Ukraine 2002 "Weapons of Victory"
Issue Date |
06.12.2022 |
ID |
Michel:
Scott:
|
Design |
Serhiy and Oleksandr Haruka |
Stamps in set |
6 |
Value |
U+3 - "Vilkha"
U+3 - "Neptune"
U+3 - "Stugna-P"
U+3 - "Bayraktar TB2"
U+3 - "Javelin"
U+3 - "HIMARS"
"U" = 12 Hrivna = domestic letter up to 50gr. rate.
Additional 3 Hrivna is donation for the Ukrainian Army.
|
Emmision |
commmemorative, semi-postal |
Size (width x height) |
stamps: 40.6mm x 26mm
Mini-Sheet: 97mm x 129mm
|
Layout |
Mini-Sheet of 6 |
Products |
FDC x1, PC x1 |
Paper |
|
Perforation |
|
Print Technique |
Offset lithography
|
Printed by |
Integrated Printing Plant Ukraina For Securities |
Quantity |
200,000 |
Issuing Authority |
Ukrposhta |
On December 6
th, 2022, on the Day of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the Post Authority of Ukraine -
Ukrposhta - issued a set of 6 commemorative stamps - "Weapons of Victory".
All stamps have the same face value of "U+3".
"U" is the letter equivalent of domestic letter up to 50gr. rate.
At the date of the issue, it was equivalent to 12 Ukrainian Hryvni (€0.30).
Additional 3 Hryvni is donation to the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
From the first days of the full-scale war, the Armed Forces of Ukraine have been using weapons of
both domestic and foreign production on the battlefield, which in the hands of Ukrainian soldiers
every day brings Ukraine closer to victory.
[R1]
"
Vilkha"
[R2] (Ukrainian: «
Вільха», "Alder tree") is a Ukrainian heavy multiple rocket
launcher system (MLRS) that fires guided missiles.
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Ukrainian MRLS Vilkha on stamp of Ukraine 2022
MiNr.: , Scott:
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Designed by the State Kyiv Design Bureau “Luch” in collaboration with other public and private Ukrainian defence companies,
it was based on the Soviet BM-30 Smerch rocket launch system and developed in the 2010s.
The MLRS was test-fired several times in 2018, while the tests were also
conducted at a military training ground in the Odesa region of Ukraine in August 2019.
The Vilkha has been seen being used by Ukrainian Ground Forces during the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine.
The MLRS can destroy infantry, armoured, and soft-skinned targets in concentration areas of artillery batteries, command posts, and ammunition depots.
It is expected that in the near future Ukraine will complete the development of a new generation
ballistic missile variant fired from the Vilkha-M complex, with the ability to hit targets at a distance
of 200 km or more.
The MLRS has a crew of four and can fire all twelve missiles of caliber 300mm in 45 seconds.
Maximum range: 70 km Vilkha, 130 km Vilkha-M, 141 km Vilkha-M2 (currently in development) with
accuracy of 10-30 meters.
The claimed truck speed is 100 km/h using a turbocharged diesel YaMZ-7511.10 engine.
The rockets that it fires are claimed to have micromotors that boost the range of the rocket
and also keep it stable in flight.
R-360 "
Neptune"
[R3] (Ukrainian: Р-360 «
Нептун», romanized: R-360 "Neptun") is a
Ukrainian anti-ship cruise missile developed by the State Kyiv Design Bureau “Luch” (the same Bureau who developed the MRLS "
Vilkha").
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R-360 Neptune anti-ship missile on stamp of Ukraine 2022
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The Ukrainian missile is generally similar to the Kh-35U, but has a longer body with more fuel, larger booster,
with substantially improved range and electronics.
The system requirement was for a single missile to defeat surface warships and transport vessels with a
displacement of up to 5,000 tons, either in convoys or moving individually.
Ukrainians also developed coastal defense missile system, to carry Neptun missiles.
The missile was first revealed at the 2015 Arms and Security international exhibition in Kyiv.
In mid-2017, Neptune missiles were tested concurrently with
Vilkha launchers and
missiles.
However, unlike the Vilkha, the test results and capabilities of the Neptune were not made public.
According to the press service of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine,
the first successful flight tests of the system took place on 30 January 2018.
The first training missile divizion entered service with the Ukrainian Navy in March 2021.
On 13 April 2022, Ukrainian sources claimed the Russian cruiser Moskva was hit by two
Neptune missiles, resulting in a fire and subsequent explosion of a shipboard ammunition store.
Moskva is one of the two largest warships to be sunk in combat since World War II.
The successful use of the Neptune system to sink the warship was cited by Ukrainian Defence Minister
Oleksii Reznikov as giving confidence to Ukraine's allies that more weapon supplies to Ukraine would
be worth it.
A Neptune missile including rocket motor is 5.05 metres in length, with a cross-shaped hard wing.
Neptune missiles are designed to be housed in transport and launch containers (TLC) with dimensions
5.30 by 0.60 by 0.60 metres.
The system has a maximum range of about 300 kilometres.
A typical Neptun coastal defense battery consists of 6 launcher vehicles with a total
of 24 anti-ship missiles.
Launcher vehicles can be located up to 25 km from the sea.
It takes 15 minutes to prepare this coastal defense missile system for firing.
"
Stugna-P"
[R4] (Ukrainian: "
Стугна-П" -
Stugna is the name of a local river) is a Ukrainian anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) system developed
in the 2010s by the State Kyiv Design Bureau “Luch” .
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Stugna-P anti-tank guided missile on stamp of Ukraine 2022
MiNr.: , Scott:
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The Stugna-P is one of the more successful post-Soviet military sector products in Ukraine, which has
otherwise struggled to actualize potential projects due to inefficiency and lack of funds.
Portable anti-tank missile system “Stugna-P” is designed to strike the manpower, movable and immovable
modern armored targets with combined, spaced or monolithic armour including active armour, as well as
pinpoint targets like permanent fire position, a tank in a trench, not heavily armoured objects and
helicopters.
The peculiarity of the complex is the ability to aim the missile on targets from the closed positions
and holds, reducing the risk of destruction of gunner by the reverse firing of the enemy.
The Stugna-P is being used in the same way US forces used the TOW missile system in the 1980s and
the Gulf War Desert Patrol Vehicle.
Kyiv ordered mass manufacture of the missile in March 2015, indicating that it would be useful in
combating Russian and separatists in Eastern Ukraine after the 2014 annexation of Crimea and insurgency
in the Donbas region.
On 25 April, near Izyum, during one engagement four tanks were destroyed or damaged in 4 minutes by the
same Stugna-P operator.
"
Bayraktar TB2"
[R5] – unmanned aerial vehicle with a long flight duration (Turkey).
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Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicle on stamp of Ukraine 2022
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The Bayraktar TB2 is a medium-altitude long-endurance (MALE) unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV)
capable of remotely controlled or autonomous flight operations.
It is manufactured by the Turkish company Baykar Makina Sanayi ve Ticaret A.S., primarily for the
Turkish Armed Forces.
The aircraft are monitored and controlled by an aircrew in a ground control station, including weapons
employment.
The development of the UAV has been largely credited to Selçuk Bayraktar, a former MIT graduate student.
The Bayraktar TB2 made its maiden flight in August 2014.
By November 2021, the TB2 drone had completed 400,000 flight-hours globally.
The largest operator of TB2 drones is the Turkish military, but an export model has been sold to the
militaries of a number of other countries, including Ukraine.
As a part of its military modernization program the Armed Forces of Ukraine purchased 12 Bayraktar
TB2s in 2019.
During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, TB2 drones have been used by Ukraine's armed forces against
Russian forces and equipment.
According to video footage released by the armed forces, TB2 drones have successfully destroyed on
different occasions a Russian command post, military vehicles including tanks, IFVs, different types of
trucks, surface-to-air missile systems (including Buk and Tor), self-propelled artillery, multiple rocket
launcher (MLRS), howitzers and an electronic warfare system.
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Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicle on semi-postal stamp of
Lithuania 2022.
MiNr.: , Scott: B56
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Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicle on semi-postal stamp of Turkey 2017
MiNr.: 4389 , Scott:
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The drone also reportedly destroyed two Russian fuel trains, patrol boats and helicopter.
The popularity of the drone in Ukraine led to a song, "Bayraktar" being written about the drone while
throwing insults at the Russian army and the invasion.
Several charity organizations in Ukraine and abroad, ran crowdfunding campaigns to collect money for
Bayraktar drones for Ukrainian army.
As part of such campaign, The Postal Authority of Lithuania issued a semi-postal stamp.
The stamp has €1 postag and €1 charity values.
The charity value was donated to the organization VšĮ "Mēlyna ir Geltona" ("Blue & Yellow"), who
collected it to purchase a Bayraktar UCAV for Ukrainian Army.
On September 9
th, 2022 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy met with the head of Turkish
defence firm Baykar and said the company would set up a factory in Ukraine to build unmanned aerial vehicles.
FGM-148 "
Javelin"
[R6] – man-portable anti-tank missile system designed to destroy armoured vehicles,
fortifications on the ground, as well as some aircraft (USA).
/
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Javelin man-portable anti-tank missile system on stamp of Ukraine 2022
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The FGM-148 Javelin, or Advanced Anti-Tank Weapon System-Medium (AAWS-M), is an American-made portable
anti-tank missile system in service since 1996, and continuously upgraded.
Its fire-and-forget design uses automatic infrared guidance that allows the user to seek cover immediately
after launch, which require a user to guide the weapon throughout the engagement.
The Javelin's high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warhead can defeat modern tanks by top attack, hitting them
from above, where their armor is thinnest, and is also useful against fortifications in a direct attack
flight.
As of 2019, the Javelin had been used in around 5,000 successful engagements.
Javelin is a fire-and-forget missile with lock-on before launch and automatic self-guidance.
The system takes a top attack flight profile against armored vehicles, attacking the usually thinner
top armor, but can also make a direct attack, for use against buildings, targets too close for top attack,
targets under obstructions, and helicopters.
The missile is ejected from the launcher to a safe distance from the operator before the main rocket motors
ignite – a "soft launch arrangement".
This makes it harder to identify the launcher, though backblast from the launch tube still poses a hazard
to nearby personnel.
The firing team may move as soon as the "fire-and-forget" missile has been launched, or immediately prepare
to fire on their next target.
During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, NATO provided thousands of Javelins to Ukraine, where they
proved highly effective.
Javelins have been responsible for a part of the hundreds of armored vehicles Ukraine has destroyed,
captured or damaged.
M142 "
HIMARS"
[R7] – High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, which has in its arsenal guided high-precision
rockets (USA).
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High Mobility Artillery Rocket System - HIMARS on stamp of Ukraine 2022
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It is a light multiple rocket launcher developed in the late 1990s for the United States Army and mounted on a standard
United States Army Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV) truck frame.
The HIMARS carries one pod with either six GMLRS rockets or one ATACMS missile.
It is based on the United States Army's FMTV five-ton truck, and is capable of launching all rockets
specified in the Multiple Launch Rocket System Family of Munitions (MFOM).
HIMARS ammunition pods are interchangeable with the M270 MLRS; however, it is limited to a
single pod as opposed to the standard two for the M270 and its variants.
The Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky says that Himars missiles are changing the course of the war
against Russia.
The US-made system has been used to hit dozens of Russian targets such as command posts and ammunition
depots.
It has also been used to target bridges, including those on the approach to Russian-occupied Kherson.
The missiles supplied to Ukraine have a range of up to 50 miles (80 km), which is over twice the range
of the howitzer guns which the US has previously given to Ukraine.
Himars can also fire a single Army Tactical Missile System missile, which has a range of 186 miles (300 km).
However, the US isn't supplying Ukraine with these.
The 50-mile range is roughly similar to that of Russian Smerch missiles, but Himars fires GPS-guided
missiles which can be more accurately targeted.
Products
FDC |
Official Postcard |
Postmarks [1] |
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Notes:
[1] In addition to the official FDC postmark ("Premier Jour") of Kiev, additional
postmarks with the similar design were available in
more than two dozen of cities in Ukraine.
References
- [R1] Technical details and press release:
Philatelic Newsletter of Ukrposhta,
Ukrposhta,
parlament.ua,
english.nv.ua,
Colnect.
- [R2] MLRS "Vilkha":
Wikipedia,
Army Technology.
- [R3] Anti-ship cruise missile "Neptune":
Wikipedia,
military-today.com.
- [R4] "Stugna-P" is a man-portable anti-tank missile system:
Wikipedia,
military-today.com,
kaz.km.ua,
eurasiantimes.
- [R5] Bayraktar TB2:
Wikipedia,
military-today.com,
Forbes,
Reuters.
- [R6] Advanced Anti-Tank Weapon System-Medium "Javelin":
Wikipedia,
Lockheed Martin.
- [R7] High Mobility Artillery Rocket System "HIMARS":
Wikipedia,
Lockheed Martin,
military-today.com,
BBC.