By Pavel Felgenhauer
MiG-31E (Foxhound) jet fighter Yesterday, June 19, Moscow's respected
business daily Kommersant reported that Russia's arms trading monopoly
Rosoboronexport has begun to fulfill an arms deal it secretly signed
with Syria earlier this year to sell five MiG-31E (Foxhound) jet
fighters, considered one of the best in the world, and an additional
unspecified number of the newest MiG-29M/M2 fighter-bombers. The paper
reported the total price to be around $1 billion. MiG-31s were produced
in Nizhniy Novgorod at the Sokol aviation factory from 1981 to 1994
(some 500 planes overall). Since production has been terminated, Syria,
according to Kommersant, will get the jets from the Russian Defense
Ministry stockpile after a refurbishing at Sokol (Kommersant, June 19).
Kommersant suggested that Iran is partially or even fully covering the
purchase bill, and that the jets may partially or fully end up as part
of the Iranian air force. Commenting on the Kommersant report, Foreign
Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamiynin yesterday morning told reporters,
"All Russian arms deals comply with international law and Russia's
obligations under international treaties and UN Security Council
resolutions" (RIA-Novosti, June 19). This vague statement was widely
taken as indirect conformation of the Kommersant story, but it later
turned out to not be the case. By the evening of June 19
Rosoboronexport CEO Sergei Chemizov, speaking in Paris at the Le
Bourget Air Show, had denied the existence of any jet fighter deal with
Syria (RIA-Novosti, June 19).
This is not the first time that Kommersant has published a page-one
“scoop” on breaking arms trade news that later turned out to be not
fully accurate. Last month Kommersant reported that Libya and Russia
were close to finalizing a $2.2 billion arms deal (see EDM, May 9).
Neither Moscow nor Tripoli confirmed the report.
Last week Kommersant reported that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
might buy nine Russian submarines, reportedly worth $2 billion, when he
visits Moscow this month to meet President Vladimir Putin (Kommersant,
June 14). This deal seemed fishy from the start, since it clearly
exceeded the present capacity of Russian shipbuilders to make new subs
and the Venezuelan navy’s capacity to run so many new ships. Kommersant
reported that Venezuela had chosen Russian subs over others offered by
Germany and France, which also sounded odd, because Russian
conventional attack subs, including the latest models, are outdated and
significantly inferior to German and French ones. Venezuelan Defense
Minister Raul Isaias Baduel promptly denied that his government was
planning to buy submarines from Russia (RIA-Novosti, June 15).
Kommersant claims the MiG-29M/M2 is more or less the same jet Russia is
currently peddling to India as the MiG-35 (Kommersant, June 19). The
MiG-35 is still only a flying prototype -- not a real fighter -- and
the Russian Air Force does not have any such planes. If India chooses a
European or U.S. fighter instead, the MiG-35 as well as the MiG-29M/M2
may never enter serial production.
The MiG-31, in turn, is a real fighting jet. Russia today has some 280
MiG-31s. Before delivering the aircraft to buyers, arms traders and
producers first remove secret Russian military equipment. Then the jets
are repainted and sold as “modernized” for high prices, creating
sky-high profits that do not seem to ever reach state coffers (see EDM,
July 31, 2006, January 4, 2007).
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Moscow has been trying
to sell the MiG-31. The plane has been displayed at air shows, but no
customers have come forward. The MiG-31 is a highly specialized jet --
not a fighter per se, but an interceptor specifically designed to kill
long-range U.S. cruise missiles. The MiG-31 is a bulky two-seater that
can carry up to eight air-to-air guided missiles with a range of up to
120 kilometers The MiG-31 can fly supersonic near the earth’s surface
as well as high up. It is a purely defensive fighter, designed to be
used over friendly territory to defend against massive air assaults.
The MiG-31 has sophisticated and powerful radar that can track 24
different targets simultaneously and exchange information with other
MiG-31s and ground control centers.
Any country that is seriously preparing to meet the U.S. military on
the battlefield, as Iran seems to be, would want to have such a jet to
meet a typical U.S. air assault complimented with hundreds or thousands
of cruise missiles, as happened in 1999 in Yugoslavia and in 1991 and
2003 in Iraq. Syria could also want several such jets, if Washington
were to decide to attack, say, terrorist-connected targets on its
territory. The MiG-31 deal with Syria, as reported by Kommersant, seems
more plausible, than stories about, say, nine subs for Venezuela.
Chemizov has denied the MiG-31 contract, but Kamiynin was deliberately
noncommittal. Kommersant may have received confidential information
about the possible deal and the leak could have been deliberate. The
arms trade stories Kommersant has been printing may be tests of Western
(U.S.) reactions, to see what would happen, if imaginary arms contracts
suddenly turn out to be real. These leaks also may be a signal to the
West to understand what woe to expect if the Russo-U.S. summit next
month in Maine goes awry.
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THE STRANGE STORY OF MIG-31 JETS FOR SYRIA
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