What's new

US Navy Developing New-Level Lethality

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
16,980
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
The US Navy is continuing its efforts to innovate and improve capabilities. The Navy in cooperation with Lockheed Martin has fired a high-tech Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) from a new launcher that will expand options for the weapon, increase possible deployments and widen the range of potential targets, industry officials said. The Navy added that the deck-mounted firing technology enables LRASM to fire from a much wider range of Navy ships.

The flight test was designed to demonstrate the missile’s ability to conduct an angled launch from a newly designed ship-launch-environment replication. As reported on scout.com, the missile has previously been test-fired from a Navy ship-firing technology called Vertical Launch Systems as a way to provide long range surface-to-surface and surface-to-air offensive firepower. The adaptation of the surface-launcher weapon, which could be operational by the mid-2020s, would use the same missile that fires from a Mk 41 Vertical Launch System and capitalize upon some existing Harpoon-launching technology, Lockheed developers explained.

The LRASM test-firing took place as Lockheed received an $86.5 million contract from the U.S. Navy and Air Force for production. A Lockheed statement said the contract marks the first production award for the air-launched variant of LRASM, and includes 23 missiles and engineering support. “This first production lot of LRASM brings a new level of capability to both the US Air Force and the Navy,” Mike Fleming, LRASM director at Lockheed Martin told defenseworld.net. “LRASM enables our warfighters to prosecute even the most advanced enemy ships,” Fleming added.

With a range of at least 320 nautical kilometers, LRASM is designed to use next-generation guidance technology to help track and eliminate targets such as enemy ships, shallow submarines, drones, aircraft and land-based targets, according to Scott Callaway, Program Director for Advanced Subsonic Cruise Missiles at Lockheed Martin.

Developers say the weapon is particularly well suited for the most advanced adversary weapons systems and most high-threat warfare scenarios such as a “near-peer” type of combat engagements. Advanced threat environments are expected to include enemy forces armed with long-range sensors, electronic warfare, tactics for compromising or jamming GPS signals and a host of additional countermeasures designed to thwart incoming surface and air weapons.

Given that the LRASM weapon is designed for both maritime and air launch, the efforts to build a new launcher are taking place alongside commensurate service efforts to advance the air launch efficacy of the weapon.

Along with advances in electronic warfare, cyber-security and communications, LRASM is designed to bring semi-autonomous targeting capability to a degree that does not yet exist. As a result, some of its guidance and seeker technology is secret, developers have said.

The development of LRASM is consistent with the Navy’s existing “distributed lethality” strategy which seeks to better arm the fleet with long-range precision offensive and defensive fire power. Having longer-range or over-the-horizon ship and air-launched weapons is relevant to the “distributed” portion of the strategy which calls for the fleet to have an ability to disperse as needed. Having an ability to spread out and conduct dis-aggregated operations makes Navy forces less vulnerable to enemy firepower while. At the same time, have long-range precision-strike capability will enable the Navy to hold potential enemies at risk or attack if needed, supplying a justification to the “lethality” part.

http://i-hls.com/archives/77945
 
New High Tech Long Range Anti Ship Missile?

What kind of "New Tech" this could be that's unheard of before?
 
New High Tech Long Range Anti Ship Missile?

What kind of "New Tech" this could be that's unheard of before?

It's the advancement of AI technologies incorporated into the missile and how it prosecutes its targets. Reportedly, LRASM's can communicate with each other to plan there best route of attack as well.
 
So "multiple" missiles communicate with each other to figure out the most lethal attack... interesting.
 
Back
Top Bottom