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HOWARD ALTMAN
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PUBLISHED MAR 1, 2023 8:44 PM
HOWARD ALTMAN
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W ith little fanfare, Ukraine has developed and used a guided artillery
rocket in combat with a longer range and heavier warhead than the
vaunted Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (GMLRS) munitions provided by
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the U.S. and allies.
Called the Vilkha-M, it is a modi!ed 7.6m (25-foot) long Soviet BM-30 Smerch
multiple launch rocket system (MLRS) artillery rocket.
The Vilkha-M has a range of 110km (68 miles) and a 300mm, 485-pound warhead
that can hit targets with great accuracy, Ivan Vinnyk, !rst deputy head of the
National Association of Ukrainian Defense Industries, told The War Zone Tuesday.
By comparison, the GMLRS munitions - !red by the M142 High Mobility Artillery
Rocket Systems, or HIMARS and the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS)
provided to Ukraine - have a range of up to about 80km (about 50 miles) and a
227mm, 200-pound warhead.
“Yes, the Vilkha has been used in combat,” Vinnyk said Tuesday during the US-
Ukraine Security Dialogue XV conference held at the National Press Club in
Washington. He could not disclose the exact location of where the Vilkha-M
missiles were used.
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In subsequent conversations on Wednesday, Vinnyk told The War Zone that the
Vilkha-M modi!cation program began in 2018 and that about 100 units have been
produced.
Questions about the use of the Vilkha-M were raised last week a"er the occupied
Azov Sea port city of Mariupol - some 50 miles away from the nearest Ukrainian
units at the time - was hit on successive nights.
While it is possible that GMLRS were used in those attacks, it is not inconceivable
to think that the Vilkha-M may have been, but Vinnyk would not divulge that
information.
Though so far produced in small numbers, the Vilkha-M gives Ukraine a munition
that reaches 36 percent further with more than twice the payload of the GMLRS.
And there are plans underway, said Vinnyk, to modify the Vilkha-M to boost the
range to 150km (about 93 miles).
As with where the Vilkha-Ms have been used, Vinnyk declined to specify exactly
when the longer-range variants might be ready or how many will be produced.
“Let’s say, hopefully just in time for the widely estimated date of counter-o#ensive
on the south towards Azov Sea,” he told The War Zone.
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The new variants, he added, will not be tested before they are used in combat.
The extended range Vilkha-Ms would have about the same range as the Ground
Launched Small Diameter Bomb (GLSDB) that the Pentagon recently authorized
for Ukraine, but with a much larger warhead and much higher kinetic punch.
It would be especially useful against targets like bridges, large structures and
heavy forti!cations that are ill suited for both GLSDB and GMLRS.
But even with a range of 93 miles, the new Vilkha-M variant would still have less
than half the range of the U.S.-produced Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS)
short-range ballistic missiles, which can hit targets at about 200 miles away.
“Still it's not bad,” Vinnyk said Tuesday at the US-Ukraine Security Dialogue XV
conference of the modi!ed Vilkha-M in the works. “It's far better than we have
right now.”
Trying to ascertain just how active Ukraine is when it comes to developing and
!elding longer-range precision weapons of its own has been a murky proposition
at best. There has been speculation that they could have revived their at one time
fairly mature home-grown ballistic missile program, for instance. Regardless,
Vilkha-M is a rare piece of evidence that Ukraine is very much capable and
actively working on — while under constant assault — of bringing its own long-
range, hard-hitting weapons to the !ght, even if in limited numbers.
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