Posted on 02/22/2007 8:59:32 PM PST by Arjun
RAMRAAMski, via India?
Pakistan's recent November 2006 purchase of 500 AIM-120C AMRAAM missiles is creating counterpressure on the subcontinent, and reportedly has India looking for 120km BVRAAMs (Beyond Visual Range Air-Air Missiles). Missiles with this notional head-on range would far outstrip the 60km of the AIM-120C, and even the 60-90km (36-54 miles) reported for the Russian AA-12/R-77 'AMRAAMski' that India already deploys. Indeed, this figure would be closer to the ramjet-powered Meteor under development via MBDA.
"There are moves also to start indigenous development of such long-range missiles by DRDO with possible foreign collaboration," a DRDO source reportedly said.
Indian defense procurement is full of announcements and 'confirmed' purchases that end up wildly late, or lose in limbo; but the effect on the global defense market could be very significant if India remains serious about this effort....
India has specified no foreign partners at this stage. Nor has it specified a development platform. Unless they wish to develop a missile from scratch, however, the global market gives them only 4 realistic options:
Meteor BVRAAM The Meteor from MBDA et. al. has the required performance built in, as it was designed specifically to help aircraft defeat opponents with R-77 or AMRAAM level missiles. It is currently in the late developmental/ testing stage. The problem is that it would require considerable time and effort to integrate it with every single one of India's fighter aircraft. The only possible exceptions would be if India chose the Eurofighter Typhoon, JAS-39 Gripen, or Rafale in its current MRCA medium fighter competition, in which case it would have one compatible aircraft. Even this is currently considered to be unlikely.
RAFAEL's Derby 4 is already headed for Indian service via the SPYDER air defense system, the Derby 4 is already in service on India's Sea Harriers, and the Python 4 missile on which the Derby is based is reportedly in service with other IAF aircraft. Israeli avionics and DASH targeting helmets in a number of India's planes may make Derby integration easier for India, and a ramjet "Derby 5" with more than 50km range might be very attractive to the Israelis; they would finally be able to give it a niche of its own beyond the AIM-120 AMRAAM, and might also be interested in the large export potential.
India also has a strong defense relationship with Israel. As such, a deal would depend on 3 factors: integration obstacles, how much the Israelis were prepared to commit in time and resources, and confidence in a lack of interference from the USA via technical export pretexts.
F/A-18F & AMRAAM
Raytheon's AMRAAM is catching up the the AA-12's presently reported range via the new AIM-120D, which is said to have a range in the 75-90km band plus better seeker and ECCM capabilities - but that would not be enough. In addition for the need to develop a ramjet version, AMRAAM suffers from many of the same disadvantages as the Meteor because it would also require integration on many existing IAF platforms. Israeli and Western avionics in some of India's modernized fighters may help here, or they may not - if not, integration with Russian aircraft would be a major stumbling block.
Choosing the F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet or F-16 E/F Block 70 for the MRCA competition would remove part of the integration burden, and the USA might be interested in picking up a large R&D share for the missile given the potential threat represented by the alternative... on which more below.
Last, we come to the The AA-12/R-77, which already is deployed on India's SU-30MKIs and even the MiG-21 BiS aircraft that caused US aircraft so much trouble at COPE India 2004 & 2005. Reports of a longer-range, ramjet-powered R-77M that might satisfy India's range requirements have persisted for years, but they remain sketchy and the missiles do not appear to have been fielded... yet.
The R-77 would also be compatible with the MiG-29Ks being purchased for use from its aircraft carrier, and with the MiG-29OVT/MiG-35 if it wins some or all of the orders under the MRCA competition. This makes it a very logical base from which to develop a longer-range BVRAAM for India. When one considers Russia's past R-77M ramjet efforts, the successful recent collaboration between India and Russia to produce the PJ-10 BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, and the recent extension of the technical defense collaboration framework between India and Russia, the Russians would appear to have a very strong position if India is serious.
The bottom line? A partnership with India could well put the R-77M 'RAMRAAMski' over the top into finished development and active military service... and into the global export market.
This would leave all of the countries who have depended on America's AMRAAM badly outranged by any opponent who could couple the new 'RAMRAAMski' with an aircraft like the widely-exported SU-27/30 family, whose radars are powerful enough to operate effectively at long range.
If so, AMRAAM customers would quickly find the air-air balance tilting against them - absent either a strong stealth advantage, supersonic cruise speeds to extend missile range, and/or longer-range missiles to replace their AMRAAMs. It would also add a new dimension to the threats faced by critical tanker and AWACS aircraft, who depend on distance to give friendly aircraft a chance to intercept whatever may threaten them.
Until compatible counters could me made available, the damage would extend beyond American aircraft and missile sales, and into the realm of American influence.
India may or may not be serious enough to push a 120 km BVRAAM missile through to successful project completion. If they are, however, it could be a game-changing move.
Guess we need to dust off Phoenix, modernize it, and start making it again.
The Navy was doing work on a ramjet powered replacement for the Phoenix that was smaller/lighter etc.
Apparently the program was dropped. I hope that meant it went black.
Ditto... hopefully DARPA has something up its sleeve as well.. The Phoenix was the best stand off weapon in the world, and our military has relied on the 30 yr-old AMRAAM design for far too long.
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