Вот такое сообщение Джейнс об учениях авиации НАТО по преодолению "вражеской ПВО", где использовали радар от словацкой "трехсотки"
EXCLUSIVE - NATO AIRCRAFT WILL 'HUNT' RUSSIAN MISSILE SYSTEMS DURING
DEFENCE-SUPPRESSION EXERCISE
Radars used by the Slovak Air Force's S-300PMU (US/NATO codename SA-10b
'Grumble') air-defence missile system will take part in 'Trial Hammer 05'
(11-22 April), a NATO specialised suppression of enemy air defence (SEAD)
exercise, reports Jane's Missiles And Rockets exclusively. The S-300PMU is
Russia's primary export version of the efficient aircraft-killing S-300
system. It had not been supplied to Afghanistan, Iraq, or the former
Jugoslavia, so NATO has yet to face this advanced system in combat.
Slovakia is effectively giving NATO aircrew their first chance to test their
missile-hunting skills against this potential future threat.
"Some of the participants of Trial Hammer '05, particularly France, Germany,
the UK and the US, were keen to have the Slovak Air Force S-300PMU system
take part in the exercise. The Slovak Government approved the plan on 9
February 2005," notes the Jane's Missiles And Rockets report. "NATO will
compensate Slovakia for the cost of transporting the hardware and the fuel
used. It will also house and feed the 30-strong unit of Slovakian personnel
for the duration of the exercise."
Existing users of the S-300PMU are: China, Cyprus, Iran, Kazakhstan and
Syria. Other countries deploying S-300 variants (all similar to the
S-300PMU) are: Belarus, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Hungary, India, Russia,
Ukraine and Vietnam (including a contract worth US$200 million for S-300PMU1
variants due for delivery 2005/06).
The PMU variant primarily represents modifications allowing for transport on
a MAZ-543M 8X8 heavy transport vehicle/launch platform. The system
(comprising surveillance and illuminating/guidance radars, and launch
vehicles equipped with vertically-launched 7.25m long missiles) can send a
133kg high explosive fragmentation warhead at mach 6 towards a target
aircraft with high accuracy at ranges of up to 47km (for aircraft flying at
6,500ft or more), or up to 25km against aircraft flying as low as 250ft.
>"NATO will
>compensate Slovakia for the cost of transporting the hardware and the fuel
>used. It will also house and feed the 30-strong unit of Slovakian personnel
>for the duration of the exercise."