Air Force clears milestone hurdle with 1st
live-fire test of hypersonic missile
By
DOUG G. WARE
STARS AND STRIPES • December
12, 2022
Air Force Master Sgt. Marcella
Philips, 2nd Maintenance Group weapons standardization loading standardization
crew chief, and Tech Sgt. Darrell Stewart, 307th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron
loading standardization crew member, secure the Air-Launched Rapid Response
Weapon to the B-52H Stratofortress ejector rack at Barksdale Air Force Base,
La., on Nov. 2, 2022. The ARRW is the first Air Force hypersonic weapon and is
scheduled to be operational in the fall of 2023. (Nicole Ledbetter/U.S. Air
Force)
WASHINGTON — The
Air Force on Monday carried out the first live-fire test of its first
hypersonic weapon, which can travel at least five times the speed of sound,
according to service officials.
The Air Force and
contractor Lockheed Martin have been developing the AGM-183A air-to-ground
missile system — better known as the ARRW — since 2018.
“The ARRW team
successfully designed and tested an air-launched hypersonic missile in five
years,” said Brig. Gen. Jason Bartolomei, the program executive officer for
weapons and director of the Armament Directorate.
The “all-up-round”
test was done off the coast of Southern California, and it appears “all
objectives were met,” the Air Force said. An all-up-round test is one that
evaluates the weapon in its fully assembled condition. The end-to-end test
succeeded when the live warhead struck and detonated in a previously designated
area in the Pacific.
Last week, the Air Force cleared the initial
hurdle in this late-stage testing process — loading the system
onto a B-52 bomber and taking it back off. Making that step allowed the Air
Force to move on to live-fire testing. Lockheed has said the ARRW should become
operational within a year.
The live-fire test
marked the first launch of a full prototype operational ARRW missile, Air Force
officials said. Tests earlier this year focused on evaluating the booster — a
rocket-powered vehicle that carries the warhead to hypersonic speeds before
releasing it to strike a target.
“With this test,
we are on the cusp of an operational capability that can be deployed to the men
and women in uniform,” Lockheed Vice President of Air Dominance and Strike
Weapons Jay Pitman said in a statement.
The Pentagon has
been focused on adding modern hypersonic components for years, particularly
when it became known that military competitors such as Russia and China were
also racing toward the technology. Claims by Moscow that Russian forces have
already used a hypersonic missile in Ukraine this year have not been confirmed
by U.S. defense or intelligence officials.
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