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Scud

Scud is the NATO reporting name given to a family of Soviet ballistic missiles developed in the 1950s for short- to medium-range battlefield use. The original weapon in the family was the R-11, produced as the SS-1 Scud and commonly referred to as Scud-A. Subsequent variants—Scud-B, Scud-C, and Scud-D—extended range and payload capabilities and were widely exported or copied by other states. Although the name “Scud” became widely associated with these missiles, it is a Western designation; the Soviet/Russian system used its own designations (for example R-11 and later variants).

Design and propulsion: The Scud family is a single-stage, liquid-fueled ballistic missile. It is designed to

Operational history: The Scud has seen widespread use during regional conflicts since the 1960s. Iraqi forces

Other uses: In meteorology, “scud” describes low, ragged clouds that race beneath a thunderstorm, driven by wind.

be
launched
from
mobile
launchers
or
fixed
sites
and
to
deliver
a
conventional
payload
at
relatively
short
ranges.
Guidance
is
basic,
typically
inertial,
with
limited
accuracy.
The
missiles
are
relatively
inexpensive
and
can
be
produced
in
large
numbers,
a
factor
that
contributed
to
their
extensive
export
and
deployment.
used
Scuds
during
the
Iran–Iraq
War
and
the
Gulf
War
in
1991;
Scud
missiles
were
also
used
by
Syria,
Libya,
and
various
allied
states.
The
conflicts
highlighted
the
missiles’
vulnerabilities
to
air
defenses
and
precision
countermeasures.
Numerous
countries
developed
indigenous
variants
and
improvements,
including
extended-range
versions
and
licensed
copies.
The
verb
“to
scud”
means
to
move
quickly,
a
sense
that
influenced
the
colloquial
association
of
the
term
with
the
missiles.