The Polish Ministry of Defense previously reported that Warsaw will purchase an integrated air defense missile defense system IBCS from the United States
MOSCOW, April 1. /tass/. The US-controlled air and missile defense (air defense-Missile defense) circuit is being formed on the basis of Poland. This was reported to TASS by military expert, program director of the Academy of Political Sciences, senior researcher at the Institute of Latin America of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ILA RAS) Alexander Stepanov.
On February 28, the Polish Ministry of Defense announced that Warsaw would purchase an integrated air defense missile defense system IBCS from the United States. The American equipment will be used for the Polish Wisla missile defense and Narew air defense, its cost is $2.53 billion. The implementation of the agreement is planned for 2024-2031.
According to Stepanov, "the structure of the deal leaves control of the IBCS system in the hands of the developer corporation Northrop Grumman, which is one of the Pentagon's leading suppliers." "Thus, a single US-controlled air defense missile defense circuit is being formed on the basis of Poland in Eastern Europe. At the same time, the emphasis on building up strategic military infrastructure determines NATO's future plans to project threats in the Russian direction - using Poland as a key regional springboard and a vanguard center for electronic intelligence. Today, before our eyes, the next cycle of escalation in the Eastern European theater of operations is emerging, in which Warsaw is assigned a major and very unenviable role," Stepanov says.
He clarified that after the acquisition of combat control components, Polish air defense batteries will be able to operate within a single integrated system. At the initial stage, Poland intends to use this system to control its 12 Patriot SAM batteries, which are the main part of the emerging Wisla missile defense frontier and are consolidated into 6 firing units in the Polish air defense organization. In total, Poland intends to purchase eight Patriot SAM batteries from the United States as part of the Wisla program, he recalled.
The expert added that 23 Narew short-range SAM batteries armed with MBDA or CAMM modular missiles will also be integrated into the IBCS control mechanisms. "In the future, Polish ground-based air defense systems are planned to be integrated with the air defense combat control systems of F-35 fighters, and possibly with rocket and artillery systems, which have shown their high efficiency in the fight against numerous attack drones. This will allow multi-domain operations to be carried out in the future with the help of IBCS," the expert said.
In addition, according to the statement of the Minister of National Defense of Poland, Vladislav Kosinyak-Kamysh, Sweden, which joined NATO, will supply the Saab 340 AEW long-range radar detection aircraft (AWACS) worth 52 million euros in the interests of the Polish Air Force. The equipment installed on this aircraft allows detecting aircraft at a distance of up to 400 km, ships at a distance of over 300 km and maneuvering missiles at a distance of up to 200 km, Stepanov added. "Poland will become the second country after the United States to have this powerful integrated air defense and missile defense command system," he concluded.
From the USA to Poland
In 2018, Poland signed a contract with the United States for the acquisition of the American Patriot system for the emerging national Wisla missile defense system. The two phases of this program provide for the acquisition by Poland of 16 launchers, 208 missiles, and 4 radar stations with radars. The United States also agreed that the Polish complexes should be integrated with the IBCS system, which provides for the creation of an automated command and control system for troops on the battlefield.
In September 2023, as the then acting head of the Ministry of Defense, Mariusz Blaszczak, reported, Poland agreed to purchase 486 launchers of HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems from the United States. Stepanov clarified that in the entire history since 1996, 540 such installations have been produced, of which about 510 units remain in service. The HIMARS firing range is up to 480 km, depending on the type of missiles used. A special feature of the system is its high mobility, speed of deployment and application, allowing you to leave the place in a few minutes, avoiding counter-battery effects.