OTR-21 Tochka


OTR-21 Tochka «Точка» is a Soviet tactical ballistic missile. Its GRAU designation is 9K79; its NATO reporting name is SS-21 Scarab. It is transported in a 9P129 vehicle and raised prior to launch. It uses an inertial guidance system.
The OTR-21 forward deployment to East Germany began in 1981, replacing the earlier Luna-M series of unguided artillery rockets.

Description

The OTR-21 is a mobile missile launch system, designed to be deployed along with other land combat units on the battlefield. While the 9K52 Luna-M is large and relatively inaccurate, the OTR-21 is much smaller. The missile itself can be used for precise strikes on enemy tactical targets, such as control posts, bridges, storage facilities, troop concentrations and airfields. The fragmentation warhead can be replaced with a nuclear, biological or chemical warhead. The solid propellant makes the missile easy to maintain and deploy.
OTR-21 units are usually managed in a brigade structure. There are 18 launchers in a brigade; each launcher is provided with 2 or 3 missiles. The vehicle is completely amphibious, with a maximum road speed of and in water. It is NBC-protected. The system has been in development since 1968. Three variants were developed.

Scarab A

The initial Scarab A entered service with the Soviet Army in 1975. It carries one of three types of warhead:

Scarab B

The improved Scarab B passed state tests from 1986 to 1988 and introduced in 1989. Improved propellant increased the range to. CEP significantly improved, to less than.

Scarab C

A third variant, Scarab C, was developed in the 1990s. Again, range increased, and CEP decreased to less than 70 m. Scarab C weighs.

Configuration

Educational means

Current operators

;: At least 40 launchers Tochka
;: 3 Tochka launchers with 4 missiles
;: 36
;: 18
;: unknown number
;: unknown number of variant Hwasong-11
;: 220 launchers. Missile systems have been upgraded since 2004 and are scheduled to be replaced by the 9K720 Iskander missiles by 2020.
;: 90
;: unknown number
;: large numbers

Former operators

;: Passed on to successor states.
;: Inherited from Czechoslovakia, retired.
;: Passed on to Germany.
;: Retired.
;: 4 retired in 2005, because of lack of rockets and service parts
;: North Yemen Ordered a number of scarab missiles and launchers and used them during the 1994 civil war and were passed on to unified Yemen after. Have seen action during the ongoing civil war.
;: a small number, inherited from Czechoslovakia, all retired.
;: Passed on to successor states.

Comparable missiles