New in 2022: These cannon-cockers are testing the
Corps’ new ship-sinking missile
By Todd South
Jan 3, 08:28 AM
A Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System launcher deploys into position aboard Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands, Hawaii, Aug. 16, 2021. (Maj. Nick Mannweiler/Marine Corps)
Canon-cocking artillery Marines in California will
kick off the first of two years of experimentation with
the Corps’ ship-sinking missile in 2022.
The Marines of 11th Marine Regiment at Camp Pendleton received
the Navy-Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System, or NMESIS in late 2021.
That delivery followed a successful movement fire
and return of the NSM by brothers-in-arms Marines of 1st Battalion, 12th Marine
Regiment, in Hawaii in August.
Marines
strap missile to truck and strike target at sea
The
combination could help the Marines' ship-sinking problem.
By Todd South
That fire saw Marines conduct the first-ever
load/offload of the system onto a Marine-flown C-130 out of VMGR-352 and
landing craft air cushion, or LCAC and target data transfers to complete the
strike.
Two NSMs were fired, traveling more than 100
nautical miles to hit a decommissioned Navy ship off the Hawaiian coast,
officials told Marine Corps Times.
And the route there followed an evasive route,
basically not a straight line. That’s how these weapons must fly to make it to
their target.
The 11th Regiment “Cannon Cockers” will help
develop the tactics, techniques and procedures that future Marine artillery
units will employ with the NSM, officials said.
Each component of the system is already in use,
it’s the combination of various pieces that’s being worked out in testing and
experimentation.
The NMESIS is a includes the Naval strike missile,
a remotely operated ground unit for expeditionary vehicle, or ROGUE, which is a
remote-control joint light tactical vehicle. The program commenced in late 2019
following Marine Corps Commandant Gen. David Berger’s push to get Marines into
the ship-killing business to better enable the Navy to fight in contested areas
of the Pacific and elsewhere.
This is an excerpt from
“19 Things Marines Need To Know For 2022,” in the January print edition of
Marine Corps Times.
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