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US-made ATACMS cluster missiles could give Ukraine’s HIMARS the power to punish Russia’s artillery and ‘cut off’ its army, former US artillery officer says<!-- wp:html --><p>The MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System.</p> <p class="copyright">US military photo by John Hamilton</p> <p>Washington will send Ukraine much-sought-after ATACMS, tactical long-range missiles, according to multiple reports.<br /> One variant that could help Kyiv is the M39 cluster missile, which has nearly 1,000 submunitions.<br /> A former US artillery officer says these weapons can hammer Russian artillery and isolate portions of its army.</p> <p>Ukrainian forces are increasingly using long-range cruise missiles to pound high-value Russian positions far behind the war's front lines. It has only a limited supply of these weapons, but Kyiv has its eyes set on the US-provided MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) to help it keep up the pressure on high-value targets in the rear.</p> <p>It hasn't yet been announced, but the Biden administration has agreed to send ATACMS to Ukraine, according to multiple reports. The exact variant Kyiv's forces might receive is, however, unclear. A former US artillery officer says the M39, an older but still deadly long-range cluster missile packed with hundreds of explosive submunitions, is a likely choice and could allow Ukraine to isolate the Russian army on the occupied Crimean peninsula and hammer its artillery — potentially without having to liberate more territory first.</p> <p>"You don't have to take the ground to prevent the Russians from being able to use it," Dan Rice, who has lobbied for Washington to send cluster munitions, rockets, and missiles as a special advisor to Ukraine's military leadership, told Insider.</p> <p>Ukrainian officials, US lawmakers in Congress, and experts and former US military officers have long pressured Washington to send ATACMS, missiles which can be fired from Kyiv's <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/atacms-gray-eagle-drones-kyiv-hit-russian-targets-inside-ukraine-2023-7">existing arsenal</a> of US-provided High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), but requests have been repeatedly met with reluctance from the White House, which has been concerned about both escalating the war and also straining its own stockpiles for this weapon. Last week, however, President Joe Biden appeared to reverse course and told his counterpart Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy that he's <a href="https://www.wsj.com/world/biden-told-zelensky-u-s-is-willing-to-provide-long-range-atacms-missiles-3d125ab3">willing to provide</a> the missiles.  </p> <p>Certain variants of the ground-launched ATACMS, like the M57s with their 500-pound unitary warhead, can strike targets as far as 186 miles away, surpassing the 155-mile range of the Western-made <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/russia-adapted-himars-ukraine-storm-shadow-missiles-bring-fear-back-2023-5">Storm Shadow/SCALP-EG</a> air-launched cruise missiles that Ukraine received from the UK and France. Fewer of these were produced compared to the older M39 cluster variant, military <a href="https://www.mca-marines.org/wp-content/uploads/0518-Long-Range-Precision-Fires.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">research</a> indicates.</p> <p>The <a href="https://asc.army.mil/web/portfolio-item/atacms/">M39 ATACMS variant</a>, which saw use in Desert Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom, only has a maximum range of around 100 miles, but that is still double the range of the precision Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System Ukraine is currently firing from its HIMARS. The M39 is also packed with 950 anti-personnel and anti-materiel (APAM) M74 bomblets. The submunitions are released and dispersed mid-flight over an area.</p> <p>US Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) firing a missile into the East Sea during a South Korea-U.S. joint missile drill.</p> <p class="copyright">South Korean Defense Ministry via Getty Images</p> <p>Rice told Insider on Monday that the transfer of the M39 variant to Ukraine could come soon and alongside two other weapons: M26 and M26A1 cluster rockets. A Department of Defense official said Tuesday they were unable to confirm reports of what Biden and Zelenskyy discussed during their meeting last week. </p> <p>"President Biden has said in the past that ATACMS are not off the table, but I don't have anything new to announce," Maj. Charlie Dietz said in a statement shared with Insider. "We will continue to focus on what we can do to help Ukraine succeed on the battlefield and protect its people." In a separate response, the State Department reiterated the Pentagon's position.</p> <h2>Isolating the Russian army</h2> <p>Like the M39 missiles, <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/ukraine-himars-cluster-rocket-boost-former-us-artillery-officer-2023-8">M26 and M26A1 cluster rockets</a> can also be fired from Ukraine's HIMARS, combat-proven systems that have been a game-changer in Ukraine. </p> <p>The M26 has a range of around 18 miles and is packed with around 650 submunitions while the M26A1 variant has a range of around 28 miles and is packed with around 510 submunitions. These rockets are a step up from the 155mm shells called dual-purpose improved conventional munitions <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/cluster-bombs-help-sustain-ukraine-strained-artillery-duels-russia-experts-2023-7">(DPICMs)</a> that the US first delivered several months ago to Ukraine. Fired from shorter-range howitzer cannons, like the US-made M777, these shells have been a headache for Russian forces, and Rice previously told Insider that the cluster rockets will only make things worse for them. </p> <p>On the battlefield, Rice said the M39 ATACMS, though likely not as good at striking facilities as newer missiles, will have two major impacts: the first is that Ukraine can cut off the Russian military in Crimea by denying it the ability to stay supplied, and the second is that Kyiv can wreak havoc on and further degrade Moscow's artillery, something cluster rockets can also do.    </p> <p>A M142 HIMARS launches a rocket on the Bakhmut direction on May 18, 2023 in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.</p> <p class="copyright">Photo by Serhii Mykhalchuk/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images</p> <p>Ukrainian forces are nearly four months into their counteroffensive, which is pressing forward in several directions along a sprawling front line along Russian-occupied territory in the east and south. One direction where Kyiv has found momentum recently is in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, where <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/ukraines-front-line-forces-hundreds-feet-per-day-nato-chief-2023-9">the ultimate aim of this particular axis</a> of attack seems to be to eventually fight all the way down to the Sea of Azov. </p> <p>Russian forces maintain a so-called "land bridge" that connects Russia with occupied Crimea in the south, and if Ukraine retakes key territory, its forces can sever Russian certain communication and supply lines. In the eastern part of the peninsula, there's also the 12-mile-long Kerch Bridge, a prized accomplishment of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who views the project as a symbol of Moscow's aspiration to illegally occupy the peninsula forever. But Kyiv has <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/ukraine-zelenskyy-says-kerch-bridge-to-crimea-must-be-neutralized-2023-7">attacked that bridge twice</a>— once with a truck bomb and again with sea drones — and <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/ukraine-zelenskyy-says-kerch-bridge-to-crimea-must-be-neutralized-2023-7">strikes on Crimea</a> are only likely to increase.  </p> <p>Rice said it is more difficult for Ukraine to target the land bridge than the Kerch bridge, but "the goal is to cut off" the Russian army. That's what ATACMS cluster missiles will help do, he said. By extending the range of the HIMARS and bolstering its area effect, Kyiv could strike railways, railway stations, and disrupt rail traffic — all of which is needed to keep supplies flowing — without needing to actually reach the Sea of Azov. </p> <p>"This is a major transformational change," Rice said, adding that even without Ukraine's military "gaining any more ground, they can isolate the Russian army in Crimea."</p> <p>Ukraine has been increasingly attacking high-value Russian targets around Crimea over the past few weeks, including <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/russias-black-sea-fleet-headquarters-hit-another-blow-forces-crimea-2023-9">several significant strikes</a> targeting the Black Sea Fleet. These major attacks are part of Ukrainian pressure campaign to <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/huge-crimea-attack-ukraine-pry-black-sea-base-russia-navy-2023-9">evict Moscow</a> from Crimea, which Kyiv has vowed to liberate from nearly a decade of Russian occupation, and <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/ukraine-missile-attack-naval-base-helps-make-crimea-untenable-russia-2023-9">make the peninsula untenable</a> for Putin's forces to stay there. </p> <p>Ukrainian military fire a M777 howitzer on the Bakhmut direction on May 17, 2023 in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.</p> <p class="copyright">Photo by Serhii Mykhalchuk/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images</p> <p>Beyond targeting supply routes and logistics channels, Rice said that Ukraine could use the ATACMS missiles and cluster rockets to "target the killer on the battlefield: Russian artillery." </p> <p>When Ukrainian radars detect incoming fire from Moscow's artillery pieces, Kyiv should be firing something right back, but the problem is that its howitzers are kept back because they're expensive and valuable targets, he said. The HIMARS can fire immediately, and because the cluster rockets and missiles are area weapons, the submunitions within the respective systems can take out multiple guns, ammunition, vehicles, and personnel, Rice said. </p> <p>M26 and M26A1 rockets can hit Russia's front-line battalions and rear echelon battalions. With longer-range M39 ATACMS missiles packed with far more explosive submunitions, this becomes even more of a deadly challenge for Moscow's army.  </p> <p>"Counter-battery fire is just going to increase in lethality and range, and everything is now within range," Rice said, adding that "as the counteroffensive continues, this lethality is going to punish the Russians until they are forced to leave."</p> <div class="read-original">Read the original article on <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/us-cluster-rockets-ukraine-punish-russian-artillery-cut-off-army-2023-9">Business Insider</a></div><!-- /wp:html -->

The MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System.

Washington will send Ukraine much-sought-after ATACMS, tactical long-range missiles, according to multiple reports.
One variant that could help Kyiv is the M39 cluster missile, which has nearly 1,000 submunitions.
A former US artillery officer says these weapons can hammer Russian artillery and isolate portions of its army.

Ukrainian forces are increasingly using long-range cruise missiles to pound high-value Russian positions far behind the war’s front lines. It has only a limited supply of these weapons, but Kyiv has its eyes set on the US-provided MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) to help it keep up the pressure on high-value targets in the rear.

It hasn’t yet been announced, but the Biden administration has agreed to send ATACMS to Ukraine, according to multiple reports. The exact variant Kyiv’s forces might receive is, however, unclear. A former US artillery officer says the M39, an older but still deadly long-range cluster missile packed with hundreds of explosive submunitions, is a likely choice and could allow Ukraine to isolate the Russian army on the occupied Crimean peninsula and hammer its artillery — potentially without having to liberate more territory first.

“You don’t have to take the ground to prevent the Russians from being able to use it,” Dan Rice, who has lobbied for Washington to send cluster munitions, rockets, and missiles as a special advisor to Ukraine’s military leadership, told Insider.

Ukrainian officials, US lawmakers in Congress, and experts and former US military officers have long pressured Washington to send ATACMS, missiles which can be fired from Kyiv’s existing arsenal of US-provided High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), but requests have been repeatedly met with reluctance from the White House, which has been concerned about both escalating the war and also straining its own stockpiles for this weapon. Last week, however, President Joe Biden appeared to reverse course and told his counterpart Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy that he’s willing to provide the missiles.  

Certain variants of the ground-launched ATACMS, like the M57s with their 500-pound unitary warhead, can strike targets as far as 186 miles away, surpassing the 155-mile range of the Western-made Storm Shadow/SCALP-EG air-launched cruise missiles that Ukraine received from the UK and France. Fewer of these were produced compared to the older M39 cluster variant, military research indicates.

The M39 ATACMS variant, which saw use in Desert Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom, only has a maximum range of around 100 miles, but that is still double the range of the precision Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System Ukraine is currently firing from its HIMARS. The M39 is also packed with 950 anti-personnel and anti-materiel (APAM) M74 bomblets. The submunitions are released and dispersed mid-flight over an area.

US Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) firing a missile into the East Sea during a South Korea-U.S. joint missile drill.

Rice told Insider on Monday that the transfer of the M39 variant to Ukraine could come soon and alongside two other weapons: M26 and M26A1 cluster rockets. A Department of Defense official said Tuesday they were unable to confirm reports of what Biden and Zelenskyy discussed during their meeting last week. 

“President Biden has said in the past that ATACMS are not off the table, but I don’t have anything new to announce,” Maj. Charlie Dietz said in a statement shared with Insider. “We will continue to focus on what we can do to help Ukraine succeed on the battlefield and protect its people.” In a separate response, the State Department reiterated the Pentagon’s position.

Isolating the Russian army

Like the M39 missiles, M26 and M26A1 cluster rockets can also be fired from Ukraine’s HIMARS, combat-proven systems that have been a game-changer in Ukraine. 

The M26 has a range of around 18 miles and is packed with around 650 submunitions while the M26A1 variant has a range of around 28 miles and is packed with around 510 submunitions. These rockets are a step up from the 155mm shells called dual-purpose improved conventional munitions (DPICMs) that the US first delivered several months ago to Ukraine. Fired from shorter-range howitzer cannons, like the US-made M777, these shells have been a headache for Russian forces, and Rice previously told Insider that the cluster rockets will only make things worse for them. 

On the battlefield, Rice said the M39 ATACMS, though likely not as good at striking facilities as newer missiles, will have two major impacts: the first is that Ukraine can cut off the Russian military in Crimea by denying it the ability to stay supplied, and the second is that Kyiv can wreak havoc on and further degrade Moscow’s artillery, something cluster rockets can also do.    

A M142 HIMARS launches a rocket on the Bakhmut direction on May 18, 2023 in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.

Ukrainian forces are nearly four months into their counteroffensive, which is pressing forward in several directions along a sprawling front line along Russian-occupied territory in the east and south. One direction where Kyiv has found momentum recently is in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, where the ultimate aim of this particular axis of attack seems to be to eventually fight all the way down to the Sea of Azov. 

Russian forces maintain a so-called “land bridge” that connects Russia with occupied Crimea in the south, and if Ukraine retakes key territory, its forces can sever Russian certain communication and supply lines. In the eastern part of the peninsula, there’s also the 12-mile-long Kerch Bridge, a prized accomplishment of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who views the project as a symbol of Moscow’s aspiration to illegally occupy the peninsula forever. But Kyiv has attacked that bridge twice— once with a truck bomb and again with sea drones — and strikes on Crimea are only likely to increase.  

Rice said it is more difficult for Ukraine to target the land bridge than the Kerch bridge, but “the goal is to cut off” the Russian army. That’s what ATACMS cluster missiles will help do, he said. By extending the range of the HIMARS and bolstering its area effect, Kyiv could strike railways, railway stations, and disrupt rail traffic — all of which is needed to keep supplies flowing — without needing to actually reach the Sea of Azov. 

“This is a major transformational change,” Rice said, adding that even without Ukraine’s military “gaining any more ground, they can isolate the Russian army in Crimea.”

Ukraine has been increasingly attacking high-value Russian targets around Crimea over the past few weeks, including several significant strikes targeting the Black Sea Fleet. These major attacks are part of Ukrainian pressure campaign to evict Moscow from Crimea, which Kyiv has vowed to liberate from nearly a decade of Russian occupation, and make the peninsula untenable for Putin’s forces to stay there. 

Ukrainian military fire a M777 howitzer on the Bakhmut direction on May 17, 2023 in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.

Beyond targeting supply routes and logistics channels, Rice said that Ukraine could use the ATACMS missiles and cluster rockets to “target the killer on the battlefield: Russian artillery.” 

When Ukrainian radars detect incoming fire from Moscow’s artillery pieces, Kyiv should be firing something right back, but the problem is that its howitzers are kept back because they’re expensive and valuable targets, he said. The HIMARS can fire immediately, and because the cluster rockets and missiles are area weapons, the submunitions within the respective systems can take out multiple guns, ammunition, vehicles, and personnel, Rice said. 

M26 and M26A1 rockets can hit Russia’s front-line battalions and rear echelon battalions. With longer-range M39 ATACMS missiles packed with far more explosive submunitions, this becomes even more of a deadly challenge for Moscow’s army.  

“Counter-battery fire is just going to increase in lethality and range, and everything is now within range,” Rice said, adding that “as the counteroffensive continues, this lethality is going to punish the Russians until they are forced to leave.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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