Military

US Air Force awards Lockheed Martin $1 billion hypersonic missile contract

US Air Force awards Lockheed Martin $1 billion hypersonic missile contract
The X-51 hypersonic test vehicle
The X-51 hypersonic test vehicle
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The X-51 hypersonic test vehicle
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The X-51 hypersonic test vehicle

It appears that the US Air Force is taking recent reports of Russian and Chinese hypersonic weapon systems seriously, as it's upped its game by awarding Lockheed Martin a contract worth up to US$928 million to develop a conventional strike weapon capable of flying over five times the speed of sound. The company's Lockheed Martin Space division in Huntsville, Alabama will carry out the indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract on the air-launched stand-off missile.

Hypersonic weapons have long been considered a potentially revolutionary weapon that permanently alter the battlefield of the future. By flying at speeds of over Mach 5 (3,836 mph, 6,175 km/h), missiles or ballistic projectiles would not only be far harder to engage and destroy with defences designed to combat incoming supersonic weapons, but their extremely high inertia would make these missiles extremely destructive even if they carried no warheads.

Russia and China have already claimed to have not only created, but even deployed hypersonics, though the credibility of this remains an open question. Nevertheless, the US Air Force seems to be taking the threat of a new Sputnik Moment to heart with the new contract that tasks Lockheed with the design, development, engineering, systems integration, test, logistics planning, and aircraft integration support of an American hypersonic stand-off missile beginning in the 2018 fiscal year.

"This effort is one of two hypersonic weapon prototyping efforts being pursued by the Air Force to accelerate hypersonics research and development," says Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek in a statement. "The Air Force is using prototyping to explore the art-of-the-possible and to advance these technologies to a capability as quickly as possible."

Source: US Air Force

2 comments
2 comments
EZ
You forgetting about the cost "overruns."
Munter
This is hilarious. Mach 5 is far too slow for emerging doctrine. And 1 billion is a joke.
Lockheed has scope creep options. You can bet they buying Congress to make sure new allocations happen. Patriots! Your military complex needs you!
Dumb as a box of hammers.