MOSCOW, April 27. /TASS/. Russia’s Aerospace Forces have targeted another 38 Ukrainian military facilities, including an S-300 and an Osa-AKM missile systems, Russian Defense Ministry Spokesman Major General Igor Konashenkov said on Wednesday.
"Tactical and army aircraft of the Russian Aerospace Forces targeted 38 Ukrainian military facilities, including seven command posts, an S-300 missile system near Nikolayevka and an Osa-AKM missile system near Velikaya Kamyshevakha, as well as two fortified areas and 27 troop and equipment concentration sites. More than 210 nationalists were killed and 43 armored and motor vehicles were destroyed," he specified.
In addition, Russian artillery units hit 309 targets in the past day, "including 14 command posts, 292 Ukrainian troop and equipment concentration sites and three ammunition depots near the Chervonoye and Ilyichevka settlements in the Kharkov region."
Missile systems
The S-300 medium-range surface-to-air missile system, brought into serial production in 1975, is designed to hit ballistic and aerodynamic targets flying at a speed of up to 1,200 meters per second. It is also capable of striking ground targets based on predetermined coordinates. S-300 systems are in service with about 20 countries, including Slovakia, Ukraine, Cyprus, Greece, Kazakhstan, Bulgaria, Belarus, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The OSA-AKM is an upgraded version of the Soviet air defense system that went into service in 1971. Its production was halted in 1989, although these air defense systems are still operational in some countries, including Belarus, Poland and Ukraine. The air defense system comprises a self-propelled launcher, target detection and tracking stations, a guidance device, missiles and a transporter-loader. OSA-AKM systems are furnished with six 9M33M3 missiles capable of striking aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, remotely-controlled aerial vehicles and other air attack weapons at an altitude of 10 to 5,000 meters and at a range of 1.5 to 10.3 km and at a target flight speed of up to 400 meters per second.