What Is the Gepard SPAAG? The Cold War Air Defence System That Became Ukraine’s Best Counter-Drone Weapon

What Is the Gepard SPAAG? The Cold War Air Defence System That Became Ukraine’s Best Counter-Drone Weapon
Yazı Özetini Göster

The Gepard SPAAG (Selbstfahrlafette Flugabwehrkanone — self-propelled anti-aircraft gun) was developed for West Germany in the 1970s and officially retired from Bundeswehr service in 2010. The war in Ukraine changed that calculus entirely: Rheinmetall-refurbished Gepards became one of the most effective counter-drone weapons on the modern battlefield, destroying hundreds of Iranian-made Shahed-136 kamikaze drones.

System Identity

ManufacturerKrauss-Maffei (hull) / Rheinmetall (weapon system)
TypeSelf-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun (SPAAG)
OriginGermany
Service Entry1976 (West Germany)
German Retirement2010 — reactivated for Ukraine 2022
OperatorsUkraine, Romania, Qatar, Brazil

Technical Specifications

PlatformLeopard 1 chassis
Combat Weight47.5 tonnes
EngineMTU MB 838 (830 hp)
Max Speed65 km/h
Main Armament2× Oerlikon KDA 35mm (twin-barrel)
Rate of Fire2× 550 rounds/minute
Ready Ammunition640 rounds (APDS + AHEAD)
RadarSiemens/Telefunken search + tracking
Effective Range4,000 m horizontal / 3,000 m altitude
Crew3

Role in Ukraine

Germany transferred 50 Gepards to Ukraine between 2022-2024. Rheinmetall refurbished systems from storage and provided technical support. Three critical roles emerged: counter-drone operations against Shahed-136 (most effective single weapon against this threat), infrastructure protection, and point defence of energy facilities. The 35mm AHEAD ammunition supply became a critical bottleneck due to Swiss export restrictions, forcing Rheinmetall to develop alternative supply chains.

Successor: Skyranger 30

Rheinmetall’s Skyranger 30 — mounted on the Boxer MRAV — is the Gepard’s direct successor. It retains the 30mm AHEAD capability in a modern, networked package. Where Gepard was a standalone system, Skyranger integrates into broader air-defence networks.

Sources

  • Rheinmetall AG — Gepard Program Information
  • German Federal Ministry of Defence — Ukraine Delivery Reports, 2022-2024
  • Jane’s Air Defence Systems
  • Defence News — Gepard Ukraine Analysis, 2023

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