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==Further reading== ==Further reading==

Revision as of 15:29, 19 June 2010

Military of Syria
Founded1946
Service branchesSyrian Army
Syrian Navy
Syrian Air Force
Syrian Air Defense Force
Police and Security Force
HeadquartersDamascus
Leadership
President of SyriaBashar al-Assad
Personnel
Available for
military service
4,356,413 (2005 est.), age 15–49
Fit for
military service
3,453,888 (2005 est.), age 15–49
Reaching military
age annually
225,113 (2005 est.)
Expenditure
Budget858 million-1 billion (FY00 est.)
Percent of GDP5.9% (FY00)

The Syrian Air Defense Force is an independent command within the Syrian Military. It has been merged into and then separated from both the Syrian Army and the Syrian Air Force.

The 55,000 man Syrian Air Defense Force controls twenty-five air defense brigades, each with six surface-to-air missile (SAM) batteries. It is equipped with 650 static SA-2, SA-3 and SA-5 launchers, 200 SA-6 and SA-11 mobile launchers and over 4,000 anti-aircraft guns ranging from 23mm to 100mm in caliber. There are also two independent SA-8 and SA-10 SAM Regiments, each with four batteries of 48 mobile SAMs.

The Syrian early warning system comprises some several dozen mobile and static early warning radar sites throughout Syria.

Syria has hardened much of its command and control systems.

Part of a Syrian SA-6 site built near the Beirut-Damascus highway, and overlooking the Bekaa Valley, in early 1982.

Inventory


Further reading

  • Kenneth M. Pollack, Arabs at War: Military Effectiveness 1948-91, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, 2002, and Pollack's book reviewed in International Security, Vol. 28, No.2.

References

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