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by Ed Adamczyk Washington DC (UPI) Apr 12, 2021
The U.S. Navy announced a successful live-fire exercise of its Rolling Airframe Missile from the littoral combat ship USS Charleston on Monday. The launching of the SeaRAM missiles from the San Diego-based vessel was a part of exercises involving all of the ship's weaponry, and occurred on Thursday, the Navy said in a statement. SeaRAM missiles, also known as RIM-116 RAM missiles, are lightweight, quick-reaction missiles designed to defeat cruise missiles and asymmetric air and surface threats. Equipped with Phalanx search-and-track radar and Electro Optic sensor, 11-missile pods are carried within launchers aboard the ship. The missiles were originally based on the design of Sidewinder missiles, and have been through three iterations, with the Block 2 configuration currently in full-rate production. The Navy calls the SeaRam system "a complete combat weapon system that automatically detects, evaluates, tracks, engages, and performs kill assessment against ASM [anti-ship missiles] and highspeed aircraft threats." The navies of 11 countries use variants of the system, and the U.S. Navy plans the purchase of about 1,600 Raytheon-made missiles and115 launchers, to equip 74 ships. "I am incredibly proud of the Charleston Gold crew and the efforts that have led to this successful SeaRAM launch," said Cmdr. Joseph Burgon, commanding officer of the USS Charleston's Gold Crew.
US Air Force Likely About to Test-Fire ARRW Hypersonic Missile for First Time - Report Moscow (Sputnik) Mar 30, 2021 Zipping along at more than Mach 5, hypersonic weapons threaten to make most missile defense systems useless. However, only two nations have mastered the technology so far - Russia and China - leaving powers like the US vulnerable. A first-ever flight test of the US Air Force's AGM-183 Air-launched Rapid Response Air Weapon (ARRW) hypersonic missile could come before the end of the week, according to an analysis of reports by The Drive's The War Zone. According to the outlet, a series of sign ... read more
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