Al-Hussein : Iraqi Indigenous Conventional Arms Projects, 1980-2003
by
Ali Altobchi
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
Book Series
Middle East@War
ISBN-10
1914377184
ISBN-13
9781914377181
Publisher
Helion & Company
Imprint
Helion & Company
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Dec 2nd, 2022
Print length
78 Pages
Weight
320 grams
Dimensions
21.00 x 29.60 x 0.70 cms
Product Classification:
Military history
Ksh 3,600.00
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Iraq not only launched domestic production of many weapon systems of the Western and Soviet design but became a prime location for the development of high-profile advanced weapon systems. The most notable of these was the al-Hussein a stretched long-range variant of the famous Soviet R-17E (ASCC/NATO-code SS-1 Scud).
Always at the forefront of Arab states when it came to the development of its armed forces and armament industry, during the 1970s Iraq embarked on an ambitious program of becoming self-sufficient in production of almost all equipment and ammunition necessary for its armed forces. Indeed, during the following decade, many of the related projects became a necessity because of the lengthy and costly war with Iran. The most ambitious and probably the best-known such projects were related to the production of ballistic missiles: the efforts resulted in the construction of a factory for production of rocket propellant at Hillah and another for the assembly of ballistic missiles at Fallujah. A direct result emerged in early 1988, when Iraq deployed the al-Hussein ballistic missile (an extended-range variant of the Soviet-made R-17E Scud) to strike Tehran in Iran in the course of the so-called War of the Cities.However, al-Hussein was far from being the only such project. At the time Iraqi scientists and armament designers including Nassir al-Hindawi, Rihab at-Taha, and Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash were considered some of the best in the world, they became closely involved in cooperating with Brazil, resulting in the development of the Astros 2 (a copy of the Soviet-made Luna-M artillery rocket), and then embarked on the development of such advanced designs as the Liath and Ababil, and a solid-fuel ballistic missile; the al-Samoud 2.Moreover, the Iraqis launched a project to develop indigenous early warning radar aircraft; anti-ballistic missiles; and cooperated with South Africa in the field of development of long-range artillery pieces like the GC-45 (in its GHN-45 variant). Indeed, within Project Babylon, the Iraqis cooperated with prominent Canadian artillery-expert Gerald Bull to develop the so-called super gun: a 1,000mm artillery piece expected to be able of reaching a range of 750km.Written by one of the Iraqi engineers involved, and richly illustrated with photographs (many in color) and specially commissioned artworks, al-Hussein is the first-hand account of these and many other indigenous Iraqi armament projects.
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