•
9M14 Malyutka •
9M14 Malyutka (NATO reporting name AT-3
Sagger)
wire-guided MCLOS, entered service in 1963. •
9M14P Malyutka-P (NATO reporting name AT-3C
Sagger C)
wire-guided SACLOS, entered service in 1969. Improved warhead (460 mm versus RHA) •
9M14P1 Improved warhead (520 mm versus RHA), and a stand off probe for improved capability against
ERA. •
9M14MP1 •
9M14MP2 •
9M14M Malyutka-M (NATO reporting name AT-3B
Sagger B)
wire-guided MCLOS, entered service in 1973. Improved motor, reducing flight time to maximum range. Mass 11 kg. Range 3 km. •
9M14-2 Malyutka-2 (NATO reporting name AT-3D
Sagger D)
wire-guided SACLOS, entered service in 1992. Speed improved to 130 m/s. 3.5 kg
HEAT warhead (800 mm penetration versus RHA). Weight 12.5 kg. Range 3 km. •
9M14-2M Malyutka-2M 4.2 kg tandem HEAT warhead for improved capability against
ERA. Weight 13.5 kg. Speed 120 m/s. •
9M14-2P Malyutka-2P •
9M14-2F Malyutka-2F 3.0 kg
thermobaric warhead. Intended for use against troops and soft vehicles. •
9M14P-2F •
9M14-2T Serbian
VTI Malyutka-2T
SACLOS. 4.4 kg tandem HEAT warhead (1,000 mm penetration versus RHA), improved capability against
ERA. Weight 13.7 kg. Speed 120 m/s. •
2T5 Serbian VTI Malyutka-2T5 range 5 kilometers, guided missile via radio control. Speed 200 m/s. •
HJ-73 Hongjian Red Arrow-73 China •
HJ-73 MCLOS entered service in 1979 •
HJ-73A SACLOS new guidance system as well as stronger primary warhead. •
HJ-73B SACLOS stand off probe for improved capability against
ERA •
HJ-73C SACLOS tandem HEAT warhead to penetrate vehicles protected by ERA. Launcher equipped with thermals. •
RAAD Iran •
RAAD 9M14M clone •
RAAD-T tandem HEAT warhead •
I-RAAD SACLOS •
I-RAAD-T SACLOS tandem HEAT warhead •
Susong-Po North Korean •
Maliutka M2T Romania, joint ELMEC and
Euromissile project, uses
MILAN 2T tandem warhead capable of defeating ~900mm of RHA. •
Kun Wu 1 In the 1970s, the Taiwanese
National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology replicated and produced the 9M14 Malyutka as the Kun Wu. The ROC had obtained the 9M14 Malyutkas from
South Vietnam. Due to the dated design and low priority placed on anti-tank weapons by the armed forces it was not widely adopted.
Production The Malyutka and modern derivatives are still produced in several versions in following countries: •
North Korea – domestic version Bulsae-1 •
Iran – domestic modernized version
RAAD •
Serbia – few domestic modernized versions with different types of warheads, range and guidance •
Vietnam – CTVN-18, under license from Serbia version with improved
SACLOS guidance •
China – HJ-73 variants •
Romania – Malyutka M2T •
Egypt – licensed modernized version AHRAM with new warheads and a thermal sight ==Operators==