9K33 Osa


The 9K33 Osa is a highly mobile, low-altitude, short-range tactical surface-to-air missile system designed in the Soviet Union. Its export version name is Romb.

Description

Osa was the first mobile air defense missile system incorporating its own engagement radars on a single vehicle.
All versions of the 9K33 feature all-in-one 9A33 transporter-launcherand radar vehicles which can detect, track and engage aircraft independently or with the aid of regimental surveillance radars. The six-wheeled transport vehicles BAZ-5937 are fully amphibious and air transportable. The road range is about 500 km.
The 1S51M3-2 radar system on the 9K33 Osa TELAR received the NATO codename Land Roll. It was derived from the naval 'Pop Group' radar system but is smaller since it does not require the elaborate stabilisation system. An improved system, the Osa-AKM was first seen in Germany in 1980. It had improvements added to the launcher configuration, carrying six missiles in ribbed containers. The system is reported to be of the frequency-agile monopulse type. It consists of an elliptical rotating surveillance antenna mounted on top of the array, operates in H band and has a 30 km acquisition range against most targets. The large pulsed J band engagement antenna is mounted below it in the centre of the array and has a maximum tracking range of about 20 km.
Mounted on either side of the tracking radar antenna is a small J band parabolic dish antenna to track the missile. Below that is a small circular antenna which emits an I band uplink capture beam to gather the missile shortly after launch. The final antennas in the array are two small white rectangular ones, one on either side of the array mounted alongside the I band. These are used for command uplink to the missile. This twin antenna system permits the 'Land Roll' radar to control up to two missiles simultaneously against a single target. Furthermore, the two missiles can be guided on different frequencies to further complicate ECM. There is also a tubular device fitted to and above the tracking radar; this is a 9Sh33 electro-optical tracker. It can be used to track the target when the main tracking radar is jammed by ECM.
A 9K33 battery comprises four 9A33B TELAR vehicles and two 9T217 transloader vehicles on BAZ-5939 chassis with reload missiles and a crane. A reload time of five minutes has been reported per TELAR.
In addition to the TELARs, each regiment is also assigned a single radar collimation vehicle 9V914. This vehicle assists in the alignment of the TELAR's radar systems, ensuring accurate target tracking and engagement.

Variants

  • 9K33 "Osa" began development in 1960 and was introduced in 1971–1972 with four exposed 9M33 missiles per TELAR 9A33B and a maximum range of.
  • 4K33 "OSA-M" was introduced in 1972 and is the naval version of the system with two 9M33M missiles on a Zif-122 retractable rotating launcher and improved performance. It has been installed on Gepard class frigate, Kara class guided missile cruisers, Kiev class VTOL cruisers and also the Kirov, Slava and Krivak classes.
  • 9K33M2 "Osa-AK" with TELAR 9A33BM2 was introduced in 1975 with the new six-missile box launcher, each 9M33M2 missile being a sealed round.
  • 9K33M3 "Osa-AKM" with TELAR 9A33BM3 and missiles 9M33M3 was introduced in 1980 with the maximum range extended to and maximum altitude to 12 km as explained above. Most OSA-AKM systems also feature an IFF antenna.
  • Saman and Saman-M is a development of the Osa\Osa-M system into target drones, used for testing and training with air defense systems, including SAMs.
The 9K33M3 is also able to use the 9A33BM3 missiles which are wire-guided, presumably for use in an ECM-heavy environment where the radio command guidance may not operate properly.

Missiles

Engagement range for the early versions is approximately 2–9 km and engagement altitudes of between 50–5,000 m. The 9M33M2 "Osa-A" missile extends the ranges out to 1,500–10,000m and engagement altitudes to 25–5,000 m. The 9M33M3 missile greatly enhances the altitude engagement envelope to 10–12,000 m, and as such are also able to fly further but the system is not able to engage targets at longer ranges, due to other factors such as the radar tracking of the missiles. The system is designed for use primarily against jet aircraft and helicopters in any kind of weather.
The 9M33 missiles are 3.158 m long, weigh 126 kg and use command guidance. There is also a backup low-light optical tracking system for heavy ECM environments. The latest 9M33M3 missiles have an increased total weight of 170 kg in order to provide the extended range coverage and larger warhead. Propulsion is provided by a dual-thrust solid fuel rocket motor. Both versions feature a missile speed of around Mach 2.4 for a maximum target engagement speed of around Mach 1.4 for the original missile and Mach 1.6 for the M2\M3 missiles. The warhead for the initial and M2 versions weighs 19 kg, increased to 40 kg in the M3 version to improve performance against helicopters. All versions have impact and proximity fuzes.
There have been unconfirmed reports of other possible versions of the missile with both infra-red and semi-active radar terminal homing seekers.
Each TELAR is able to launch and guide two missiles against one target simultaneously. Kill probability is quoted as being 0.35–0.85 for the Osa and 0.55–0.85 for the Osa-AK and Osa-AKM. Reaction time is around 26 seconds. Time to prepare for engagements from being in transit is around 4 minutes and missile reloading takes around 5 minutes. Each battery of four TELARs is usually accompanied by two reload vehicles carrying 18 missiles in sets of three, with a crane mounted on the reload vehicles to assist in moving the missiles.
When launched the booster motor burns for two seconds, this permits the radar to gather and control it at very short ranges. The sustainer motor has a 15-second burn, bringing the missile to a top speed of about Mach 2. Once launched the missile is command-guided for the whole flight, and the warhead is detonated by its proximity fuze or possible command. The warhead is said to have a lethal radius of 5 m at low altitude against an F-4 Phantom size target.

Radars

Produced by the USSR/Russia, there are many export customers for this system, including Cuba, Greece, Poland, Syria, Ecuador and Iraq.
After the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, in which Syrian air defenses were oblitarated by a massive air campaign against Syrian SAM sites in the Beqaa valley, the Syrians managed to deploy SA-8s. At least one F-4 Phantom in a SEAD mission was shot down on July 24, 1982 by an SA-8 system. The WSO, Aharon Katz was killed, while the pilot, Gil Fogel, survived and was held captive by the Syrians for two years.
In late 1980s, Cuba deployed several 9K33 Osa units in southern Angola which posed a significant threat to South African air superiority at shorter ranges. The South African 61 Mechanised Battalion Group captured an intact 9K33 Osa anti-aircraft missile system on 3 October 1987 during the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale. This was the first time that such a system had ever fallen into the hands of non-Warsaw Pact forces, giving Western intelligence agencies an opportunity to examine an important Soviet-bloc weapon system.
Iraq used Osa systems during the 1991 Gulf War.
The system also saw use in the 2008 Russo-Georgian War by both the Georgian and Russian militaries.
Libyan 9K33 Osa were used, and some destroyed during the 2011 Libyan Civil War by NATO airstrikes. In order to prevent the threat to Azerbaijani aerial vehicles and suppress the enemy's activism, Azerbaijani Armed Forces have destroyed OSA surface-to-air missile system, a re-supply vehicle and personnel of the Armenian Armed Forces on 15 May 2017.

Syrian Civil War

During the Syrian civil war in December 2012, rebels fighting Bashar al-Assad's forces managed to capture at least one Osa system after a raid on an air defense base near Damascus. Later, on different occasions, videos showing rebels using the system appeared.
On 31 July 2013, a video surfaced showing the successful missile launch for a rebel operated Osa system with a possible hit on a Syrian helicopter.
On 16 January 2014, a video of the shooting down of a Syrian Mi-8 or Mi-17 helicopter was uploaded. The heavy damage on the plunging helicopter appeared to confirm the use of a bigger missile to hit the helicopter compared to the damage caused by MANPADS. Also, a video filming the TV screen inside the Osa vehicle matches another video taken outside. Another video surfaced on 18 January 2014, this time missing the intended target. On 15 October 2015, the Russian military reported that a 9K33 Osa system captured by rebel forces was destroyed in an airstrike by a Russian Su-34 bomber near Damascus. On 26 June 2016, Jaish al-Islam insurgents reported a new attempt to shoot down a helicopter with an Osa anti-aircraft system and released a video of the event.

War in Donbass

The Ukrainian Joint Forces reported destruction of the Osa-AKM surface-to-air missile system of the DNR forces along with Zhitel R-330Zh automatic jamming system in Donbass on 30 March 2019.

Yemeni Civil War

On 29 November 2019, Russian sources speculated that a Soviet made 9K33 Osa fired by Houthi forces shot down a Saudi Arabian Army Aviation AH-64 Apache. Neither Yemen nor Iran had any 9K33 Osa in their armed forces, while known Houthis' operated systems are based on the Soviet made surface-to-air 2K12 Kub which employes a two-stage rocket engine and the air-to-air missiles R-73 and R-27T which both have a single stage rocket engine.

Command post

PPRU-M1 is a mobile command center for a mixed grouping of air defense forces, such as 9K33 Osa and Tor missile system, 9K22 Tunguska, 9K35 Strela-10, 9K38 Igla

Upgrades

Belarus

  • The 9K33-1T "Osa-1T" was developed by UE "Tetraedr" from Belarus. A SAM system comprises combat assets and technical support means, including
  • * the 9А33-1Т TELAR or "Combat Vehicle", based on the original BAZ-5937 and equipped with a new day/night camera system OES-1T instead of the original day-only 9Sh33 or 9Sh38-2 "Karat";
  • * the 9M33M2 or -3 SAMs, or the new 9M33M3-1 with a range of 20 km;
  • * the 9Т217-1T Transportation and Loading Vehicle ;
  • * the 9V210-1T Maintenance Vehicle ;
  • * the 9V214-1T Alignment Vehicle ;
  • * the 9V242-1T Automatic Mobile Check-up and Testing Station and
  • * the 9F16M2 Ground Equipment Kit.
  • The T38 "Stilet" is a further development of the Osa-1T. Main components are the TELAR T381 on MZKT-69222 chassis and the new missile T382. Maximum range of targets' destruction 20 km, minimal RCS of targets detected 0.02 m².

    Poland

  • Osa-AKM-P1 "Żądło" is a Polish upgrade of the 9K33M2 "Osa-AK" and 9K33M3 "Osa-AKM". Probably 32 of the 64 systems purchased from the Soviet Union will be upgraded to keep them in service until 2017. An upgraded TELAR 9A33BM3-P1 was displayed at the MSPO 2004 exhibition in Kielce, Poland. The upgraded vehicle is fitted with a passive detection and identification system SIC 12/TA as well as the ISZ-01 IFF system.
In 2019 Poland started modification of the whole environment of the Osa system. Those works has been commissioned to WZU Grudziądz. The total cost is about €40-50 million.

Operators

Current operators

  • – 28/48 48+
  • – Upgraded to Osa-1T
  • – 24 missile launch units
  • - 180 upgraded
  • – 30 systems, 120cvs
  • Hezbollah
  • – 48 upgraded
  • – 20
  • – 64. Probably 32 systems will be upgraded to Osa-AKM-P1 to keep them in service until 2017.
  • – 16 launchers and 8 reloaders
  • – 400 Since 2007 the Osa-AKM system has modernized and fitted with protection against spoofing
  • – 14 batteries, composed of 60 independent and autonomous fighting vehicles
  • – 40
  • – 9K33M2 Osa-AK is in service.

    Former operators

  • – One regiment which passed to the Czech Republic.
  • – Phased out in 2006.
  • – 41 Osa-AK. Partially sold to Greece after the German reunification.
  • – 50 systems delivered from the Soviet Union between 1982–1985. As well as captured Kuwaiti units.
  • – Captured by the Iraqi forces in the Persian Gulf War.
  • – Passed on to successor states.