Cirit | |
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Type | Air-to-surface, anti-armor and anti-personnel missile |
Place of origin | Turkey |
Service history | |
Used by | Turkish Army, UAE Army |
Wars | Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present) Syrian Civil War Operation Olive Branch 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict |
Production history | |
Designed | 2004 – 2009 |
Manufacturer | ROKETSAN |
Produced | 2011 - present |
Specifications | |
Mass | 15 kg |
Length | 1.9 m |
Diameter | 2.75" (70 mm) |
Warhead | Tri-Mode: Anti Armour, Anti Personnel and Incendiary
Anti Personnel: Increased Anti Personnel and Incendiary Thermobaric: Increased Anti Personnel and Anti Structure [1] |
Warhead weight | 3 kg insensitive explosive |
Engine | Solid-fuel rocket |
Operational range | 1.5 - 8 km |
Guidance system | Midcourse Guidance: MEMS-IMU, MEMS-INS, Magnetometer Terminal Guidance: Semi-Active Laser Seeker |
Steering system | Pop-out fins |
Launch platform | Attack Helicopter[2] Unmanned Aerial Vehicle[2] TAI Hürkuş[2] Land combat vehicle Naval platforms Stationary platforms |
External images | |
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Launch and Warhead test | |
Tri-Mode Warhead | |
moving target |
Cirit is a laser-guided 70 mm missile system under production by Turkish arms industry manufacturer ROKETSAN.[3][4] It is one of the projects launched by Turkey to equip the Turkish Army's T-129 Atak, AH-1P Cobra and AH-1W Super Cobra attack helicopters with low-cost precision strike capabilities. It has been selected by Eurocopter for execution of a test and integration program to equip the Eurocopter EC635. The weapon's name comes from a traditional Turkish horseback game, Cirit (pronounced Jirit), where two teams of riders fight a mock battle using wooden javelins which are called cirit.