Government Offers Cash For Voluntary Surrender Of Old
Missiles
If you're an Afghan warlord sitting on some old Stinger
missiles, the government of Hamid Karzai is offering you a carrot:
give up your Stingers voluntarily, we'll pay you for them. The
stick is implied -- if the Afghan Army, or UN disarmament experts,
find them, then you will give them up anyway, without getting
anything in return.
You might wonder how a sophisticated weapon like the Stinger
anti-aircraft missile wound up in a country so war-ravaged and poor
that it dropped off the bottom of the UN's World Development Index
in 1996 -- with too little development underway or sustained to be
measurable.
It was actually a result of the same civil war that had ravaged
the country. In the late 1980s quantity of the missiles were
provided by the USA, through Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence
bureau (ISI), to Afghan mujahideen during the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan, after foreign missiles -- Russian SA-7s and British
Blowpipes -- proved insufficient to defeat modern Russian fighters.
But after the war, the whereabouts of some of the missiles remained
cloudy.
Somewhere between 500 and 2,000 FIM-92 Stingers were shipped to
Pakistan from the USA. According to some estimates, the Soviets
lost almost 400 aircraft to stingers. Assuming a conservative one
hit per two firings ratio, it would probably be safe to assume that
between one third to one half of those remain in someone's
inventory. Because of their potential for misuse in terrorist
hands, the unused remainder of the weapons are some of the most
sought-after commodities on Earth.
Despite much speculation, no civilian aircraft has ever been
downed with a US Stinger missile. The two-dozen or so attacks by
terrorists on civil aircraft, which began with the downing of two
Air Rhodesia Vickers Viscounts in the 1970s -- with the survivors
of one shootdown being bayoneted to death by Joshua Nkomo's ZIPRA
terrorists -- have all used Soviet-designed missiles. The most
common is the SA-7 and its Chinese copy, the HN-5, both of which
have been encountered in Afghanistan. Recently the improved SA-16
has been used in Iraq, but not in Afghanistan.
In addition, no US or Coalition military aircraft in Afghanistan
has been struck by a missile, although some pilots have reported
what appeared to be missile launches.
The stocks of Stingers supplied to the Mujahideen during the
1980s conflict were the 1970s-vintage FIM-92A weapon. Experts
believe that these older weapons are no longer serviceable due to
the limited life of batteries and other parts. However, several
buy-back and turn-in programs have secured a quantity of these
weapons, as well as some Blowpipes and a large quantity of Chinese
HN-5s.
If you happen to have a Stinger or two in your warehouse, call
Hamid... has he got a deal for you!