mulj
Trusted Member
Rather big and significant development.Emergency Squawk - 7700 likely needed priority AtC for landing. Denied by KSA.
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Rather big and significant development.Emergency Squawk - 7700 likely needed priority AtC for landing. Denied by KSA.
Yup.Rather big and significant development.
Irsnians seemed to listen advice from @Persian Gulf , now tho bases are pounding enemy without particular problems.
I'll believe it when I see it.View attachment 184019
The Russians are coming!!!
| Purpose | Batteries |
|---|---|
| Capital region | 6–8 |
| Nuclear facilities | 8–12 |
| Major airbases | 12–20 |
| Oil infrastructure | 10–20 |
| Strategic ports | 6–10 |
| Mobile reserve | 10–20 |
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Missiles per launcher | 4 |
| Launchers per battery | 6–12 |
| Ready missiles per battery | 24–48 |

No AI garbage pleaseSeeing the apocalyptic black smoke burning scenes of oil depots near Tehran, this war shows that having decent AD to shoot down enemy planes is important. If Iran had enough money to invest in AD, it could have prevented a more tougher challenge to the USAF. I'll repost this conversation I had with ChatGPT trying to analyze what level of Air Defenses at what scale Iran needs to be able to shoot down US planes reliably :
My Question : To defend a large country like Iran from major bombings by a major Air Force power like the US, how many S-300-equivalent batteries should be enough? 2 dozen? 3 dozen? Should be complemented by AWACS daily patrol too?
ChatGPT Answer :
Short answer: Two or three dozen S-300–equivalent batteries would not be enough to defend a very large country like Iran from a major U.S.-level air campaign. Realistically, you would need many dozens to over a hundred long-range SAM batteries, plus a layered network (radars, fighters, medium/short-range SAMs, EW, decoys, and mobility). Otherwise a modern air force will suppress them.
Let’s break it down.
1. Size of the country vs SAM coverage
Iran is huge:
Even with long-range SAMs like the
- ~1.65 million km² land area
- Mountains and deserts create radar blind spots
- Many high-value targets: nuclear sites, oil terminals, airbases, ports, cities
S-300PMU2, the effective defended zone is far smaller than the missile’s maximum range.
Typical effective coverage of a battery is roughly:
Also, SAMs usually protect specific sites, not continuous airspace.
- ~120–150 km defensive radius (practical coverage)
- But terrain and radar horizon shrink this significantly.
Example: Iran only received four S-300 batteries, which were used to guard key nuclear facilities instead of the whole country.
2. Realistic number needed for nationwide defense
Military analysts usually think in “air defense zones” rather than country coverage.
A rough estimate:
Total realistic range:
Purpose Batteries Capital region 6–8 Nuclear facilities 8–12 Major airbases 12–20 Oil infrastructure 10–20 Strategic ports 6–10 Mobile reserve 10–20
➡ 60–100+ long-range SAM batteries
And that’s still not a guarantee of air denial.
3. Why even 100 batteries may not stop the US
A modern US campaign would include:
Air defenses are usually destroyed early in a war.
- Stealth aircraft
- F-35 Lightning II
- B-2 Spirit
- Suppression of Air Defenses (SEAD)
- Anti-radiation missiles like
AGM-88 HARM- Stand-off cruise missiles
- Electronic warfare aircraft
- Cyber attacks on radar networks
Recent conflicts show this:
- Ukraine loses S-300 systems regularly
- Israeli strikes reportedly disabled major parts of Iran’s air defense network during attacks.
4. Why layered air defense matters more
Modern doctrine uses multiple layers, not just S-300-type systems.
Example structure:
Long range
Purpose:
- S-300
- S-400 Triumf
- Iranian Bavar-373
- bombers
- AWACS
- tankers
Medium range
Example systems:
Purpose:
- Buk-M2
- Iranian Khordad-15
- fighters
- cruise missiles
Short range / point defense
Purpose:
- Pantsir-S1
- Tor / MANPADS
- drones
- glide bombs
- anti-radiation missiles
5. AWACS patrols are absolutely critical
Yes — AWACS dramatically improves air defense effectiveness.
Example aircraft:
Benefits:
- E-3 Sentry
Without AWACS, ground radars can be blinded.
- Detect aircraft 400–600 km away
- Look over mountains
- Track low-flying cruise missiles
- Coordinate SAM batteries
- Prevent radar ambush
6. Realistic “minimum credible” defense network
For a country the size of Iran, a strong defensive network might look like:
Long-range SAM
Medium-range SAM
- 80–120 batteries
Short-range / point defense
- 200–300 batteries
Airborne early warning
- hundreds of systems
Fighter interceptors
- 6–12 AWACS
Even this would only make bombing difficult, not impossible.
- 150–300 aircraft
Bottom line
Your guess of 2–3 dozen S-300 batteries is far too small.
For a country like Iran:
…would be needed to create a serious air-denial network against a major power.
- 60–100+ long-range SAM batteries
- hundreds of other air defenses
- AWACS + fighters
Simple summary
Component Amount Missiles per launcher 4 Launchers per battery 6–12 Ready missiles per battery 24–48
If you want, I can also show you something interesting:
Why even Russia (the world’s largest SAM user) still struggles to stop Western airpower — the numbers are very surprising.
Attack on energy facilities has begun it appears. Phase two, I believe. Since Iranians are refusing to budge. It will be interesting to see, as Iran can only target the nearby Gulf energy infrastructure in a similar retaliation, when it just promised to not attack them, if not attacked from there.That is right. The Iranians have nothing to loose now. Although US can easily switch to destruction of their oil and power facilities, it will also be seen as detrimental to Iranian people, whom the US sympathize with atleast openly.
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