Has Ukraine repurposed an obsolete air defense system for use against Russia?

Here's what we know about the situation
Repurposing a Soviet-era weapon
The S-200 air defense system
Previous evidence
No confirmation from Kyiv
A viable replacement
Waiting on new missiles
An impressive weapon
Phased out over a decade ago
Credence to the reports?
Comments from the British Ministry of Defence
Being used as a ground attack weapon
New reports of the S-200’s use
Russia’s Ministry of Defense
Detected and intercepted
Refitting older systems
More evidence in October 2023
A possible repurposed S-200 system?
Here's what we know about the situation

Ukrainian ingenuity has played a big role in allowing Kyiv to punch above its weight against what was once considered the second-greatest military power in the world.

Repurposing a Soviet-era weapon

One of the best recent examples of how Ukraine is using the weapons that it has on hand came in the summer of 2023 when reports began to surface that Kyiv had repurposed obsolete Soviet-era air defense systems.

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Cooper6, CC BY-SA 4.0

The S-200 air defense system

Reports about Ukraine reengineering the S-200 air defense systems it still had in its stockpiles to hit ground targets first surfaced in July 2023 when an alleged video of the missile was published. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Von Vitaly V. Kuzmin, CC BY-SA 4.0

Previous evidence

In the video, a missile that Forbes journalist David Axe explained was likely a V-860 or a V-880 from an S-200 was seen slamming into the ground somewhere in Bryansk Oblast. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By George Chernilevsky, Own Work, CC BY-SA 3.0

No confirmation from Kyiv

There was no official confirmation from Ukraine regarding S-200’s use at the time, or that it was being converted into a ground attack weapon, but the move would have made a lot of sense. 

A viable replacement

Axe wrote that converted S-200 missile systems could have been a “viable replacement” for the country’s ever-shrinking stockpiles of its Tochka ballistic missiles. 

Waiting on new missiles

Moreover, Axe added that the S-200 could have also been a good placeholder for Ukraine and its military forces while they waited for more long-range rockets from Western allies. 

An impressive weapon

The S-200 is a surface-to-air missile defense system according to Business Insider and the weapons payload weighs 7.5 tonnes and measures an impressive 36 feet long. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By One half 3544, Own work, Public Domain

Phased out over a decade ago

Popular Mechanics reported the S-200 missile system was retired from Ukraine’s arsenal over a decade ago but that it was believed Kyiv had kept three to four launch platforms. 

Credence to the reports?

If true then it would lend credence to reports that Ukraine has been using the obsolete air defense system against Russian targets, reported Britain’s Ministry of Defense in its August 20th update on the war in Ukraine and the reports that Ukraine had been repurposing its remaining S-200 stock. 

Comments from the British Ministry of Defence

“Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles are regularly hitting Moscow,” the ministry wrote. “In addition, there have also been increasing reports of SA-5 GAMMON missiles striking Russia.”

Being used as a ground attack weapon

“This Soviet-era 7.5 tonne, 11-metre long weapon is retired from its air defence role in Ukraine’s inventory. However, it is now apparently being employed as a ground attack ballistic missile,” the ministry added. 

New reports of the S-200’s use

On August 19th, an S-200 missile system was allegedly used against Russia according to a statement from the Russian Ministry of Defense, which said it intercepted rockets bound for Crimea. 

Russia’s Ministry of Defense

"During the night on August 19, the Kyiv regime attempted to carry out a terrorist attack using an S-200 surface-to-air missile re-equipped into a strike weapon on the Crimean territory,” the ministry wrote based on a translation from the Russian News Agency (TASS). 

Detected and intercepted

“Russia’s air defense capabilities timely detected and intercepted it in the air," ministry officials continued, adding that there were no casualties nor any damage on the ground. 

Refitting older systems

The Russian Ministry of Defense had reported another attack using S-200 missiles on August 12th, noting at that time that they were detected and intercepted.   

More evidence in October 2023

In October 2023, more evidence that Kyiv may have actually repurposed its remaining stock of S-200 systems for use against ground-based targets came in October 2023 according to the Bulgarian military news website Bulgaria Military. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By David Birkas, CC BY 2.0

A possible repurposed S-200 system?

A video shared on Telegram appeared to show what the poster called the footage from the first use of a repurposed S-200 system. However, it was a claim that could not be verified at the time.

Photo Credit: Telegram @supernova_plus

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