TR Missile & Smart Munition Programs

Strong AI

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On the first day of #SAHA2026, we launched four new systems designed to enhance the operational depth of our Armed Forces. 🚀

With our next-generation solutions acting as a force multiplier for our national technology, we continue to build confidence in the skies and beyond. 🇹🇷

🚀 CİRİT C-UAS MISSILE
🚀 CİDA BEYOND LINE-OF-SIGHT LONG RANGE ANTI-TANK MISSILE
🚀 MINI CRUISE MISSILE
🚀 NEŞTER SMART GLIDING MUNITION

🚀 Roketsan General Manager Murat İkinci:

"Actually, we launched four new products of ours. Of course, among these products, the munitions for our sihas stand out prominently. For instance, when you look at our new mini cruise missile in this regard, it will hopefully add even more power to the strength of our sihas with a range of 250 kilometers.

Of course, one of the products we announced here is also our long-range anti-tank missile. This will be the longest-range among our anti-tank missiles. Especially at 55 kilometers, when launched from the air, it's a product that truly makes a difference at a 55-kilometer range. And again, our Cirit missile, as a countermeasure against scalpels and UAVs, is one of the four new products we've announced this time."

 

boredaf

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🚀 Roketsan General Manager Murat İkinci:

"Actually, we launched four new products of ours. Of course, among these products, the munitions for our sihas stand out prominently. For instance, when you look at our new mini cruise missile in this regard, it will hopefully add even more power to the strength of our sihas with a range of 250 kilometers.

Of course, one of the products we announced here is also our long-range anti-tank missile. This will be the longest-range among our anti-tank missiles. Especially at 55 kilometers, when launched from the air, it's a product that truly makes a difference at a 55-kilometer range. And again, our Cirit missile, as a countermeasure against scalpels and UAVs, is one of the four new products we've announced this time."

Let's hope someone takes proper photos of the information cards or presentations tomorrow.
 

Sanchez

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As you know, diplomacy often relies on symbolism and presentations to convey a message.
Going by the ICBM AI slop video, our thinking is that either give us the F110s or we nuke US? Really? What kind of retarded idiot thought about doing that. At least commenters were quick enough and deleted it, but it's already out there!
 

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boredaf

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got you covered, coincidentally
You're a star mate, so, 125 kg with 250 km range, that is brilliant. Was there any information about the size of its warhead?
 

2033

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Unfortunately, YILDIRIMHAN is a complete sham. I don’t believe a single word of it. The whole world is laughing at us; the Ministry of National Defense’s R&D department has brought shame upon us.
 

Mis_TR_Like

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Unfortunately, YILDIRIMHAN is a complete sham. I don’t believe a single word of it. The whole world is laughing at us; the Ministry of National Defense’s R&D department has brought shame upon us.
Whatever the truth is, it's been a total PR disaster. The video, the statement by the DM, the information sheet, none of it makes sense.
 

Bogeyman 

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Turkey, Ukraine seeking broader space cooperation Dec 15, 2020​


Turkey and its littoral Black Sea neighbor Ukraine have signed an agreement to broaden their cooperation in space and satellite technologies.

SSB President and Turkey’s top procurement official Ismail Demir and Turkish Industry and Technology Minister Mustafa Varank met with Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal on Nov. 30 to discuss space and defense cooperation between the two countries.

Serdar Huseyin Yildirim, head of the Turkish Space Agency, announced the agreement Dec. 4, which involves cooperation on launching technologies, satellite production, marketing and production of subsystems, and a program designed to manufacture a common rocket launcher.

The Turkish Space Agency is responsible for the civilian applications of Turkish-Ukrainian space efforts, while Turkey’s Presidency of Defence Industries, or SSB, is administering the military aspect of programs.


What if Türkiye acquired Russian SATAN ICBM technology from Ukraine?
 

IC3M@N FX

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It cannot be ruled out, but it is very, very unlikely that Ukraine, with its current engineers, still possesses intercontinental ballistic missile technology from the USSR, such as the “Satan I,” and if it does… For several years now, the U.S. and Europe have been supporting Ukraine with money, weapons, and intelligence, and this support is far more extensive than what Turkey provides to Ukraine—we’re talking about literally several billion U.S. dollars, plus weapons, ammunition, and intelligence.

Do you really believe that the US/Israel and Europe would allow such a critical technology transfer as that of intercontinental ballistic missiles from the Soviet era to Turkey?

Let’s assume that Yildirimhan is real and that things have progressed to the point where a test is possible—then there are only two possibilities: Either there has been a program in place for several years under the strictest secrecy, or a technology transfer via Pakistan/China (DF-5A/Satan I) has been taking place for several years now.

The final possibility is that this is a Hoax/Fake intended for show and to spread disinformation abroad.
 

Strong AI

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When we say Delta V, of course we think of systems that go to space, rockets and so on, but at SAHA 2026 we encountered a RAMJet. Thanks to Mr. Mehmet, the General Manager of Delta V, he will give us information about their RAMJet work. But RAMJet is very popular, and we don’t know much about it. First of all, what is a RAMJet?

> > First of all, welcome. It’s the first day of the fair. It has already started quite busy, and actually we are giving the first interview to you.

> > Thank you very much.

> > Thank you.

RAM is actually part of the air-breathing engine group. We can divide air-breathing engines that operate in the supersonic regime into two groups. One of them is the ramjet, meaning if there is subsonic combustion it is called a ramjet; if there is supersonic combustion it becomes a scramjet.

The ram concept is a motor technology based on taking the airflow of a system moving at supersonic speed, reducing it to subsonic speed, burning it in the combustion chamber, and producing thrust.

Why is it critical? Because especially for systems that cruise at low altitude—not climbing but cruising forward—the need for thrust to achieve long range makes this almost indispensable.

In this sense, Delta V is a public company that develops innovative propulsion systems. Although there are different projects in our country, we wanted to demonstrate something here. Let me show this as well.

We developed a unique system with a bi-conic inlet. Existing systems are mostly air-launched. We wanted to address a different gap by prioritizing a system that is launched from land and goes to land or sea targets. So we wanted to develop such a system, and we realized it in a very short time—within months, so to speak.

We integrated a booster motor so that it can reach those speeds and operate, and we performed its first ignition. Our only objective here was to see an air ignition, even for a very short time—to observe that the motor actually burns in the air.

And through two different telemetry units, we observed that it ignited, produced positive thrust, and continued for a certain duration. In this sense, it was extremely successful.

Where will these be used? When launched from land, traveling at supersonic speed—what does supersonic provide? It essentially means it cannot be intercepted easily. Let’s imagine a system cruising at Mach 2.5 at very low altitude, therefore not easily detectable. So we can already say that it could pose a serious threat to ships.

Besides that, we also have a need for supersonic target aircraft. Because the steel dome and its subcomponents are extremely critical and are being developed rapidly. These systems need targets moving at supersonic speeds. They need to be tracked by radar; there are many detailed aspects. In this sense, we think we can also use this RAMJet as a target drone.

We continue to develop it as internal projects, and we can say that we plan to conduct new test firings in the future. This is actually a family—a technological demonstration platform. In the future, we plan to make larger versions of it, again as a RAMJet with a mid-body air intake.


I should also say that the system is quite advanced. The inlet is a movable inlet. During the boost phase it is completely closed, and when transitioning to the ignition phase, the inlet opens and takes in air—on the order of about 10 kilograms per second—bringing it together with solid fuel in the combustion chamber. Inside, with multiple igniters—perhaps not just redundant but even quadruple redundant—it achieves continuous ignition and produces positive thrust, allowing the system to continue.

> > So what parts—fuel, motor—come from you? Without going into very secret topics, what exactly does Delta V contribute here?

I’ll say something a bit bold: we provide everything. Because the fuel technology and fuel production are also ours. All the aerodynamic and internal ballistics aspects you see here are ours. There is a special internal ballistics design here. The bi-conic geometry allows us to reduce supersonic flow to the conditions we want in the combustion chamber.

The design process, development phase, computational aerodynamics analysis, creation of these geometries—all engineering processes belong to us. At the same time, all manufacturing is also ours. So I can say that we design and produce this end-to-end.

> > It seems like we’ll be hearing a lot about RAMJet from Delta V in the coming period.

Yes. As Delta V, we take on critical problems—especially areas where there are gaps, even if major companies are already working on them. We treat these as missions. We start them as internal projects.

In the future, we want to test larger-scale and longer-range versions in flight. Because ground test infrastructures can be very costly. Instead, if we have a cost-effective platform and can accelerate it to real operating conditions with a booster, we can perform the most realistic tests. We built our concept around this idea and will continue scaling up this way.

> > At fairs, we usually give a small introduction to products and then invite you to the studio later for detailed discussion. Let’s move a bit to space. What are you doing there?

Of course. As the name Delta Space Technologies suggests, our main and largest area of activity is space. But considering national needs, we also try to provide solutions in defense using sustainable, cost-effective, and rapidly deployable technologies.

In this context, let me move to our space projects. This is very important. In June 2025, we conducted its first launch. It is a two-stage rocket with very high total impulse. We launched it to high altitude and, for the first time in Türkiye, performed hot staging—separating the second stage while it was firing—at about 44 kilometers and Mach 2.5.

We ignited the second stage and accelerated it to about Mach 5.7, and in the end we reached an altitude of about 210–215 kilometers. Throughout the entire flight, we collected telemetry data for about 7 minutes. It was a very valuable launch.

Why are we doing this? We call it a hypersonic test platform. Why is this important? Because hypersonic speeds are now critical. If you don’t want to be intercepted, you need to reach hypersonic speeds.

> > What counts as hypersonic?

Speeds above Mach 5.

At these speeds, controlling and operating systems is extremely critical, and we see from various examples that such systems are very difficult to intercept.

Why are we doing this? Similar platforms exist in countries like Germany. This is a test platform. An institution developing a hypersonic weapon system—whether Delta V or others—needs to test materials, control systems, telemetry, and other components in that regime. These must be tested in ionized atmospheric conditions, which is very difficult to replicate on the ground. So this platform enables that.

We have started this and are also developing different versions. It will evolve into a very capable stage, and we plan to build a liquid-propellant second stage with thrust vector control and maneuverability. We aim to test it soon.

 

boredaf

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I think I just got a spoiler about Saha from Aselsan's website. Apparently, Aselsan made an electronic warfare variant of Tolun.

tolunew1 - Copy.jpg


tolunew2 - Copy.jpg

 

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Nitrogen tetroxide provides more energy per unit mass compared to solid fuel, but it seems like a trade-off: giving up the advantage of rapid reaction, as in military ballistic missiles, in exchange for higher efficiency and control. Pre-launch refueling of liquid-fueled missiles (if the missile is not in a silo) must be an extremely delicate and time-consuming operation. IMHO, the progress made in SLV studies should have opened the window for achieving strategic ranges with SRMs. My amateur opinion is that the ability of liquid engines to be switched on and off, or to adjust the thrust, could also be an advantage for placing the warhead into orbit or performing complex maneuvers in the terminal phase. I think it would be consistent to say that Türkiye's engine control and high-energy capabilities gained in space projects are directly adapted to the ICBM class. Perhaps these studies were being pursued with a dual-use purpose from the beginning (like R-7, Atlas and many others) , who knows?

I also agree with the general comments regarding the warhead. What should be required when reaching this class is, as any defense enthusiast knows, 'obvious'. On the other hand, not only the payload carried by the warhead but also the technology the warhead itself possesses is important, MiRV for example. I don't know, it might be pointless to consider a missile with a ballistic trajectory of +3000/4000km without this technology.
 

Kaan Azman 

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You're a star mate, so, 125 kg with 250 km range, that is brilliant. Was there any information about the size of its warhead?
30 kg, very nice very lovely size

Also, more news on CİRİT C-UAS and Mini Cruise missile, as well as some other things are coming up. After I take a rest since today has taken its toll too.
 

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Nilüfer Kuzulu, the leader of the Yıldırımhan R&D team, announced that they have been working on hypersonic missiles for 10 years. It was stated that the warhead would be 10 times more intense than that of the Gazap bomb.
Saying we've been working on hypersonic missiles for 10 years means we decided to develop ICBMs after the July 15 coup attempt.
 

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