Military

Army fires third next-gen strike missile test

May 6, 2020Katie McCarthy
A precision strike missile is fired on April 30, 2020, at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, and hit a target 85 kilometers away. (Lockheed Martin) Coffee or Die

A precision strike missile is fired on April 30, 2020, at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, and hit a target 85 kilometers away. (Lockheed Martin)

WASHINGTON — The Army successfully held its third precision strike missile test Thursday morning, hitting its close-range target of 85 kilometers, enabling the Army to keep its 2023 fielding deadline on track.


The latest test, at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, was “the shortest and most challenging yet,” said Brig. Gen. John Rafferty, director of the Army’s Long Range Precision Fires Cross-Functional Team.


The challenge with shorter distances is energy, Rafferty explained. Once the missile is launched, “it has to start tipping as soon as it comes out of the launcher. We started off with 240 kilometers, went to 180, and now we’re at 85.”


Previous PrSM test-fires were conducted in December and March.


Gen. John M. Murray, commanding general of Army Futures Command, talks with journalists during a media round table, April 30, 2020, following a successful test-fire of the Army's precision strike missile. Courtesy photo. Coffee or Die.
Gen. John M. Murray, commanding general of Army Futures Command, talks with journalists during a media round table, April 30, 2020, following a successful test-fire of the Army’s precision strike missile. Courtesy photo.

“It was a pretty exciting 91 seconds or so,” Rafferty said about the direct hit from more than 50 miles away – a relatively close range for a missile designed to soar more than 300 miles for a strike.


The latest success leaves the Army “three for three” on PrSM test fires, said Gen. John M. Murray, commander of the Army Futures Command, adding the latest test “performed perfectly” and at “a very nominal flight trajectory.”


The new missile is set to replace the MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile System, or ATACMS, a surface-to-surface missile that has been on the job for nearly four decades.


The PrSM is half the size and will outrange its predecessor. The ATACMS has a maximum firing range of only 300 km – nearly half the range of the PrSM’s 500 km. Both missiles pack the same explosive punch.


Like the ATACMS, the PrSM is designed to fit into the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System and M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System launchers.


Next year, three additional long-range tests are set to push the PrSM even further. In all, the Army will fire four PrSM missiles in 2021, with one test firing two missiles in sequence. Right now, only Lockheed Martin is vying for a contract.



The Army test fires a Patriot missile in a recent test. The Patriot missile system is a ground-based, mobile missile defense interceptor deployed by the United States to detect, track and engage unmanned aerial vehicles, cruise missiles, and short-range and tactical ballistic missiles. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Army.
The Army test fires a Patriot missile in a recent test. The Patriot missile system is a ground-based, mobile missile defense interceptor deployed by the United States to detect, track and engage unmanned aerial vehicles, cruise missiles, and short-range and tactical ballistic missiles. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Army.



By 2023, the Army plans to field the PrSM. However, the initial supply is designed to hit stationary targets, like airfields, Murray said. By 2025, the Army plans to field an upgrade capable of destroying moving targets.


Looking even further ahead, a “600 to 700 km [missile] is entirely possible,” Rafferty said, “but we’ve got a long way to go with rocket technology in this form factor” as officials plan to stay with the current launchers in the HIMARS and MLRS fleets.


“We’re not investing in a new fleeting of launchers,” Murray said. “We’re getting two missiles in the same pod that our current missile go into, so we’re actually doubling the load-out of our current fleet with this missile technology.”


Because of this, not only will it save money, but Soldiers shifting from the ATACMS system will transition smoothly, Murray said, since much of the same software, computers, and platforms will be used.


From “the outside looking in,” Murray added. “It’s exactly the same.”



This article was originally published on May 1, 2020, by the U.S. Army.



Katie McCarthy
Katie McCarthy

Katie McCarthy is the managing editor for Coffee or Die Magazine. Her career in journalism began at the Columbus (Georgia) Ledger-Enquirer in 2008, where she learned to navigate the newsroom as a features reporter, copy editor, page designer, and online producer; prior to joining Coffee or Die, she worked for Outdoor Sportsman Group as an editor for Guns & Ammo magazine and their Special Interest Publications division. Katie currently lives in Indiana with her husband and two daughters.

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