British made portable Star streak missile 'shoots down Russian helicopter

British-made portable Star streak missile 'shoots down Russian helicopter in its first use in Ukrainian battlefield'

  • A British-made anti-aircraft missile reportedly shot down a Russian helicopter
  • It is the first time the Starstreak missile has been used in the war in Ukraine
  • Starstreaks are missiles that travels at more than three times the speed of sound
  • Footage showed a Russian Mi-28N helicopter shot out of the sky in Luhansk
A British-made anti-aircraft missile reportedly shot down a Russian helicopter in the weapon's first use in Ukraine.

The Starstreak system is a laser-guided missile that travels at more than three times the speed of sound to take down low-flying enemy jets and attack helicopters.

Footage which reportedly shows the moment the Russian Mi-28N helicopter was shot out of the sky in the Luhansk region captures the aircraft being cut in two as its tail is struck by a missile.
Moment Russian helicopter is shot out of the sky in Luhansk region


  A British-made anti-aircraft missile reportedly shot down a Russian helicopter in the weapon's first use in Ukraine

The Starstreak system is a laser-guided missile that travels at more than three times the speed of sound to take down low-flying enemy jets and attack helicopters

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace previously said the Starstreak system – a shoulder-mounted missile that travels at more than three times the speed of sound to take down low-flying enemy jets – was ready to be used imminently.

Mr Wallace said the first Ukrainian troops had been trained and were now deployed with Starstreak, adding that the UK was 'doing more than pretty much anyone else' to help the war-torn country.

'One of the biggest challenges is that the more you go up in sophistication of weapons systems, the more training you require to use them, which is why the real focus of effort has to be helping the Ukrainians either refurbish or locate Russian or Soviet equipment that is already in their inventory,' he told the Mail on Sunday. 'Just providing British tanks wouldn't really work.'

The video released on Friday shows the Starstreak missile in action during its first week of use in the war, a source at the Ministry of Defence told the Times.

The missile is made in Belfast by short range missiles company Thales.

It can be shot from a shoulder or stand and has a range of more than four miles.

The missile detaches into three darts mid-air, which are guided to the target by a laser operator on the ground.

The use of lasers rather than being attracted to infrared energy means flares cannot counteract the three-pronged missile.
  Defence Secretary Ben Wallace previously said the Starstreak system – a shoulder-mounted missile that travels at more than three times the speed of sound to take down low-flying enemy jets – was ready to be used imminently

Britain has already sent thousands of anti-tank weapons to Ukraine, although Nato nations have continued to rebuff pleas from Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky for tanks and fighter aircraft.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace last night told Sky News: 'There will be more lethal aid going into Ukraine as a result of today.

'Ukraine needs longer-range artillery and that's because of what the Russian army has been doing, which is now digging in and starting to pound these cities with artillery.

'The best counter to that is other long-range artillery, so [Ukraine will] be looking for and getting more long-range artillery, ammunition predominantly.

'They are also looking for armoured vehicles of some types — not tanks necessarily, but certainly protective vehicles, and more anti-air [weapons]. All of this will be forthcoming as a result of this conference.'


What are Starstreak missiles?



Starstreak High Velocity Missiles were designed to provide close air defence against conventional air threats such as fixed wing fighters and late unmasking helicopter targets.

The three dart payload maximises levels of lethality and accurate line of sight while laser guidance enables engagement of the smallest signature targets, which are extremely difficult to defeat and lock onto by traditional fire and forget missiles.

The missile is capable of being launched from lightweight land, sea and air platforms, from either automatic fire control systems.

It can be deployed quickly into operations and is easy to integrate into a force structure.

The Starstreak system is a shoulder-mounted missile that travels at more than three times the speed of sound to take down low-flying enemy aircraft

As soon as a target is detected the operator presses the trigger and launches the missile.

The rocket motor system accelerates the missile to greater than Mach 3 in a fraction of a second.

The missile then releases the three laser guided darts towards the target.

The laser beam riding guidance, which enables precision engagement of the smallest of targets, is immune to all known countermeasures.

The darts in flight cannot be decoyed by even the latest flares or Electronic Countermeasures.

The darts are designed to defeat both heavily armoured and light skin aerial targets.

On penetrating the targets the darts will inflict high levels of kinetic energy damage and each darts also has a fragmenting warhead which detonates inside the target to maximise lethality.