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Evidence Shows Polish Missile Attacks Were Russian-origin S-300 Missile Fired From Belarus, Not From Ukraine

According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), S-300 ranges up to 150 km. The proximity and ranges of the S-300 suggest that the missile was fired from Belarus, not from Ukrainian territory. Ukraine may have fired Spanish-supplied Apside anti-air missiles, but the recovered debris shows Russian-origin missiles. Experts at Global Defense Corp believe that missile originated from Belarus.

Reports that what was initially alleged to be a Russian missile struck inside Poland’s border on Tuesday, killing two people, sparked fears that the ongoing war in Ukraine could escalate into a more significant conflict.

Leaders of Poland and NATO have since said that the rocket was probably a stray that Ukraine fired to defend itself from a barrage of Russian missile attacks on Tuesday, Reuters reported. Russia has also denied that it intentionally or accidentally struck Poland’s border.

According to the Russian-state-owned news agency TASS, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters Wednesday that Russia carried no blame for what happened and there was no reason to escalate the war.

Russian-origin missile fired from Belarus

Belaruski Hajun, an independent Belarusian military monitoring media outlet, has reported that Russia transported another 20 missiles for S-300/400 air defense systems from Belarus.

Debris from the Polish site. Belarus operated earlier models of S-300 missiles. Photo Polish MoD.

The outlet has detected the arrival of another Il-76 cargo plane of the Russian Aerospace Forces in Belarus. The aircraft with the registration number RF-76605 landed at the Machulishchy airfield on 13 November at 19:55 (Kyiv time).

S-300 missiles launched from a canister.

On November 9 and 10, just before the Il-76 flights began, at least 16 trawls with containers for missiles for the S-300 and S-400 air defense systems were moving in the direction of the airport. They carried 14 missile containers each, for a total of 64 missiles.

The activity of the transport aviation of the Russian Aerospace Forces in Belarus, November 2022. Source: Belaruskiy Hayun

Having spent 2 hours and 10 minutes at the same airfield, the Il-76 of the Russian Aerospace Forces with the number RF-76605 took off to the Millerovo airfield (Rostov Oblast, Russia) at 22:05.

As per the outlet’s information, eight Il-76 planes have landed at Machulishchy airfield within the last few days; presumably, they are conducting transportation of missiles for S-300/400 air defence systems from Belarus.

Polish border with Belarus

This information was additionally confirmed on Sunday. At 13:00, five trawls transferring four missile containers for S-300 air defence systems each (20 missiles in total) were detected in the direction of the Machulishchy airfield.

Thanks to DigitalGlobe, commercial satellite imagery reveals that Belarus has at least partially converted its S-200 SAM site to support the S-300 system at Polatsk. The S-300 (NATO reporting name SA-10 Grumble; SA-12 Giant/Gladiator; and SA-20 Gargoyle) is a family of Russian-origin long-range surface-to-air missile systems.

According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), S-300 has a range up to 150 km. The proximity and ranges of the S-300 suggest that the missile was fired from Belarus, not from Ukrainian territory. In a fog war, Ukraine may have fired Spanish-supplied Apside anti-air missiles, but the debris recovered shows that Russian-origin missiles. Experts at Global Defense Corp believe that missile originated from Belarus.

In 2010, Russia completed the first stage of repairing and modernizing the Belarusian S-300 air-defense missile system.

NATO responses

Still, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said in Brussels on Wednesday that Russia, rather than Ukraine, was at fault in the situation since it launched the war and Tuesday’s attacks against Ukraine to begin with.

An S-300 rocket was identified as the likely culprit in an incident on Tuesday that saw a missile land in Poland, killing two people. Contributor/Getty Images

The fact that the missile likely came from Ukraine instead of Russia may be easing concerns about a potential escalation of Russia’s war into an all-out conflict with NATO, even as world leaders continue to chart their response to the incident. But the development was notable all the same because it marked the first time that the deadly invasion directly spilt over into a NATO country in more than eight months of the war.

The S-300, identified as the likely culprit in Tuesday’s incident, is a family of Russian-made surface-to-air missile (SAM) systems that are “capable of engaging aircraft and UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] in addition to providing some cruise and ballistic missile defense capability,” according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies Missile Threat site.

Map showing the location of Przewodow in Poland, where a suspected Russian missile landed.

European Council President Charles Michel has also been on Twitter to express his condolences to the families of the dead.

“Shocked by the news of a missile or other ammunition having killed people on Polish territory,” he wrote.

Both Ukraine and Russia have reportedly used the missiles in the course of the war. iNews, citing a Western intelligence report, reported in July that Russia was using Soviet-era S-300 missiles for strikes against land-based targets in Ukraine. That same month, the Ukrainian military’s Operational Command South formation said on Facebook that Ukrainian missile and artillery units destroyed a battery of Russian-operated S-300 air defense systems near Zelenotropynske in the southern Kherson region.

Slovakia donated an S-300 system to Ukraine in April, and in return, the U.S. provided Slovakia with a Patriot missile system that U.S. service members manned. U.S. defense officials praised the donation and said that the system was meant to help bolster Ukraine’s air defenses so it can better protect itself from Russian attacks.

The New York Times reported that Ukraine had already had its own S-300 system even before the donation.

When Russia was initially believed to be behind the missile that landed in Poland, this sparked conversations on whether NATO could invoke Articles 4 or 5 of its charter. The principle of collective defense, which means that an attack against one NATO member is considered an attack against all NATO members, is enshrined in Article 5. Article 4 allows for any member state to seek consultations with the rest of the defensive alliance, especially when “related to the security of a member country.” It does not guarantee that NATO will take action in a given situation.

Dr. Michael Butler, associate professor of political science at Clark University, told Newsweek that in light of the indications that it was a stray Ukrainian missile rather than a Russian attack, invoking Article 4 could still give NATO the chance to discuss how to handle similar instances in the future.

This includes “possibly establishing new rules of engagement and where the ‘red line’ might be going forward,” he said.

“If, as by all indications it appears, this was not an intentional Russian strike on a NATO member, that’s the best case scenario…but not one that Poland, the U.S., or any other NATO member can bank on going forward,” Butler said.”There’s a reason why the prospect of this being an intentional Russian strike was so immediately plausible—Russia has repeatedly demonstrated itself to be a rogue state that does not respect international norms, loathes NATO, and fully understands the maxim of ‘divide and conquer.'”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky initially alleged Tuesday that a Russian missile hit Poland and called it a “really significant escalation.” Now that Zelensky’s accusation is likely false, Butler does not believe that the Ukrainian president will face a backlash among his Western allies for how he first responded to the news.

“While Zelensky might have a strategic reason for representing the incident in this way—to further engage NATO and reaffirm the continued severity of the war for them, as well as for Ukraine—we are talking about a war-time leader trying to process an enormous volume of information and intelligence on the fly, in the context of a country whose entire power grid was just taken down by a systematic barrage of missiles,” Butler said.

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