In 1984/1985 Iraq entered in a program with Argentina and Egypt to develop a high-technology two-stage ballistic missile system of approximately 1000km based on the Pershing II ballistic missile which would be called Condor-II in Argentina, BADR-2000 in Iraq.[2][3][4] and Vector in Egypt[1] The missile system under development consisted of all the systems required like computation, command and communication, transport and handling, launch preparation, power supply etc.[1]Argentina would develop the missile while Egypt would help in procuring new technology and Iraq would finance the project.[3][4] A number of Aerospace and defense companies from Italy and Germany aided the project and technical support was handled by a consortium of 16 European companies under the name Consen based in Switzerland.[3] The project was supposed to be carried out in close collaboration with the Arab League Industrial Development Organisation (ALIDO) centered in Baghdad.[2] When it came to the missile Iraq preferred to use solid propulsion in both stages as opposed to solid propulsion in first stage and liquid propulsion in the second.[2] The liquid propelled engine which was being developed along with the Iraqi engines could be used in third stage and would turn the missile into a Space delivery vehicle for limited payloads.[2]Iraq concentrated its efforts in the Belat al-Shuhada Factory.[3] The project was supposed the Iraqis in 1985 would then commence Project 395 in effort to construct facilities to produce solid-propellant motors indigenously,[3] many American firms were involved in Project 395 and helped Iraq build Infrastructure to produce the Condor-II missile.[2] Since the project was mostly covert and Iraq itself lacked the production facilities, program progress was slow. In 1987 and 1988 disputes arose between Iraq and Argentina and Egypt regarding the provision of missiles, Iraq had grown suspicious regarding where its investment was going and in 1987 Iraq had signed a contract for 17 Badr-2000 missiles, however it realized that it would not get these missiles.[2] By 1987 the building of three key sites required for the manufacturing of Badr-2000 missile had started.[citation needed] Collaboration ended in 1988 when Iraq was taking the project all by itself, in summer 1988 Egyptian scientist Abdel Kader Helmy was arrested in California for transferring missile technology to Iraq.[2]Iraq declared that in 1989 it took the entire project on its own,[2] by 1989 Iraq had invested $400 million in the project and had built a factory to manufacture propellants.[3] In 1989 the Technical Corps for Special Projects (TECO), which was an affiliate of the Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI) which managed Iraq's military procurements, designated Project 395 to the Condor-II missile Program.[2] Some additional military procurements were also imported by Iraq in 1989 and 1990.[2]Iraq had erected an R&D research facility and three other facilities for Project 395,[2] one facility managed production of solid propellants of the Badr-2000 missiles, the other motor cases, the third did final assembly and testing, all of which were part of the Belat Al-Shuhada missile factory.[citation needed] Despite that however the missile could not enter mass production and Iraq did not use any Badr-2000 missiles.[2][3]
Characteristics
The Badr-2000 was to be a mobile medium-rangedual stageballisticsurface-to-surface missile.[1] The Badr-2000 missile was intended to have a range of 1000km although UNSCOM estimated that the actual range was around 620–750km.[3] The missile had a weight of 4800kg and a payload of 350kg,[2] the payload itself was a separating reentry vehicle.[1] The Badr-2000 missile had a length of 10.3m and a width of 0.8m which was the booster,[1][2] all of this would amount to a CEP of 30–50m.[4]
After the Gulf WarUNSCOM supervised the destruction of all Badr-2000 missiles as well as production facilities.[2] All production facilities were reduced to facilities that could only produce non-proscribed missile designs under UNSCOM supervision, nine solid propellant facility buildings were destroyed and two testing facility buildings were also destroyed however no motor-casing production facility was damaged.[citation needed]Iraq would later use the technology used in Badr-2000 for the single-stage Short-range "Badr-2000 Junior" (Ababil-100 which is also called al Fat'h) which lacked the flexible joint nozzle.[1]Iraq would later attempt to acquire the 120km single-stage rocket called Sakr-200 from Egypt, the fate of this attempt is unknown.[3] Some sources also suggest that Iraq sought to design another long-range ballistic missile whose design was again based on the Badr-2000 and Al-Fat'h ballistic missiles.[citation needed]