by Senior Airman Charles V. Rivezzo
7th Bomb Wing Public Affairs
7/15/2013 - DYESS AIR FORCE BASE, Texas -- The
337th Test and Evaluation Squadron successfully completed their first
captive carry test of a Long Range Anti-Ship Missile on-board a B-1
Bomber June 17, marking a significant step forward toward the B-1's role
in the maritime environment.
Designed and developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
and the Office of Naval Research, the LRASM is based off the Joint Air
to Surface Standoff Missile Extended Range and was constructed as part
of an effort to overcome challenges faced by current anti-ship missiles
penetrating sophisticated enemy air defense systems.
"This is a big stepping stone toward fielding an anti-surface warfare
cruise missile," said Maj. Shane Garner, 337th TES. "However, at the end
of this program, this particular missile is not going to be a fielded
weapon; it's what we call a technology demonstrator. The point of this
program isn't to field a missile, but to demonstrate the new
technologies they want to put into an anti-surface warfare JASSM
variant."
Because the LRASM leverages the state-of-the-art JASSM-ER airframe, it
proved to be a seamless transition for the B-1 in terms of
compatibility, significantly reducing the time and costs associated with
traditional weapons testing.
"When the B-1 looks at this missile it just reads it as a JASSM-ER,"
said Capt. Alicia Datzman, 337th TES. "In turn, DARPA was able to
exploit that capability and simply add on the new technology to expedite
the cost. Currently, JASSM officials are doing everything they can to
take this missile's technology and move it into a program that would
eventually become operational."
However, while the LRASM does utilize the airframe of the JASSM-ER, it
incorporates additional sensors and systems to achieve a stealthy and
survivable subsonic cruise missile as well as a weapon data link and an
enhanced digital anti-jam GPS to detect and destroy specific targets
within a group of ships.
"One of the biggest improvements of this weapon is its ability to
receive target or coordinate updates in-flight," Garner said. "Unlike
the JASSMs 'fire and forget' mentality, this new technology gives you
the chance to 'fire and change your mind.' Because of the standoff
feature these weapons possess, they tend to be in-flight for some time.
For us to be able to change its coordinates on the fly provides us with a
large range of flexibility."
The overarching concept behind the B-1's rise in the maritime
environment can be attributed to the Department of Defense's much
discussed Air-Sea Battle concept, in which long range bombers serve as a
key tenet.
ASB is designed to guide the four branches of the armed forces as they
work together to maintain a continued U.S. advantage against the global
proliferation of advanced military technologies and anti-access/area
denial capabilities.
Furthermore, should the LRASM technology be fielded into a variant of
the JASSM-ER, the B-1 presents itself as a premier platform to carry the
weapon, as it is currently capable of carrying 24 of the long range
missiles, tops across all Air Force platforms.
The 337th TES is scheduled to complete its first live-fire test of the missile in the coming months.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
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