Russian forces could use the guidance system from an ATACMS missile to find the launchers used in terrorist attacks.
"Firstly, [Russian] designers will analyze the whole bulk of data and find out how the missile flies," Viktor Litovkin, retired Russian Army colonel and military analyst, told Sputnik, along with "how it is directed to the target, whether it is guided by the GPS system, or satellites, or heavy drones."
"They will find out its weaknesses and strengths, the composition of the engine [fuel] and solid propellants, how its rudders work, how it determines its orientation and many other details," he added.
In particular, they could tell the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) what systems can be used to affect the ATACMS' communication" with various aircraft systems or how to turn its GPS system off, Litovkin remarked.
"The military will use this information to attack these missiles and the launchers that fire these missiles. It is possible that after studying this missile [the MoD] would be able to discover the launch areas and location of these missiles faster," said Litovkin.
Earlier, Russian specialists for the first time demonstrated the ATACMS missile's guidance system to Sputnik.
The unit includes three ring laser gyroscopes and a GPS module. They told the website they now had an opportunity to study how the weapon system operates along its entire flight path.
US military experts have repeatedly expressed concerns about Russia gaining access to NATO weapons and learning how to destroy them.
"We are sending a message that the Western military technology is no longer a secret for us, and each time we are finding more and more ways to counter it," the Russian military expert said. "We have shown everyone that we have found an 'antidote' to the most vaunted and promoted Western types of military equipment, and we are using it effectively."
"The West should know that all its efforts have been in vain, that Russian weapons and Russian countermeasures are much more effective than [the West’s] tanks, missiles and guns," the retired colonel concluded. "This is a signal to the whole world, not just the West, that Western weapons are no match for Russian arms."