9K38 Igla (SA-18 Grouse) Russian Man-Portable Air-Defense Missile
9K38 Igla



Hezbollah Proliferation. 9K38 Igla (SA-18 Grouse) is a Russian-made man-portable infrared homing surface-to-air missile defense system (SAM/MANPAD). This is a third-generation, man-portable, surface-to-air missile system and it is given the Russian industrial index number 9K38, for the complete system. The SA-18 Grouse with its 9M39 missile was accepted into service in the Soviet Army in 1983. The full-capability 9K38 Igla with its 9M39 missile was finally accepted into service in the Soviet Army in 1983. The main improvements over the Igla-1 included much-improved resistance against flares and jamming, a more sensitive seeker, expanding forward-hemisphere engagement capability to include straight-approaching fighters (all-aspect capability) under favorable circumstances, a slightly longer range, a higher-impulse, shorter-burning rocket with higher peak velocity (but the approximately same time of flight to the maximum range). The naval variant of 9K38 Igla has the NATO reporting name SA-N-10 Grouse. The Igla–1M missile consists of a Ground Power Supply Source (GPSS), Launching Tube, Launching Mechanism & Missile (9M 313–1). There is also a two-barrel 9K38 missile launcher called Djigit.