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Missile Mission

EagleEyes

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Robert Hewson delves into the world of airborne missile programmes.

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Looking back over the headlines of 2001, the single most newsworthy item was probably the 1 May debut of Israel’s long-secret active-radar beyond visual range (BVR) missile programme, the Derby. In a series of tightly controlled briefings first details were released of the new weapon which, until then, the world had not even been sure what to call.

While the existence of this classified project had been known for some time, speculation had ranged widely as to what it was capable of when it had entered service, even what it looked like and what it was called.

The Derby name ­ one of the many random codewords for national defence projects that pop out of the Israeli Ministry of Defence computer ­ had been associated with the missile programme for some time, but so too had Alto, Glory, Firefly, Project Five and Python 5.

In 2001 a window was opened onto the Israeli design when South Africa unveiled its own new BVR missile, the Kentron R-Darter. There was very close collaboration between Rafael and Kentron on radar missile development and when the wraps finally came off the R-Darter, the world at last got a pretty good idea of what the Derby looked like too.

Many sources close to the South African programme confessed that the R-Darter and the Derby were one and the same ­ though both companies now espouse a very different (public) view on their current working relationship. However, when placed side-by-side it is impossible to tell the R-Darter and the Derby apart. The only difference, according to the published specification, is that the R-Darter weighs 2kg more.

The importance of these weapons lies in the fact that they now offer a credible level of advanced BVR missile performance without too many export restrictions. The BVR weapon of choice, the AIM-120 AMRAAM, comes with many strings attached by the US State Department. The US authorities are still reluctant to sell the AMRAAM in a region where no equivalent threat weapon has been fielded.

Chile has not yet secured AMRAAM approval for its new Block 50 F-16s. There have been credible press reports that Chile has opted for the Derby instead and Rafael confirms there is at least one export customer for the new missile. Brazil has also been identified as a serious potential client, as part of the Israeli-led upgrade of its F-5Es.

The R-Darter is now in service on SAAF Cheetah Cs and will be integrated on South Africa’s Gripens when they enter service. One important factor driving the declassification of the R-Darter (and by extension the Derby) was the decision by Gripen international to offer the R-Darter as a weapons option on the Gripen. As the Gripen team has also struck up a very close relationship with Rafael ­ offering the Python 4 and SPICE stand-off weapon on the aircraft ­ it is not entirely inconceivable that the Derby is for sale to export customers also.

Strangely, Israel has shown a surprising lack of interest in the Derby with the IDF/AF saying publicly that it would like to acquire the missile but cannot afford it at the moment. Instead, Israel has been working hard to secure approval for the AIM-120 and is already integrating the US weapon on part of its F-15A/C fleet. Both the F-15I and F-16I will have AMRAAM capability, although the IDF/AF would ideally also like to equip its F-16s with the Derby over which it has full control of important technologies like ECCM configurations.

Chinese Pythons

Israeli weapons of a different kind were also in the news during April following the interception of and subsequent collision with a US Navy EP-3E Aries by a Chinese Shenyang J-8. The PLAAF fighters that shadowed the EP-3E were all clearly armed with the Chinese version of the Python III missile, the PL-8. While it had been known for some time that Israel had supplied Python III technology to China­ and perhaps even some real missiles ­ this was the best view that anyone had of the missile in PLAAF service.

It also transpired South Africa had probably been a Python III operator when a senior Kentron official confirmed the SAAF had operated a foreign-sourced missile under the codename ‘V3S’. This missile was introduced on the Mirage F1CZ from 1989 onwards and is understood to have been the Python III ­ introduced to meet shortcomings exposed in the SAAF’s available missile stocks by the war in Angola.

In Europe, the two rival next-generation short-range missile programmes ­ the MBDA ASRAAM and BGT’s IRIS-T ­ both encountered a bit of a rough ride. The ASRAAM saga took an unwelcome turn when the UK authorities, in the form of Procurement Minister Baroness Symons, made an unprecedented public announcement that the ASRAAM didn’t work.

It is common for new weapons systems not to perform quite as advertised but it is most unusual for a national programme to be criticised in such a specific way by the customer. MBDA rejected the Baroness’s claims and produced its own evidence to support the ASRAAM’s effectiveness.

The truth of the matter lay somewhere in between. The ASRAAM was having trouble discriminating certain types of targets under certain types of conditions in certain types of cloud. This is a problem for all IR-guided missiles, no matter how sophisticated, and is not something that can always be legislated in the laboratory. While the ASRAAM team stated it had met the required paper specification for the missile, it seemed once the missiles went flying in their captive trials, things were not always working out in the real world.

The most significant aspect of the MoD’s ASRAAM pronouncement was the way that its ‘problems’ were directly linked to the ongoing negotiations for the pan-European Meteor BVR missile programme. Baroness Symons said: “We are also determined to draw the lessons from thisÉ when we sign the contract for the Meteor.” Such an attitude must have caused some alarm for the Meteor’s UK shareholder, BAE Systems.

Canada and the IRIS-T Causing alarm elsewhere was the Canadian decision to drop out of the German-led development effort for the IRIS-T missile. The IRIS-T is a future short-range agile dogfight missile ­ the product of a team of German, Italian, Swedish, Greek, Canadian and Norwegian industries being led by Germany’s BGT. IRIS-T is earmarked for use on Germany’s Eurofighters and Sweden’s Gripens.

With work on the programme largely complete, Canada announced in October it was leaving the project on grounds of cost. As the only Hornet operator in the IRIS-T group, Canada would have had to be sole bearer of all the Hornet integration costs. Canada’s workshare portion was low but its value to the team was much higher as it provided access to the worldwide F/A-18 community which has now been shut off. With potential customers such as Switzerland and Finland expressing an interest in the project, this was bad news for the IRIS-T.

In July, the Eurofighter fired its first AMRAAM missile (and its first ASRAAM), over the Decimomannu range in Sardinia. At around the same time the first AMRAAM firings from an Australian Hornet were undertaken at Woomera ­ marking only the second time that trial AMRAAMs have been fired outside the USA.

The final saga to merge the missile interested partners, of the Anglo French Matra BAE Dynamics and Italy’s Alenia came to an end on 18 December when MBDA was finally formed. This saw MBDA take under its wing the missile interests of Alenia Marconi Systems (AMS) in return for BAE Systems’ radar business joining AMS.

Source: Global-Defence
 
Derby missile is in service with Indian Navy for it&#39;s Sea-Harrier fighters.

Miro
 
Originally posted by melb4aust@Jan 23 2006, 08:36 AM
Any source for this information...@miro.
[post=5584]Quoted post[/post]​

India hits Derby missiles
BY MADHUPRASAD
DH NEWS SERVICE, BANGALORE:

After five years of negotiations India will be buying Beyond Visual Range (BVR) air-to-air ‘Derby’ missiles from the Rafael Armament Development Authority Ltd.
According to sources in the Ministry of Defence, Rafael has won a deal worth &#036;25 million to supply 20 Derby missiles to the Indian Navy. According to Rafael, the deal includes six practice missiles. The missiles are designated for the Indian Navy’s Sea Harrier planes, which are stationed on Viraat aircraft carriers.

The agreement between India and Rafael is slated for signing after the Aero India Show. India has been conducting a worldwide search for BVR missiles for its battle fleet since 2000. The contract for arming its Sea Harrier jets was then opened in 2003.

Under the draft agreement, Rafael will station specialists in India to train the Navy in maintenance and operation of missiles. An Indian defence ministry official said that Rafael would also supply racks and trailers for transferring and installing the missiles.

Delivery of the missiles will start 30 months after the contract is signed, and be completed a year after that. According to Rafael, the missiles have a maximum range of 20 kilometres, a flying speed of Mach 1.2, and can lock in on the target even before being launched, or shortly after launch.

Sources said that IAF also needed next-generation BVR missiles in order to upgrade its Mirage 2000H and Sukhoi Su-30 MKI.

The need for new missiles was revealed in early 2003, when the IAF’s weapon systems were unable to cope with those of French in the joint Indo-French military manoeuvres.

http://www.deccanherald.com/deccanherald/feb112005/s7.asp
 
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