine with more rockets for its HIMARS, as part of a new $550 million assistance package.

Ukraine has been using its U.S. provided HIMARS to strike Russian targets far behind the front line, such as ammunition dumps and command centers.

According to retired U.S. Army General Mark Hertling this has been a “game changer” in its fight against the Russian invasion, leaving the Kremlin’s forces “in dire shape.”

Ukrainian forces have hit three bridges over the Dnipro using HIMARS, making it harder for the Russians to reinforce their troops in Kherson.

These include the critically important Antonovsky bridge which has been left “likely unusable.”

Russian forces in occupied parts of the Kherson Oblast are also facing an insurgency from Ukrainian partisan fighters, with sabotage and assassination attempts against a number of local collaborators.

Speaking to the BBC, one partisan explained how his team tracks Russian troop movements, then passes the details on to the Ukrainian army for artillery strikes.

One official in the Russian-installed local administration was killed in a car bombing, whilst a number of others have been injured.

Valery Kuleshov, a pro-Russian blogger, was shot and killed in Kherson during April in a suspected partisan attack.

Newsweek has contacted the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense and Russian Foreign Ministry for comment.

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HIMARS ‘Game Changer’ in Ukraine War, Russia ‘in Dire Shape’: Ex-General

Retired U.S. Army General Mark Hertling said Saturday that High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) given to Ukraine to assist in its fight against Russia are a “game changer,” contending that Moscow’s forces are now “in dire shape.”

The White House on Friday announced that an additional $270 million in security assistance would be sent to Ukraine, including four additional HIMARS. The rocket systems have been seen as crucial to helping Kyiv’s forces repel Moscow’s military.

That announcement from the Biden administration came after a senior U.S. defense official told journalists Friday that Ukraine had utilized HIMARS to take out more than 100 “high value” targets. Those strikes effectively destroyed ammunition depots, long-range artillery positions, command posts, air-defense sites, and radar and communications nodes, the official said.

“As for HIMARS – w/ fewer rounds, greater range, precision accuracy – it’s a game changer,” Hertling tweeted in a lengthy thread Saturday, providing analysis on the war. The retired general previously served as the commander of the U.S. Army Europe and the Seventh Army.

“Russia is in dire shape & losing, Ukraine is adapting to the fight & winning,” he asserted.

Earlier on Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky shared his appreciation for the new HIMARS being sent by the U.S.

“Thank you @POTUS [Biden] for the new defense aid package for Ukraine. Critically important, powerful arms will save our soldiers’ lives, speed up the liberation of our land from the Russian aggressor. I appreciate the strategic friendship between our nations. Together to victory!” Zelensky wrote on Twitter several hours after the White House made the announcement.

Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Gabrielius Landsbergis touted the delivery of HIMARS to Ukraine as successfully pressuring Russia, leading to a diplomatic breakthrough regarding the port in Odessa, Ukraine.

“The agreement to unblock Odesa would have been impossible without HIMARS. It’s now very clear that the war will end earlier if we arm Ukraine faster,” Landsbergis tweeted Friday.

The U.S. has provided Ukraine with billions of dollars in military and humanitarian assistance as it defends itself against Moscow’s aggression. Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the internationally condemned war five months ago on February 24, bizarrely claiming that Kyiv’s government is led by Nazis. In reality, Zelensky is Jewish and had family members killed in the Holocaust genocide perpetuated by the German Nazis in World War II.

Retired U.S. Army General Mark Hertling called the HIMARS used by Ukraine against Russia a “game changer” in a Saturday tweet. Above, HIMARS launchers fire salvoes during the “African Lion” military exercise in the Grier Labouihi region in southeastern Morocco on June 9, 2021.
FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images

On Wednesday, General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that Ukraine’s use of HIMARS was “degrading” Russia’s capabilities.

“These strikes are steadily degrading the Russian ability to supply their troops, command and control of their forces, and carry out their illegal war of aggression,” he said.

Russia claimed on Friday that it had destroyed four HIMARS this month that were utilized by Ukraine. However, U.S. and Ukrainian officials have disputed those reports.

Newsweek reached out to the Russian foreign ministry for comment.



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