Persian Gulf War (1991) Trial by fire Prior to
the First Gulf War, ballistic missile defense was an unproven concept in war. During Operation Desert Storm, in addition to its anti-aircraft mission, the Patriot was assigned to shoot down incoming Iraqi
Scud or
Al Hussein short range ballistic missiles launched at Israel and
Saudi Arabia. The first combat use of Patriot occurred January 18, 1991, when it engaged what was later found to be a computer glitch. There were actually no Scuds fired at Saudi Arabia on January 18. This incident was widely misreported as the first successful interception of an enemy ballistic missile in history. Throughout the war, Patriot missiles attempted engagement of over 40 hostile ballistic missiles. The success of these engagements, and in particular how many of them were real targets, is still controversial. Postwar video analysis of presumed interceptions by
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) professor
Theodore Postol suggests that no Scud was actually hit. This analysis is contested by
Peter D. Zimmerman, who claimed that photographs of the fuselage of downed Scud missiles in Saudi Arabia demonstrated that the Scud missiles were fired into Saudi Arabia and were riddled with fragments from the lethality enhancer of Patriot Missiles.
Failure at Dhahran On February 25, 1991, an Iraqi
Al Hussein Scud missile hit the barracks in
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, killing 28 soldiers from the U.S. Army's
14th Quartermaster Detachment. A government investigation revealed that the failed intercept at Dhahran had been caused by a
software error in the system's handling of timestamps. The Patriot missile battery at Dhahran had been in operation for 100 hours, by which time the system's internal clock had drifted by one-third of a second. Due to the missile's speed this was equivalent to a miss distance of 600 meters. The radar system had successfully detected the Scud and predicted where to look for it next. However, the timestamps of the two radar pulses being compared were converted to
floating point differently: one correctly, the other introducing an error proportionate to the operation time so far (100 hours) caused by the truncation in a 24-bit fixed-point register. As a result, the difference between the pulses was wrong, so the system looked in the wrong part of the sky and found no target. With no target, the initial detection was assumed to be a spurious track and the missile was removed from the system. No interception was attempted, and the Scud impacted on a makeshift barracks in an
Al Khobar warehouse, killing 28 soldiers, the first Americans to be killed from the Scuds that Iraq had launched against
Saudi Arabia and Israel. Two weeks earlier, on February 11, 1991, the Israelis had identified the problem and informed the U.S. Army and the PATRIOT Project Office, the software manufacturer.
Success rate vs. accuracy On February 15, 1991, President
George H. W. Bush traveled to Raytheon's Patriot manufacturing plant in
Andover, Massachusetts, during the Gulf War. He declared, the "Patriot is 41 for 42: 42 Scuds engaged, 41 intercepted!" The President's claimed success rate was over 97% at that point in the war. On April 7, 1992,
Theodore Postol of MIT, and Reuven Pedatzur of
Tel Aviv University testified before a
House Committee claiming that, according to their independent analysis of video tapes, the Patriot system had a success rate of below 10%, and perhaps even a zero success rate. On April 7, 1992, Charles A. Zraket of
Harvard Kennedy School and
Peter Zimmerman of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, a
think tank funded by the United States government and Raytheon, testified about the calculation of success rates and accuracy in Israel and Saudi Arabia and discounted many of the statements and methodologies in Postol's report. According to Zimmerman, it is important to note the difference in terms when analyzing the performance of the system during the war: • Success rate – the percentage of Scuds destroyed or deflected to unpopulated areas • Accuracy – the percentage of hits out of all the Patriots fired In accordance with the standard firing doctrine, on average four Patriots were launched at each incoming Scud in Saudi Arabia an average of three Patriots were fired. The large number of missiles fired suggests low confidence in individual missiles and that a higher rate of successful interceptions was achieved through brute force. For example, if a Patriot has a 50% individual success rate, two missiles will intercept 75% of the time, and three will intercept 87.5% of the time. Only one has to hit for a successful interception, but this does not mean that the other missiles would not also have hit. The Iraqi redesign of the Scuds also played a role. Iraq had redesigned its Scuds by removing weight from the warhead to increase speed and range, but the changes weakened the missile and made it unstable during flight, creating a tendency for the Scud to break up during its descent from
near space. This presented a larger number of targets as it was unclear which piece contained the warhead. According to the Zraket testimony, there was a lack of
high quality photographic equipment necessary to record the interceptions of targets. Therefore, Patriot crews recorded each launch on
standard-definition videotape, which was insufficient for detailed analysis. Damage assessment teams videotaped the Scud debris that was found on the ground. Crater analysis was then used to determine if the warhead was destroyed before the debris crashed or not. Part of the reason for the 30% improvement in success rate in Saudi Arabia compared to Israel is that the Patriot merely had to push the incoming Scud missiles away from military targets in the desert or disable the Scud's warhead in order to avoid casualties, while in Israel the Scuds were aimed directly at cities and civilian populations. The Saudi Government also censored any reporting of Scud damage by the Saudi press. The Israeli Government did not institute the same type of censorship. Patriot's success rate in Israel was examined by the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) who did not have a political reason to play up Patriot's success rate. The IDF counted any Scud that exploded on the ground, regardless of whether or not it was diverted, as a failure for the Patriot. Meanwhile, the U.S. Army, which had many reasons to support a high success rate for Patriot, examined the performance of Patriot in Saudi Arabia. Both testimonies state that part of the problems stem from its original design as an anti-aircraft system. Patriot was designed with
proximity fused warheads, which are designed to explode immediately prior to hitting a target spraying shrapnel out in a fan in front of the missile, either destroying or disabling the target. These missiles were fired at the target's center of mass. With aircraft this was fine, but considering the much higher speeds of tactical ballistic missiles, as well as the location of the warhead, usually in the nose, Patriot most often hit closer to the tail of the Scud due to the delay present in the
proximity fused warhead, thus not destroying the missile's warhead and allowing it to fall to earth. In response to the testimonies and other evidence, the staff of the House Government Operations Subcommittee on Legislation and National Security reported, "The Patriot missile system was not the spectacular success in the Persian Gulf War that the American public was led to believe. There is little evidence to prove that the Patriot hit more than a few
Scud missiles launched by Iraq during the Gulf War, and there are some doubts about even these engagements. The public and the
United States Congress were misled by definitive statements of success issued by administration and Raytheon representatives during and after the war."
US-led invasion of Iraq (2003) Patriot was deployed to Iraq a second time in 2003, this time to provide air and missile defense for the forces conducting
Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). Patriot PAC-3, GEM, and GEM+ missiles both had a very high success rate, intercepting
Al-Samoud 2 and Ababil-100 tactical ballistic missiles. No longer-range ballistic missiles were fired during that conflict. The systems were stationed in Kuwait and Iraq, and successfully destroyed a number of hostile surface-to-surface missiles using the new PAC-3 and guidance enhanced missiles. Patriot missile batteries were involved in three friendly fire incidents. On March 23, 2003, a
Royal Air Force Tornado was shot down, killing both crew members, Flight Lieutenant Kevin Barry Main (pilot) and Flight Lieutenant David Rhys Williams (navigator/WSO). On March 24, 2003, a USAF
F-16CJ Fighting Falcon fired a
HARM anti-radiation missile at a Patriot missile battery after the Patriot's radar had
locked onto and prepared to fire at the aircraft, causing the pilot to mistake it for an Iraqi surface-to-air missile system because the aircraft was in air combat operations and was on its way to a mission near Baghdad. The HARM destroyed the Patriot's radar system with no casualties. On April 2, 2003, two PAC-3 missiles shot down a USN
F/A-18 Hornet, killing U.S. Navy Lieutenant Nathan D. White of
VFA-195,
Carrier Air Wing Five.
Post-2003 service in Iraq A US Army Patriot battery in
Erbil, Iraq shot down at least one Iranian ballistic missile during the
2024 Iranian strikes in Israel.
Service with Israel 2017 The
Israeli Air Defense Command operated
MIM-104D Patriot (PAC-2/GEM+) batteries with Israeli upgrades. The
Israel Defense Forces' designation for the Patriot weapon system was "
Yahalom" (,
diamond). On April 30, 2024, the
Israeli Air Force published an article stating that their Patriot batteries would be decommissioned in two months, being replaced by "more advanced air systems". According to
The War Zone, the Patriot was replaced by the
David's Sling and
Arrow systems. Following the announcement, Ukraine initiated talks on obtaining retired Israeli Patriot systems in April 2024. On January 28, 2025, a US defense official confirmed to the
CNN that 90 ex-Israeli interceptors were transferred to Ukraine via the United States. Reportedly Kyiv will also receive components for the system, including radars, after being refurbished in the US. The interception of a Hamas drone in July 2014, was the first time in the history of the Patriot system's use that it successfully intercepted an enemy aircraft.
Syrian civil war (2014–2024) In Israeli service in the Syrian civil war, Patriot has primarily been active in drone and air defense, rather than a missile defense capacity. In August 2014, a Syrian unmanned aerial vehicle was shot down by an Israeli Air Defense Command MIM-104D Patriot missile near
Quneitra, after it had penetrated the airspace over the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights. In September 2014, a
Syrian Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 was shot down in similar circumstances. Since 2014, Israeli Patriots have missed several Syrian drones, including two misses in July 2016 and another in June 2018; as well as several successful shootdowns against Syrian drones in April 2017 July 11 and 13, 2018, as well as against a Hezbollah intelligence drone attempting to infiltrate Israel in September 2017 through the
Golan. On July 24, 2018, an Israeli Patriot missile shot down a Syrian
Sukhoi Su-22 fighter which had crossed into Israeli airspace.
Service with Saudi Arabia Patriot has continued to see usage in Saudi Arabia against
Houthi missile attacks. In June 2015, a Patriot battery was used to shoot down a Scud missile, fired at Saudi Arabia by
Houthi rebels in response to the
Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen. Another Scud was fired at an electricity station in
Jizan Province and intercepted by a Saudi Patriot in August 2015. Saudi Arabia claims that another long-range ballistic missile was fired toward
Mecca and intercepted by a Saudi Patriot in October 2016. Houthi sources said that the missile's intended target was the air force base in
King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, 65 km (40miles) north-west of Mecca. In March 2018, another missile, apparently fired from Yemen, was intercepted by a Patriot missile over Riyadh. Videos showed one interceptor exploded just after launch and another did a "U turn" midair toward Riyadh. During the
Abqaiq–Khurais attack in September 2019, the six battalions of Patriot missile defense systems owned by Saudi Arabia failed to protect its oil facilities from attacks by multiple drones and suspected cruise missiles. The United States removed two of its four Patriot antimissile batteries securing oil fields in Saudi Arabia in May 2020, following an easing of tensions with Iran. They were to be replaced by Saudi's own Patriot batteries. In February 2021, a Patriot battery intercepted a ballistic missile over Riyadh that was fired by Houthis as a
Formula E race was held on the outskirts of the city in
Diriyah, attended by Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman.
Service with the United Arab Emirates According to Brigadier General Murad Turaiq, the commander of some of the Yemeni forces allied to the Saudi-led coalition currently fighting in Yemen, Patriot air defense systems deployed to Yemen by the
United Arab Emirates (UAE) have successfully intercepted two ballistic missiles fired by Houthi forces. General Turaiq told the Abu Dhabi-based
The National newspaper on November 14, 2015, that the first missile was shot down late the previous day in the
Al-Gofainah area and a second was intercepted before it hit the building hosting the control centre for forces operating in
Marib and Al-Baydah provinces.
Airbus Defence and Space satellite imagery obtained by
IHS Jane's showed two Patriot fire units, each with two launchers, deployed at the Safir airstrip in Marib province on October 1.
Talisman Sabre Exercise In July 2021, the US Army used a battery of Patriot missiles in the
Exercise Talisman Saber in the
Shoalwater Bay Training Area in
Queensland, Australia. The US Army test fired Patriot PAC-2 interceptor missiles and successfully intercepted target drones.
Service with Eastern Europe Patriot sales and contributions to Poland and Ukraine Russia's 2014 invasion of Crimea led to a "sales burst" for the Patriot system, with Romania, Poland, and Sweden signing onto the system between the start of the invasion and the wider invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Poland asked Germany to transfer the Patriots to Ukraine. Germany declined. On December 19, Ukraine President
Zelenskyy talked about negotiating personally with US President
Biden over a potential transfer of Patriot missile systems. He said they offer "a (better) distance, radius of reflection, protection". Ukrainian Foreign Minister
Dmytro Kuleba said that this was the most difficult diplomatic issue they had faced. One day later, the Biden administration announced it would be delivering another $1.85 billion in aid to Ukraine that would include a Patriot battery. During a meeting with Zelenskyy in front of the press at the
White House on December 21, Biden confirmed that the United States would send a Patriot battery to Ukraine, noting that it would take "months" to train the "dozens" of soldiers needed to operate the system, probably in Germany. Providing a Patriot missile system is seen as a symbol of Western engagement in the conflict, although its range is only local. Other nations subsequently announced plans to send their own Patriot batteries. On January 5, 2023, Germany announced that it would supply one Patriot battery to Ukraine as a part of their own military aid package. On January 17, 2023, the Netherlands announced it too will send one launcher, and added a second launcher on January 20. The Dutch government announced it will send launchers (Dutch:
lanceerinrichtingen) and missiles, not complete systems (a battery) which includes radars, etc. On April 19, a German government website announced that the country had delivered a Patriot system to Ukraine. A second Patriot battery was delivered on April 27 from the United States. On August 9, 2023, it was announced that Germany would provide an additional complete Patriot battery to Ukraine. The system was delivered on December 13 after the Ukrainian crew completed training in Germany. So, during 2023, three Patriot batteries were delivered to Ukraine.
Patriot operations in the Russo-Ukrainian War Patriot has had a successful track record in Ukraine during the
Russo-Ukrainian War, successfully intercepting a wide range of Russian weaponry and aircraft.
Aircraft interceptions - May 2023 On May 13, 2023, a Patriot battery was allegedly used to destroy at least four (possibly five) aircraft belonging to a Russian strike package over Bryansk Oblast, Russia. Visually confirmed losses included a
Su-34,
Su-35, and two
Mil Mi-8 helicopters. On May 19, U.S. defense officials and congressional staffers told
CNN that a Patriot system had been used by the Ukrainian army to shoot down at least one Russian jet a few weeks before. The spokesman of the Ukrainian Air Force later confirmed the shoot down of a Russian Su-34, Su-35, two Mi-8MTPR EW helicopters, and an Mi-8 transport helicopter by the Patriot system.
Missile defense During a night time attack on the Kyiv region on May 4, 2023, Ukraine air defense claimed a hypersonic
Kh-47M2 Kinzhal ballistic missile was shot down by a Patriot missile defence system. The Russian Defense Ministry stated in response that six Kinzhal missiles hadn't even been fired, and furthermore claimed that a Patriot battery in Kyiv was destroyed by a Kinzhal missile, citing social media footage. U.S. officials confirmed that the Patriot system was damaged, but stated that the damage was "minimal" or "insignificant", the radar was intact and that the system could likely be repaired locally without needing to be moved out of Ukraine. The battery was returned to operational status after minor repairs. It has not yet been established whether the Patriot had been damaged by the fragments of the downed Russian missile or by a direct hit. The following day, U.S. officials told the
New York Times that "a Patriot system had been damaged in the attack but added that the Patriot remained operational against all threats," while Deputy Pentagon Spokeswoman Sabrina Singh announced that the Patriot system had been fixed, with assistance from the US. In contradiction to the U.S. announcement, the Russian Ministry of Defense claimed that the system's multifunctional radar station and five launchers were destroyed. After two missile attacks on May 29, 2023, Ukrainian President Zelenskyy announced that all missiles were intercepted and according to Ukrainian Air Force spokesman, Yuriy Ihnat, these were assumed to likely be
Iskander-M ballistic missiles. Dashcam video captured the debris from an expended PAC-3 CRI missile falling in between passing vehicles. According to a report by the US
Defense Intelligence Agency, Russia upgraded 9K720 Iskander and
Kh-47M2 Kinzhal missiles with a terminal phase maneuvering capability in spring 2025 in order to bypass Ukraine's Patriot systems. A
Financial Times article from October 2025 said, citing current and former Ukrainian and Western officials, that interception rates dropped from 37% in August to 6% in September, allowing Russia to seriously damage key military sites, four drone plants, and critical infrastructure ahead of the winter. According to the French Army, Ukrainian
SAMP/T air defence systems have outperformed Patriot missiles in intercepting
Iskander missile, after Russia modified the flight profiles of Iskanders.
Losses On March 9, 2024, video footage emerged showing the destruction of an Armed Forces of Ukraine
convoy that allegedly contained at least two M901 Patriot missile launchers near the city of
Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast. The convoy was reportedly struck by a Russian
Iskander-M ballistic missile. The Armed Forces of Ukraine has not commented on the video. On April 5, 2024, a damaged Ukrainian Patriot launcher was delivered to the United States. It is not yet known exactly where the launcher was damaged. According to
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, a Patriot radar was allegedly damaged in a Russian strike and deemed unrepairable by the manufacturer, but was repaired by military technical staff from the German Luftwaffe working sixteen hours a day from Monday to Saturday. The radar was transported back to Ukraine in July 2025 and by early August had been used in a successful intercept of a Russian strike. According to
Oryx, on 24 September 2025 a Ukrainian AN/MPQ-53 Patriot radar site was destroyed in an Iskander strike.
Demands on Patriot systems Including the United States, 18 countries operate Patriot missile systems. Outside the US, only Japan's
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries appears to build Patriot missiles, under licence from various US companies. This has led to a demand on the US Army. Patriot batteries are the most deployed units in the US Army by early 2021. Some units have had a 6-month deployment extended up to 15 months. The missile is currently being used in active service in Saudi Arabia. In active use by the
IDF in the "southern Negev desert". The Patriot missile batteries are also seeing active service in Ukraine, where there are three batteries in service. To refill US stockpiles, Japan has modified its export rules to allow export of missiles to the United States. Previously only specific components could be exported now entire missiles can be exported. They cannot be sent directly to Ukraine, however they can backfill US stockpiles. NATO has announced a plan to purchase some 1000 Patriot missiles. A $5.5 billion contract has been awarded to
Raytheon and
MBDA to establish a new production facility in Germany. The U.S. is also ramping up production domestically. In 2018,
Lockheed Martin was building 350 PAC-3 MSE missiles annually and was working to ramp up its production to 500 missiles a year prior to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. In December 2023, Lockheed hit their production goal of 500 missiles per year, and is "fully funded by the U.S. Army to build 550 missiles annually" at its new 85,000 square-foot
Camden, Arkansas facility. The Romanian government has announced that it will send a "full" Patriot battery to Ukraine, provided that the US government "help(s) cover the gap". In January 2025, 90 Patriot air defense interceptors were transferred from
Israel to Ukraine by the United States.
Axios reported that Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu approved their transfer in September 2024. In May 2025, US Secretary of State
Marco Rubio told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee "frankly, we don't have" spare Patriot systems for Ukraine, and the US was encouraging NATO allies to donate Patriot missiles and systems from their stock. In June 2025, the Foreign Ministry of Israel denied providing Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine, contradicting an earlier suggestion by its envoy in Kyiv that such a transfer had occurred. On September 27, 2025, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed that Israel had supplied Ukraine with a Patriot air defense battery, stating that the system was already installed and operational. Zelensky further announced that two additional Patriot batteries would be delivered by Israel in the fall of 2025.
2026 Iran War An explosion near
Manama sparked a fire near a petroleum refinery and resulted in injuries to at least 32 Bahraini citizens, four of them "serious cases" during the
2026 Iran War. An analysis by academic researchers examined by
Reuters found that an American-operated Patriot missile was likely involved in the blast after it downed an Iranian drone mid-air. == Operators ==