RPG-22
The RPG-22 Netto is a disposable, single-shot rocket-propelled grenade launcher designed for anti-tank and light armored vehicle engagements.[1][2]
Developed by the Soviet State Research and Production Enterprise Bazalt as an evolution of the RPG-18, it entered service in 1985 with a lightweight fiberglass telescoping tube weighing 2.7 kg and measuring 785 mm when collapsed.[3][4]
The launcher fires a 72.5 mm PG-22 high-explosive anti-tank rocket with a shaped-charge warhead capable of penetrating 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor equivalent at ranges up to 150-200 meters.[2][5]
Primarily operated by Russian forces post-Soviet dissolution, it has been exported to nations such as Bulgaria, Colombia, Georgia, India, Iraq, Moldova, and Peru, serving in various infantry roles despite later replacements like the RPG-26.[6][1]
History
Development and Design
The RPG-22 Netto was developed in the late 1970s by the Soviet Bazalt State Research and Production Enterprise as an enhanced successor to the RPG-18 disposable anti-tank rocket launcher, addressing the latter's limitations in penetrating improved tank armor encountered in contemporary threats.[2][7] Drawing from operational experience with the RPG-18, the design prioritized greater warhead lethality through a larger 72.5 mm caliber PG-22V high-explosive anti-tank round, incorporating a more powerful solid-fuel rocket motor and increased explosive charge for approximately 25% better armor penetration, reaching up to 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor.[2][8] The system was adopted by the Soviet Army in 1980, with production spanning until around 1993, primarily at Bazalt facilities in the USSR and licensed in Bulgaria.[2][7] Key design elements emphasized disposability and infantry portability, featuring a smoothbore fiberglass launch tube that telescopes from 755 mm collapsed to 850 mm extended, weighing 2.7 kg unloaded to facilitate rapid deployment by a single operator.[2][3] The rocket employs spring-deployed stabilizing fins for in-flight stability, with flip-up iron sights graduated to 200 meters effective range, and a piezoelectric fuze in the warhead for impact detonation.[3] Safety mechanisms include a safety lever and arming sequence requiring tube extension and trigger guard positioning, while the rear vented design mandates a minimum 15-meter backblast clearance to mitigate operator risk from exhaust gases.[2] This construction mirrored Western counterparts like the M72 LAW but optimized for Soviet tactical needs, such as urban and Afghan theater engagements where lightweight, one-shot systems proved advantageous.[3]Adoption and Production
The RPG-22 Netto was developed in the late 1970s as an enhanced disposable anti-tank rocket launcher succeeding the RPG-18 and entered Soviet Army service in 1980.[2] Manufacturing was primarily handled by the Bazalt State Research and Production Enterprise in the Soviet Union, with additional production licensed to Bulgaria's VMZ Sopot facility.[1][9] Serial production ran from 1980 until around 1993, when it was phased out in favor of more capable systems like the RPG-26 owing to the PG-22 warhead's inadequate penetration against emerging armored threats.[2][1] Large stockpiles ensured its retention in Russian reserves and limited frontline use into the post-Soviet era.[2] Adoption extended beyond the Soviet Union through exports to allied and client states, including Bulgaria, Colombia, Croatia, Georgia, India, Peru, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine, with some nations like Bulgaria maintaining local assembly.[1][3] The weapon's simplicity and one-shot design facilitated widespread proliferation among former Warsaw Pact and developing militaries seeking cost-effective anti-armor capabilities.[3]Design Features
Launcher Construction
The RPG-22 Netto employs a lightweight, disposable launch tube constructed primarily from fiberglass to minimize weight while providing sufficient structural integrity for single-use operation.[3] This material choice facilitates ease of transport and reduces operator fatigue compared to heavier metallic alternatives.[8] The tube features a smoothbore internal configuration, optimized for the passage of the fin-stabilized rocket without rifling-induced spin.[3] The launcher divides into two interconnected fiberglass sections: a main rear tube housing the rocket's propulsion elements and a telescoping forward extension that slides over the barrel prior to firing, extending the effective length for improved stability and accuracy.[2] [10] Protective end caps seal both extremities during storage and transport, preserving the rocket from environmental damage until deployment.[3] A flip-up ladder-type iron sight mounts on the tube for basic point-and-shoot aiming, calibrated for the weapon's effective range.[8] Overall, the construction prioritizes simplicity and disposability, with the extended ready-to-fire length measuring 85 cm and unarmed configuration at 78.5 cm, contributing to a total system weight of approximately 2.8 kg.[11] This design enables rapid preparation for firing in about 10 seconds, emphasizing field expediency over reusability.[2]PG-22 Warhead and Propulsion
The PG-22 is a 72.5 mm high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rocket-propelled grenade developed for use with the RPG-22 disposable launcher. It consists of a shaped-charge warhead attached to a rocket motor and stabilization fins, with the warhead employing a single-stage explosive charge designed to form a high-velocity metal jet for armor penetration. The warhead weighs approximately 1.48 kg and achieves penetration of up to 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor (RHA), sufficient against contemporary tanks lacking advanced composite or reactive armor at the time of its introduction in 1985.[5][1] Propulsion for the PG-22 is provided by a solid-fuel rocket motor, which ignites after launch from the fiberglass tube to accelerate the grenade to a muzzle velocity of 133 m/s. This motor offers improved thrust compared to predecessors like the RPG-18's PG-18, enabling a greater effective range of 150–200 meters for direct fire against point targets, with a maximum trajectory range of about 250 meters. The design incorporates a booster charge for initial ejection from the launcher, followed by sustained rocket burn to minimize backblast hazards and enhance portability in the disposable system.[5][2] Flight stabilization is achieved through folding fins that deploy post-launch, with the PG-22 also featuring spin stabilization imparted by rifling or internal mechanisms in some production variants, reducing dispersion over range. A self-destruct fuze activates if the grenade fails to impact a target after approximately 4–5 seconds of flight, limiting unexploded ordnance risks; this is a piezoelectric point-impact fuse with graze sensitivity for reliability against angled surfaces. The overall rocket assembly weighs 2.7 kg when loaded in the RPG-22.[12][5]Technical Specifications
Performance Metrics
The RPG-22 launches a 72.5 mm PG-22 high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rocket with a muzzle velocity of 133 m/s.[5][2] The warhead employs a shaped charge capable of penetrating 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor (RHA), equivalent to defeating most contemporary armored vehicles at close range.[2] It also demonstrates structural penetration of 1.2 m of brick wall or 1 m of reinforced concrete, enabling use against fortifications. Effective direct-fire range is limited to 150 m due to the integral optical sight's graduated scale, though maximum range extends to 250 m under ideal conditions.[5] The system's disposable design prioritizes portability over repeated use, with a total weight of 2.7–2.8 kg and operational deployment time of 8–10 seconds from transport to firing configuration.[2][13] Safe operation occurs within temperatures from -40°C to +50°C, reflecting robustness in varied field environments.[5]Sighting and Range
The RPG-22 features a basic flip-up ladder-type iron sight integrated into the fiberglass launch tube, which deploys upward from the rear section to provide elevation adjustments calibrated for target distances of 50 meters, 150 meters, and 250 meters.[8][3][14] Raising the sight simultaneously cocks the firing mechanism via a mechanical linkage, while lowering it safely decocks the weapon if no target is engaged.[10] This unpowered, non-optical sighting system prioritizes simplicity and reliability for disposable use, lacking advanced features like magnification or illumination found in reusable launchers such as the RPG-7.[2] The effective range against armored targets is typically 200 meters, limited by the PG-22 rocket's velocity of approximately 133 meters per second and inherent ballistic dispersion without guidance.[8][3] Maximum sighted range extends to 250 meters, beyond which accuracy degrades significantly due to the unguided nature of the projectile and environmental factors like wind.[10][15] Operators must account for a minimum arming distance of around 20 meters to ensure fuze activation, with the rocket's self-destruct mechanism activating after approximately 6 seconds if the target is missed.[2]Operation
Firing Sequence
The RPG-22 is prepared for firing by extending the two-part fiberglass launch tube, sliding the forward telescoping section outward from its stowed length of 785 mm to an operational length of 850 mm.[2][8] This extension automatically opens protective covers at both the muzzle and breech ends, exposing the pre-loaded PG-22 rocket.[2][10] The operator shoulders the launcher and raises the integral flip-up ladder rear sight, which cocks the firing mechanism via mechanical linkage.[2][10] Lowering the sight de-cocks the mechanism, returning the weapon to a safe condition for transport or abortion of the engagement.[2][10] Prior to triggering, the operator must verify a minimum backblast danger zone of 15 meters behind the launcher to mitigate risks from expelled exhaust gases and potential fragments.[2][10] Aiming employs the raised rear sight, graduated for ranges of 50 m, 150 m, and 250 m against point targets, with an effective firing range of up to 200 m.[8] Firing is executed by squeezing the trigger on the pistol grip's backstrap, releasing an inertia-driven firing pin that strikes the rocket's percussion primer.[2] This ignites the solid-fuel booster motor, which fully burns out within the smoothbore tube, accelerating the fin-stabilized PG-22 grenade to a muzzle velocity of 133 m/s before exit.[2][8] The disposable design precludes reloading, rendering the launcher inert after a single shot.[2]Safety and Handling
The RPG-22 is transported and stored in a collapsed configuration with front and rear covers sealing the barrel ends to prevent accidental ignition or environmental damage.[2] To prepare for firing, the operator extends the telescoping forward section, which automatically opens the protective covers and readies the 72.5 mm PG-22 rocket for launch; this process takes approximately 10 seconds.[2] The firing mechanism is cocked by raising the rear flip-up sight, arming the percussion primer on the rocket; lowering the sight de-cocks the weapon for safe carry if no target is engaged.[2] Firing requires shouldering the launcher with the pistol grip aligned ergonomically, aiming via the integrated ladder sight graduated for ranges up to 250 meters, and squeezing the trigger to initiate the solid-fuel motor, which accelerates the rocket to 133 m/s entirely within the barrel to minimize initial recoil.[2] A critical safety measure is ensuring a clear backblast zone, as the open rear barrel expels hot propellant gases in a cone-shaped area spanning a 90-degree sector extending 30 meters behind the weapon, capable of causing severe burns, overpressure injuries, or fatalities to personnel or fragile structures in that vicinity.[16] Operators must avoid firing from enclosed or semi-enclosed spaces without adequate ventilation to prevent gas accumulation hazards, and instructional markings on the fiberglass tube emphasize verifying the rear area and proper grip to mitigate self-injury from backblast.[17] Post-firing, the empty launcher is discarded as it is designed for single use only, with no reloading or disassembly provisions; unused units, if armed, require safe discharge by firing into a designated non-hazardous direction rather than manual unloading.[2] The weapon's inert construction in non-combat modes and absence of a reversible combat-to-travel switch enhance handling simplicity but necessitate disciplined adherence to procedural checks to prevent premature arming.[18] Prohibited actions include unnecessary cocking without intent to fire, unsupported shoulder firing if not specified, or operation in conditions violating backblast clearance, as outlined in operational guidelines to maintain operator safety.[19]Combat Use
Conventional Military Applications
The RPG-22 functions primarily as a man-portable, disposable anti-tank system in conventional infantry tactics, allowing squad-level troops to engage lightly armored vehicles, APCs, and bunkers at short ranges of up to 200 meters without logistical demands of reloadable launchers. Developed in the Soviet Union and adopted by the Soviet Army around 1979–1985, it was distributed to motorized rifle units to counter anticipated armored advances in potential European theater conflicts, providing a cost-effective means to penetrate up to 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor equivalent.[2][3] Post-Cold War, the RPG-22 remains in active inventory with several state militaries, including Russia's, where it supports reserve forces for rapid anti-armor augmentation in combined arms operations.[3] Bulgarian Land Forces locally produce the system at VMZ Sopot, integrating it into standard infantry anti-tank batteries for defensive maneuvers, with design evolutions like the Bullspike-AT extending its utility against modern threats.[20] Georgia's Defense Forces employ the RPG-22 in expeditionary roles, as evidenced by its use during joint operations in Afghanistan in the 2010s, where Georgian personnel trained on and carried it for close-support fire missions.[21] In the Russo-Ukrainian War commencing in 2014 and escalating in 2022, Ukrainian conventional units, including the 79th Air Assault Brigade, have fired the RPG-22 against Russian armored assets such as T-72 tanks in ambush and defensive engagements, highlighting its ongoing tactical value in peer-state conflicts despite the prevalence of guided munitions.[22][23] This employment underscores the weapon's simplicity and reliability for dismounted troops in high-intensity maneuver warfare, though its unguided nature limits effectiveness against reactive armor or beyond point-blank ranges.[3]Asymmetric and Non-State Employment
The RPG-22's single-use, lightweight construction—measuring 785 mm in length and weighing 2.8 kg loaded—facilitates its appeal to non-state actors, enabling rapid deployment without the logistical burdens of reusable systems, such as maintenance or resupply chains.[24] This disposability aligns with asymmetric tactics emphasizing hit-and-run operations, concealment, and minimal training requirements, allowing irregular forces to target armored vehicles or fortified positions while evading conventional countermeasures.[25] On September 20, 2000, the Real Irish Republican Army (Real IRA), a dissident republican paramilitary group, employed an RPG-22 in a terrorist attack on the MI6 (SIS) headquarters in Vauxhall, London.[24] The launcher was fired from a motorcycle at close range, striking the eighth floor of the building and causing superficial structural damage, including shattered windows and scorch marks, but resulting in no injuries or fatalities. British authorities identified the weapon as a Russian-manufactured RPG-22, marking its first documented use on the UK mainland and highlighting illicit procurement networks supplying Eastern Bloc arms to European non-state groups.[26] In the Syrian Civil War, opposition forces including factions aligned with the Free Syrian Army documented RPG-22 usage starting around 2013, often in urban ambushes against Syrian government armor.[27] Videos from clashes in areas like Hama and Idlib province showed rebels firing the system, with warheads sourced via smuggling routes from Croatia through Jordan, involving former Yugoslav stockpiles transferred to intermediaries.[25] These acquisitions, including alongside M79 Osa launchers, enhanced rebel anti-tank capabilities in southern and central fronts, though supply inconsistencies limited widespread adoption.[28] Iraqi insurgents during the post-2003 insurgency recovered limited quantities of RPG-22s from pre-invasion stockpiles or battlefield captures, employing them sporadically against coalition vehicles in urban settings like Fallujah.[29] Reports indicate small numbers surfaced after Operations Desert Storm and Iraqi Freedom, underscoring the weapon's proliferation through unsecured depots rather than direct state sponsorship.[29] Pro-Russian separatist militias in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine integrated RPG-22s into their arsenal from 2014 onward, using them in defensive ambushes against Ukrainian armored advances.[30] These groups, operating as non-state entities with external backing, documented the launchers alongside RPG-18 variants, leveraging their portability for guerrilla tactics in contested areas like Luhansk and Donetsk.[30] Such employment reflects broader patterns of arms diversion from Soviet-era reserves to hybrid irregular forces.[30]Operators
Current State Operators
The RPG-22 remains in limited service among select state militaries, primarily those with Soviet-era legacies or local production capabilities, as of 2025. Russia continues to inventory the launcher within its Ground Forces for anti-tank applications, valuing its disposable design for rapid deployment despite the availability of more advanced systems.[3] Bulgaria operates and produces the RPG-22 under license through VMZ Sopot, supplying its Land Forces and enabling exports, including derivatives like the Bullspike, which features improved warheads while retaining the core single-use tube configuration.[31] Ukraine employs RPG-22-based systems, such as Bulgarian-supplied Bullspike launchers, issued to infantry units for defensive operations against armored threats, demonstrating practical utility in asymmetric engagements.[32] Additional operators include Georgia, where the weapon is listed in Defense Forces equipment for territorial defense roles, and Colombia, with the National Army maintaining stockpiles acquired through historical channels for counterinsurgency. Reports also indicate presence in Peruvian and Croatian forces, though active deployment levels are not publicly detailed and may rely on residual inventories rather than new procurement.[3]Former and Proliferated Use
The RPG-22 was deployed by Soviet forces starting in 1985, during the latter stages of the Soviet-Afghan War (1979–1989), as a disposable anti-tank weapon intended to counter armored threats encountered in mountainous terrain.[3] Soviet stocks of the launcher, produced in large quantities, remained in limited service with Russian forces into the post-Soviet era but were largely supplanted by newer systems like the RPG-26 and RPG-27 by the 1990s.[2] Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, inherited stockpiles in former Soviet republics such as Ukraine and Georgia were utilized in regional conflicts, including Ukrainian operations against separatists in 2017.[22] Proliferation of the RPG-22 has occurred through black-market channels and diversions from state stockpiles, particularly in Eastern Europe and the Balkans. Bulgarian production at the VMZ Sopot facility contributed to exports and illicit flows, with Bulgarian-origin units recovered in Irish Republican Army (IRA) dissident caches.[33] In 2000, the Real IRA employed a Russian-manufactured RPG-22 in an attack on MI6 headquarters in London, firing a rocket that caused minor structural damage but no casualties; this marked the system's first documented use by a non-state actor in Western Europe.[34] Croatian authorities seized a shipment of RPG-22s destined for the Real IRA in August 2000, highlighting trafficking routes from the Balkans amid post-Yugoslav arms surpluses. Further dissemination has fueled asymmetric conflicts, with RPG-22s from former Yugoslav arsenals appearing in the Syrian Civil War by 2013, employed by rebel groups against government armor.[27] Illicit sales, including attempted diversions of RPG-22 rockets from Ukrainian military stocks, underscore ongoing black-market availability in Eastern Europe, often bundled with grenades and small-arms ammunition.[35] These instances reflect the launcher's appeal to irregular forces due to its simplicity, light weight (approximately 2.7 kg loaded), and single-use design, though its tandem warhead offers limited penetration against modern reactive armor.[2]Effectiveness and Limitations
Armor Penetration Capabilities
The RPG-22 employs the PG-22 rocket, featuring a 72 mm high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) shaped charge warhead designed to defeat armored vehicles through the formation of a penetrating metal jet upon detonation.[2][5] This warhead achieves an armor penetration of approximately 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor (RHA), enabling it to target the sides or rear of contemporary main battle tanks like the T-72 during its introduction in the mid-1980s.[2][36][1] Beyond steel armor, the PG-22 demonstrates capability against fortified structures, penetrating up to 1.2 meters of brick wall or 1 meter of reinforced concrete, which supports its utility in urban or defensive scenarios.[36][1] The launcher's effective anti-armor range is limited to about 150 meters for direct fire, with a muzzle velocity of 133 m/s, beyond which accuracy diminishes due to the unguided nature of the projectile.[2][5] As a single-use system without tandem warhead technology, its penetration performance against modern explosive reactive armor (ERA) or composite arrays exceeding 400 mm equivalent remains constrained, reflecting design priorities for lightweight disposability over advanced countermeasures.[2][7]Comparative Analysis
The RPG-22, a disposable 72 mm rocket-propelled grenade launcher developed in the Soviet Union during the 1980s, offers improved armor penetration over its predecessor, the RPG-18, primarily through a more advanced shaped-charge warhead capable of defeating up to 400 mm of rolled homogeneous armor (RHA).[2][8] In contrast, the RPG-18 achieves approximately 300 mm RHA penetration with its 64 mm warhead, making the RPG-22 a direct upgrade for engaging lightly armored vehicles or older tanks without explosive reactive armor (ERA).[16] Both systems share a similar operational profile as lightweight, single-use launchers weighing around 2.7 kg for the RPG-22 and 2.2 kg for the RPG-18, with effective ranges limited to 150-200 meters due to unguided flight and optical sighting constraints.[2][3] Compared to the reusable RPG-7, the RPG-22 prioritizes portability and simplicity at the expense of versatility and sustained fire capability. The RPG-7, with its 40 mm launcher tube and interchangeable PG-7 series warheads, can achieve comparable 300-500 mm RHA penetration depending on the round (e.g., PG-7VR tandem warhead defeats ERA plus 650 mm), but requires separate loading and weighs 6-7 kg empty, complicating logistics in rapid assaults.[16] The RPG-22's integrated, pre-loaded design enables faster deployment—extending the tube and firing in seconds—ideal for infantry squads needing immediate anti-armor response without the RPG-7's 2-3 kg per-round reload burden or backblast training demands.[3] However, the RPG-7's modularity allows adaptation for high-explosive or thermobaric effects, whereas the RPG-22 remains fixed to its high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) configuration, limiting its utility against fortifications or personnel.[2] Western disposable systems like the American M72 LAW (66 mm) and AT4 (84 mm) parallel the RPG-22's doctrine of mass issuance to line infantry, but differ in caliber, weight, and performance trade-offs. The M72 LAW, introduced in 1963, penetrates only 200-300 mm RHA and weighs 2.5 kg, rendering it less effective against post-1970s Soviet tanks compared to the RPG-22's 400 mm capability.[16] The heavier AT4, at 6.7 kg, matches or exceeds the RPG-22's penetration (up to 400-500 mm RHA) with a larger warhead and extends effective range to 300 meters, but its bulk reduces soldier mobility in prolonged engagements.[16] All three emphasize minimal training—firing after a 10-meter arming distance—but the RPG-22's Soviet-era design lacks the AT4's multipurpose variants for urban bunker-busting, reflecting a focus on tank-heavy threats over diverse NATO-style operations.[3]| System | Caliber (mm) | Weight (kg) | Penetration (mm RHA) | Effective Range (m) | Reusability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPG-22 | 72 | 2.7 | 400 | 150-200 | No |
| RPG-18 | 64 | 2.2 | 300 | 200 | No |
| RPG-7 (PG-7V) | 40 (launcher) / 93 (warhead) | 6-7 (empty) | 300-500 (varies) | 200-500 | Yes |
| M72 LAW | 66 | 2.5 | 200-300 | 200 | No |
| AT4 | 84 | 6.7 | 400-500 | 300 | No |