USAF hits maritime target with cruise missile
launched from C-130
By Garrett Reim17
December 2021
The US Air Force
(USAF) has hit a target with a cruise missile launched from the ramp of a cargo
aircraft for the first time as part of its Rapid Dragon programme.
The service
deployed a cruise missile with a live warhead from the back of an MC-130J
Commando II special operations transport using its Rapid Dragon Palletized
Weapon System on 16 December. The test took place at the Eglin AFB Overwater
Test Range above the Gulf of Mexico, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)
says.
After the Rapid
Dragon system, which contains cells for holding multiple cruise missiles, was
dropped off the ramp of the MC-130J cargo aircraft it deployed a parachute to
slow its descent and then a cruise missile was released from its bottom side.
“Immediately after
the vertical release, the [cruise missile] deployed its wings and tail,
achieved aerodynamic control, ignited its engine, performed a powered pull-up
manoeuvre, and proceeded toward its newly assigned target,” says the AFRL. “The
cruise missile successfully destroyed its target upon impact.”
The type of
maritime target and the type of cruise missile used in the experiment were not
disclosed. Previous Rapid Dragon demonstrations have used the Lockheed AGM-158
Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile-Extended Range (JASSM-ER). Given the
maritime target, it is likely that the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile – based on
the JASSM-ER – was used.
“The [Rapid
Dragon] programme name is derived from a thousand-year-old Chinese
military-designed crossbow catapult that launched multiple crossbow bolts with
the pull of a single trigger, raining destruction down on armies from
tremendous ranges,” says the AFRL. “These lethal devices were called Ji Long
Che – Rapid Dragon Carts.”
Constrained by a
limited number of bombers, the USAF is looking for new ways to launch its
arsenal of cruise missiles – particularly for potential conflicts with
China.
That the USAF
chose to hit a maritime target as part of its first live-fire test of Rapid
Dragon may indicate the service’s interest in using the technology for
anti-ship missions. If the USAF were to repel an attempted amphibious invasion
of Taiwan by Chinese forces it would need to sink a large number of ships.
The service says
the next step for the Rapid Dragon programme will be a live-fire test with a
cruise missile from a Boeing C-17 Globemaster III strategic airlifter in the
spring of 2022. The USAF also wants to try launching additional weapons and
unmanned air vehicles in future tests.
Ultimately, the service says it
plans to move Rapid Dragon from a developmental prototype to an operational
prototype over the next two years.
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