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US uses new 'Ninja' missiles with 6 pop out blades to kill targets in Syria without an explosion

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Video has emerged online that shows the remains of three AGM-114R9X missiles used in a recent strike on Al Qaeda-linked terrorists in Syria, providing the best look yet at the innards of this mysterious version of the venerable Hellfire, which has six pop-out sword-like blades in lieu of a traditional explosive warhead. The War Zone was one of the first to report on a previous photograph that gave us our very first look at the inner workings of this weapon. Visible markings, which include the R9X designation, seen in the new video also offer additional details.

The video clip first appeared on social media on June 17, 2020. This comes three days after an AGM-114R9X strike on an SUV in Syria's Idlib Governorates. The U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights subsequently said its sources had informed it that two individuals, one of Jordanian nationality and another from Yemen, in the vehicle had died in the strike. Both were reportedly members of Hurras al-Din, a terrorist group affiliated with Al Qaeda, which the U.S. government also refers to simply as Al Qaeda in Syria, or AQ-S.

Experts and observers had previously determined that at least three, and possibly four, AGM-114R9Xs had struck the SUV in Idlib in total, which would match up with what looks to be components from three distinct missiles in the video. In once case, the remains of at least three blades are visible attached to a central hub structure. A second hub, with what appears to have a more complete blade still attached, is also present.

Red spheres are also seen. Diagrams of previous AGM-114 variants, including the basic AGM-114R version, show a similar component located toward the rear of the missile. This is what is called a 'pneumatic accumulator' and is not unique to this rare variant of the missile.

The same hub structure and blade stubs are also seen in a photo from the aftermath of a previous targeted strike in which one of these missiles was employed against a minivan in Idlib in December 2019. You can read the War Zone's full initial assessment of how the missile works here. That strike killed a member of Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which Hurras al-Din split from in 2017. HTS, which had rebranded itself from the Al Nusra Front earlier that year, has at least officially renounced its links to Al Qaeda.

The video also appears to show, for the first time, the official markings on the AGM-114R9X, which are, for this particular example, as follows:

P/N: 13707784
AGM-114R-9X
S/N: 2007108
Lot: MGP17K835M131

While the clip is unconfirmed, publicly available records show that this part number, or P/N, corresponds to a "Guided Missile, Surface Attack" and indicate that it was previously associated with a Hellfire variant known as the AGM-114R9G. Of the known AGM-114R subvariants, which you can read about in greater detail in this past War Zone piece, information about the R9G version is particularly scant.

However, information the War Zone previously received had suggested that AGM-114R9G was the original designation for the sword-blade-armed variant, but that it had been redesignated as the R9X as part of a decision to place it in a more secretive realm. This would fit with the fact that, despite its clear, if gruesome effectiveness and its low risk to innocent bystanders, the weapon appears to be issued only on a very limited basis.

By all indications, drones that the U.S. military's notoriously shy Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) and the Central Intelligence Agency appear to be the only ones to carry it. The U.S.-led coalition fighting against ISIS in Iraq and Syria notably told AFP that it was not involved in the most recent strike, which actually aligns with previous U.S. military statements that have suggested that this and other strikes against Al Qaeda-linked groups in northwestern Syria are part of a separate and distinct operation.

The publicly available information regarding this particular part number also shows that the Air Force has been the service officially responsible for managing this variant since 2017. That is also the year when the first known instance of this weapon being employed took place, when one of the missiles killed Al Qaeda's then-number two leader Abu Khayr al Masri while he was driving in Idlib. The War Zone Zone was first to highlight that he had likely died at the hands of a new type of exotic low-collateral damage munition.

So far, the U.S. military has not officially confirmed the existence of the R9X at all, unlike the AGM-114R9H, a publicly acknowledged "very low collateral damage" version of the Hellfire that may not have a warhead of any kind inside. This is all despite now extensive media reporting and a clear and obvious increase in its use, primarily in Syria. In January, the missile was employed for what appeared to be the first time in Afghanistan. The Wall Street Journal, which first broke details about the R9X in 2019, also reported that the weapon had been fired at targets in Libya, Iraq, Yemen, and Somalia, as well.

Despite this heavy secrecy surrounding the missile, it leaves far too distinct impact marks, damage effects, and identifiable wreckage due to the lack of an explosive warhead to conceal its use. The fact that the weapon is clearly marked just like any other Hellfire is another indication that knowledge of its existence is unavoidable. If anything, the AGM-114R9X is now firmly an open secret and it seems likely we will continue to learn more about it as it sees increasing use.

https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zo...wy-hellfire-missile-with-pop-out-sword-blades
 
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A drone strike that killed two senior commanders of an al-Qaida-linked terror group in northwestern Syria likely employed a unique variant of the beloved Hellfire missile, according to video from the scene of the strike.

Two leaders of the al-Qaida offshoot Horas al-Din, Jordanian citizen Qassam al-Urduni and Yemeni citizen Bilal al-Sanaani, were reportedly killed when a drone strike believed to have been carried out by the U.S.-led coalition nailed their vehicle on Sunday, the Associated Press reports.

Video posted to Twitter on Sunday purportedly shows the aftermath of the strike -- but instead of a fiery wreck, al-Urduni and al-Sanaani's vehicle appears relatively intact, the roof and windshield impacted from above and one side shredded:

The absence of an explosion and the pattern of damage to the roof and sides of the vehicle suggest that the drone didn't employ a conventional precision-guided munition but the R9X variant of the AGM-114 Hellfire missile, a non-explosive weapon that can best be described as a 100-pound flying switchblade or an anvil covered in swords.

First publicized by the Wall Street Journal in 2019 and colloquially known as the "flying Ginsu" or "ninja bomb," the R9X is elegant in its simplicity: rather than packing an explosive payload, the kinetic warhead contains a halo of blades that deploy moments before impact and effectively eviscerate a target without the potential civilian casualties that accompany a large explosion.

Although the R9X, developed in a collaboration between the Defense Department and Central Intelligence Agency, is technically a secret, the distinctive effects of the munition have become increasingly recognizable since the U.S. government reportedly started deploying it downrange against targets in Syria and Yemen in 2017.

Indeed, the impact patterns on al-Urduni and al-Sanaani's vehicle appear to match those on the car of Ahmad Hasan Abu Khayr al-Masri, the al-Qaida second-in-command who, according to the Wall Street Journal, the CIA allegedly targeted and killed with an R9X in Syria's Idlib province in February 2017.

The same pattern also appears on the vehicle of Abu Ahmed al-Jaziri, a foreign fighter for al-Qaida offshoot Hayat Tahrir al-Sham who was killed in a drone strike in December 2019.

The use of the R9X hasn't been restricted to Syria and Yemen: According to The War Zone, photos from the aftermath of a January 2019 airstrike against a suspected Taliban commander in Afghanistan's Kunduz province suggest that the unusual missile was used to neutralize that target.

It's unclear how many R9X missiles the Pentagon has in its arsenal: the Army and Air Force's fiscal year 2021 budget requests for missile procurement make no mention of this specific Hellfire variant, although the Air Force's budget request does note that multiple variants "may be procured based upon operational requirements for various warheads and the enhanced weapon engagement zone."

With that in mind, this most recent apparent deployment of the R9X against a suspected terrorist downrange suggests that the Pentagon is increasingly embracing the Hellfire variant as a low-collateral precision strike weapon -- and, as a result, the military's flying switchblade is becoming more of a necessity on the battlefield rather than just a mere oddity.

The Defense Department did not immediately respond to request for comment.

https://www.military.com/daily-news...d-death-of-two-al-qaida-commanders-syria.html


 
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This is a fantastic concept, real ingenuity. Creates no collateral damage and leaves everyone on ground zero completely perplexed about what just hit. And strikes more fear into the enemy.
 
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A drone strike that killed two senior commanders of an al-Qaida-linked terror group in northwestern Syria likely employed a unique variant of the beloved Hellfire missile, according to video from the scene of the strike.

Two leaders of the al-Qaida offshoot Horas al-Din, Jordanian citizen Qassam al-Urduni and Yemeni citizen Bilal al-Sanaani, were reportedly killed when a drone strike believed to have been carried out by the U.S.-led coalition nailed their vehicle on Sunday, the Associated Press reports.

Video posted to Twitter on Sunday purportedly shows the aftermath of the strike -- but instead of a fiery wreck, al-Urduni and al-Sanaani's vehicle appears relatively intact, the roof and windshield impacted from above and one side shredded:

The absence of an explosion and the pattern of damage to the roof and sides of the vehicle suggest that the drone didn't employ a conventional precision-guided munition but the R9X variant of the AGM-114 Hellfire missile, a non-explosive weapon that can best be described as a 100-pound flying switchblade or an anvil covered in swords.

First publicized by the Wall Street Journal in 2019 and colloquially known as the "flying Ginsu" or "ninja bomb," the R9X is elegant in its simplicity: rather than packing an explosive payload, the kinetic warhead contains a halo of blades that deploy moments before impact and effectively eviscerate a target without the potential civilian casualties that accompany a large explosion.

Although the R9X, developed in a collaboration between the Defense Department and Central Intelligence Agency, is technically a secret, the distinctive effects of the munition have become increasingly recognizable since the U.S. government reportedly started deploying it downrange against targets in Syria and Yemen in 2017.

Indeed, the impact patterns on al-Urduni and al-Sanaani's vehicle appear to match those on the car of Ahmad Hasan Abu Khayr al-Masri, the al-Qaida second-in-command who, according to the Wall Street Journal, the CIA allegedly targeted and killed with an R9X in Syria's Idlib province in February 2017.

The same pattern also appears on the vehicle of Abu Ahmed al-Jaziri, a foreign fighter for al-Qaida offshoot Hayat Tahrir al-Sham who was killed in a drone strike in December 2019.

The use of the R9X hasn't been restricted to Syria and Yemen: According to The War Zone, photos from the aftermath of a January 2019 airstrike against a suspected Taliban commander in Afghanistan's Kunduz province suggest that the unusual missile was used to neutralize that target.

It's unclear how many R9X missiles the Pentagon has in its arsenal: the Army and Air Force's fiscal year 2021 budget requests for missile procurement make no mention of this specific Hellfire variant, although the Air Force's budget request does note that multiple variants "may be procured based upon operational requirements for various warheads and the enhanced weapon engagement zone."

With that in mind, this most recent apparent deployment of the R9X against a suspected terrorist downrange suggests that the Pentagon is increasingly embracing the Hellfire variant as a low-collateral precision strike weapon -- and, as a result, the military's flying switchblade is becoming more of a necessity on the battlefield rather than just a mere oddity.

The Defense Department did not immediately respond to request for comment.

https://www.military.com/daily-news...d-death-of-two-al-qaida-commanders-syria.html


Wasnt the Iranian General taken out by a similar missile?
 
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I think the real strength of this weapon is its accuracy, It will kill the person just by its kinetic energy. Blades are to make sure that it cut throw any obstacle in front of the target like some door or window or car roof as in case of the pictures in the original tweet.

These Kinds of fancy weapons look and sound cool but only feasible when the USA has complete air dominance so they can locate and hit the intended person freely.
 
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Will it not then disclose all classified info of that projectile, since it falls and kills instead of traditional explosion?
 
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Will it not then disclose all classified info of that projectile, since it falls and kills instead of traditional explosion?
Doubt its that classified. Blades are deployed and slices people in the car like swords swinging down.
 
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