Air Defense

MIM-104 Patriot

A high-end air defense system used by Ukraine against Russian air and missile attacks and by U.S. forces defending Al Udeid Air Base from Iranian ballistic missiles.

Conflict side
UkraineUnited States
Built by
Raytheon (RTX)Lockheed Martin
Built in
United States
MIM-104 Patriot, Long-range surface-to-air missile system, Air Defense

Profile

Type
Long-range surface-to-air missile system
Conflict side
UkraineUnited States
Origin
United States / NATO donors
Service note
Modern integrated air defense
SAMstrategicNATO

Service History

Used by
Ukrainian Air Force, U.S. Army air defense units

Specifications

Crew
Battery has about 90 assigned; 3 soldiers operate the engagement control station in combat
Missiles
PAC-2/GEM family and PAC-3 / PAC-3 MSE interceptors
Range
Variant and target dependent; open sources cite up to about 160 km against aircraft
Mobility
Truck/trailer-mounted radar, control, power, antenna, and launcher elements
Loadout
Launcher load varies: up to 4 PAC-2, 16 PAC-3 CRI, or 12 PAC-3 MSE

Conflict Usage

Russia-Ukraine War
Side: Ukraine

Supplied to Ukraine for high-end air defense of cities and critical infrastructure against aircraft and missile threats.

United States-Iran Conflict
Side: United States

U.S. Army Patriot batteries remained at Al Udeid Air Base and engaged incoming Iranian ballistic missiles during Iran's retaliation after Operation Midnight Hammer.

MIM-104 Patriot Images

Related Weapon Systems

Buk-M2, Tracked medium-range surface-to-air missile system, Air DefenseAir DefenseBuk-M2Tracked medium-range surface-to-air missile systemThe Buk-M2 is a Russian tracked medium-range surface-to-air missile system in the Buk family, using the 9M317 missile and networked radars to defend maneuver forces and key areas against aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, precision weapons, and some ballistic targets. In the Russia-Ukraine War it appears on the Russian side as part of layered battlefield air defense, where Ukrainian forces have targeted its launchers and associated radar vehicles.

Sources