The Hellenic Patriot:
Greece's Best Air Defense for the 21st Century
By John Sitilides1 <sitilides@westernpolicy.org>, Executive Director, The Western Policy Center
Washington, D.C.
Wednesday, 23 September 1998
One of the most significant
aspects of Greece's ongoing defense modernization program involves
improvement of its air defense capability. Its lengthy coastline,
vulnerable islands and islets, and potential adversaries to its north,
east and south make Greece especially receptive to a proven air defense
system deployable against a broad spectrum of potential threats, such as
high-performance fighter jets, cruise missiles, and tactical ballistic
missiles from the Eastern Mediterranean and North Africa.
A behind-the-scenes debate throughout 1998 will soon be coming to a
close, as KYSEA is expected to decide by October 8 whether to procure
the Patriot air defense system from the United States of the S-300V
system from Russia. Key factors in the decision will include achieving
quantitative advantage within the regional balance of power, cost
efficiency, interoperability, and technological benefits. An extensive
review of confidential and public documents verifies that, based on
these and almost every other consideration, the Patriot surpasses the
S-300V as the most effective air defense system for Greece well into the
21st century.
Military forces around the world recognize the Patriot as a
revolutionary air defense system, the product of years of technological
advances, enormous research and development, and a proven record on the
battlefield. It is a long-range, all-altitude, all-weather system
capable of engaging multiple, simultaneous targets, even against the
most intense electronic countermeasures. It is backed by the strength,
long-term stability and economic commitment of the United States Army,
which deploys the Patriot as the cornerstone of America's integrated air
defense system.
Given Greece's long-standing military alliance with the United States
and other NATO countries, the Patriot's ability to seamlessly integrate
into the existing Hellenic Command and Control Structure demonstrates a
clear operational advantage over the S-300V, designed during the
Cold War to interact with now-defunct Warsaw Pact forces.
If Athens decides to award the contract in the next several weeks, an
early version of the first Patriot systems can be deployed in Greece as
early as the end of this year providing there is fast action on
contracting. These, systems would be manned by the Hellenic Air Force
and would provide advanced air defense capability for large population
centers almost immediately.
The full arsenal of Patriots, consisting of 200 Guidance Enhanced
Missiles (GEMs) with a range of 70 kilometers and a maximum altitude of
24 kilometers, would be manned by the Hellenic Air Force and operational
by the end of 2001. About two-thirds of the system would be deployed as
a battalion headquartered on the Greek mainland, and one-third would be
stationed on an island to be designated by the air force.
Reliability is also provided by the Patriot's NATO-compliant
Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) transceiver, allowing the Hellenic
Air Force to correctly ascertain the origin of a threat or target before
engaging the air defense system. The S-300V has no such IFF capability.
The economic benefits of the Patriot to Greece are extensive. Starting
almost immediately, Greece's domestic industries would participate in
Patriot-related projects worth up to $1.9 billion which includes the
opportunity to support other nations that purchase Patriot.
This high technical content work includes the manufacture, testing, and
integration of the control stations, electronics systems, launchers,
trucks and tractors, and the final assembly of the missiles. This
transfer of technology and innovative manufacturing techniques, with
great potential civilian application, would create 2,400 new jobs in
Greece, strengthen the country's economic infrastructure and better
equip the country for heightened competition within the European
Monetary Union and the global economy.
Though the short-term cost of the S-300V hints at a lower price tag, the
Patriot's software-driven system, automated maintenance, and reliance on
fewer major equipment items would save the Hellenic Defense Ministry
approximately $2 billion over the 25-year life of the system, or an
average of $80 million annually, in comparison to the purchase of the
S-300V. After six years, the Patriot system is less expensive to own and
operate than the S-300V system.
Even if the Russians gave the S-300V system to Greece at no charge, it
would cost more to operate after ten years than the Patriot system. The
S-300V requires five times the manpower, twice the number of repair
parts, and three times the major equipment items of the Patriot. As the
Simitis administration proceeds to modernize and streamline the national
economy, it may look to the Patriot for both immediate and long-term
economic benefits.
The political benefits of the Patriot can also be extremely significant.
Currently, the strongest element of the U.S.-Greek relationship is at
the military level, with their armed forces cooperating on land, in the
air, and on the seas. Defense Secretary William Cohen and Ambassador
Nicholas Burns have voiced America's support for Greece's ambitious
defense modernization program.
Since the U.S. Army has established the Patriot as the foundation of
Theater Missile Defense and America's primary ground-based air defense
weapon into the 21st century, Greece would benefit from the Pentagon's
investment commitment to the future technological upgrading of the
system. Along with the United States, Germany, Israel, and Saudi Arabia,
Greece would confidently operate the most modern air defense system in
the world.
Certainly, the contrast between the national suppliers - the United
States and Russia - could not be greater. Political and economic
stability in Moscow remains elusive. Any funds authorized for a thinning
skilled defense labor pool to conduct research and development will
likely be spent on Russia's domestic defense rather than on the
upgrading of arms for export. Any long-term business relationship with a
Russian enterprise would be extremely risky.
In short, the Hellenic Patriot would represent a quantum leap
forward for Greece's qualitative defense capability, transforming the
effectiveness of the military forces, bestowing sizable economic and
technological benefits on the country, and securing an even stronger
relationship with its most powerful ally well into the 21st century.
From a political, economic, and strategic standpoint, the Patriot would
be Greece's most effective, least costly, and most reliable air defense
1[The Western Policy Center is a public policy corporation promoting
U.S. geostrategic interests and Western institutions in southeastern
Europe by strengthening the debate on American foreign policy toward
NATO allies Greece and Turkey, and toward Cyprus. Based in California
since 1994, the Center opened new offices in Washington, D.C. in
February 1998.]