News

Smerch: Soviet-designed Tornado wreaks fear in Karabakh

October 7, 2020 09:53 PM


Twitter Share Facebook Share WhatsApp Share

"Smerch", meaning "Tornado" in Russian: the word is on everyone's lips in Stepanakert, the capital of the Armenian-controlled Azerbaijani region of Nagarno-Karabakh.

Stepanakert has been under sustained Azerbaijani bombardment since fighting flared between the two foes late last month, with Baku vowing there can be no compromise until it wins control of the territory.

Both sides have access to Soviet-era weapons but it is the USSR-designed Smerch multiple rocket launcher system that is causing the most concern in Stepanakert.

Overnight, at least three houses next to each other were destroyed by a powerful explosion but there were no casualties.

"Only a Smerch rocket could have caused such damage," said local resident Albert Kafaian as he surveyed the damage to the surroundings.

A crater 4 to 5 meters (11 to 13.5 feet) wide was gorged in the middle of what was a small courtyard. Only the walls, reduced to rubble, of the two-storey concrete dwellings remain.

The overturned wreckage of a car -- all that was left of a garage -- lay at the foot of a tree. Fortunately, the owners had fled to Yerevan. 

Another rocket landed in the garden of a house, leaving a roughly 10-metre crater in the ground. The sole victim appeared to be a dog whose gutted remains were lying nearby.

David Babaian, an advisor on foreign policy in the breakaway region, said Smerch attacks had taken place that night, in what he described as a "tactic of terror".

'Destroy anything that moves' 

The salvos have started to follow a typical pattern: hourly fire in the night, possibly from the Smerch, then a respite in the morning.

The day brings drone attacks, with the familiar buzzing sound giving away the culprit.

Azerbaijan, for its part, has accused Armenian forces of shelling civilian targets in urban areas, including its second-largest city of Ganja.

The 300 mm Smerch rockets, fired from a multiple rocket launcher on the back of a truck, replaced in the 90s the more famous "Grad" BM-21 system.

These were the successors of the Katyusha rocket launcher system used with great success by the USSR in World War II with its ease of reloading making up for lack of accuracy.

It remains impossible to confirm with certainty the exact type of rockets being used, even if some 10 apparently unexploded rockets are cordoned off on the streets of the city, inviting the curiosity of journalists and locals.

The kind of arms being used are "weapons that cannot be precisely adjusted, super-powerful, intended to destroy anything that moves over large areas," prominent Russian military commentator and deputy editor of the online newspaper Ezhednevny Zhurnal, Alexander Goltz, told AFP.

Amnesty International has meanwhile said the breakaway authorities have released images of damage "consistent with the use of cluster munitions" against Stepanakert.

The International Committee of the Red Cross at the weekend condemned "reported indiscriminate shelling and other alleged unlawful attacks", saying "scores" of civilians had already lost their lives.

 

 



Most Read

  1. Mexican claims victory by paying $28 for $28,000 Cartier earrings Mexican claims victory by paying $28 for $28,000 Cartier earrings
  2. Maryam Nawaz can wear uniform! Maryam Nawaz can wear uniform!
  3. Here is all about Madiha Rizvi’s second husband Here is all about Madiha Rizvi’s second husband
  4. Gunmen storm Lucky Cement factory, kill security guard Gunmen storm Lucky Cement factory, kill security guard
  5. When Pakistani pilot shot down Israeli fighter plane When Pakistani pilot shot down Israeli fighter plane
  6. Sussanne Khan faces most ‘EMBARRASSING’ moment with beau Arslan Goni Sussanne Khan faces most ‘EMBARRASSING’ moment with beau Arslan Goni

Opinion

  1. PML-N smashed PTI in by-polls
    PML-N smashed PTI in by-polls

    By News Desk

  2. Riding the Digital Wave: How Technology is Rewriting the Script of Economic Prosperity
    Riding the Digital Wave: How Technology is Rewriting the Script of Economic Prosperity

    By News Desk

  3. Tax on solar energy: Govt's misplaced priorities favour powerful stakeholders over people welfare  
    Tax on solar energy: Govt's misplaced priorities favour powerful stakeholders over people welfare  

    By Manzoor Qadir

  4. Legacy of Indian military subjugation in Kashmir
    Legacy of Indian military subjugation in Kashmir

    By Dr Ghulam Nabi Fai

  5. Islamabad becoming the hub of international diplomacy
    Islamabad becoming the hub of international diplomacy

    By Salim Bokhari

  6. Insights into the Pakistan Stock Exchange's Recent Record High Triumph
    Insights into the Pakistan Stock Exchange's Recent Record High Triumph

    By Zulfiqar Ali Mir