Watch
this US Air Force cargo plane launch a cruise missile in Norway
Nov 10, 05:22 PM
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A U.S. Air Force MC-130J Commando II
executes the first-ever European-theater live-fire demonstration of a Joint
Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile during exercise Atreus in Norway on Nov. 9,
2022. (Staff Sgt. Izabella Workman/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON
— The U.S. Air Force has for the first time in an overseas test used its Rapid Dragon system, in which cruise
missiles on pallets are launched from the back of a mobility aircraft.
An
MC-130J Commando II from the 352nd Special Operations Wing launched a Joint
Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile-Extended Range cruise missile using the system
nicknamed “bomb bay in a box” in a range over
the Norwegian Sea on Wednesday, the Air Force Research Laboratory said.
Dean
Evans, the program manager for Rapid Dragon, said the successful test
shows how quickly the program is progressing, noting that it moved from a
concept on paper to a live-fire test in two years.
“Now,
less than three years from the program’s inception, Rapid Dragon is being used
by [U.S. Special Operations Command Europe] in the Arctic Circle,” Evans said
in a release. “This is a testament to the team’s focus on rapid fielding to
meet warfighter needs.”
The
command posted a video online Wednesday that shows the test process at Norway’s
Andøya Space Defense Range from multiple perspectives. A parachute attached to
the Rapid Dragon deployment box is tossed from the open cargo bay of the
MC-130, which then unfurls and swiftly pulls the pallet out of the aircraft.
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