Posted on 03/26/2017 7:02:50 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
The Philippine Navy (PN)s first two anti-submarine warfare (ASW) helicopters will be armed with Spike NLOS missiles giving it a capability to engage hostile vessels beyond visual range.
The said weapon manufactured by Israels Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd. NLOS is short for non-line of sight. It was originally designed to destroy tanks.
PN spokesperson Capt. Lincuna said these helicopters are the AgustaWestland AW-159 Wildcats which are scheduled to be delivered by 2018.
The Department of National Defense signed a contract with AugustaWestland, now Leonardo, to buy two AW-159 ASW helicopters for PHP5.362 billion, March 2016.
It will be deployed aboard the two frigates the Philippines has ordered from South Korea worth PHP16 billion.
Lincuna said the PN will be using Spike NLOS as an anti-ship weapon due to its claimed range of 25 kilometers.
The missile has a built-in camera that allows it to be operated day or night, the PN spokesperson.
The Spike NLOS weapon system can be operated in either direct attack or mid-course navigation based on target coordinates only. These modes enable defeat of long-range hidden targets, with pinpoint precision, damage assessment and the obtaining of real-time intelligence, weapon manufacturer Rafael said in its website.
Lincuna said the missiles will complement the AW-159s detection and tracking equipment.
The helicopters will be a full package, from detection, tracking, up to prosecution, he said
Ping
Philippine Navy? I know the Philippine Air force has such old aircraft the pilots use the old bras of Imelda Marcos for skycaps.
The best ships in the Phillipines are sitting on the bottom of Leyte Gulf.
Every anti-ship/sub and aircraft missile that the Philippines armed forces get, is one more possible retardant against Red Chinese naval aggression in the South China seas and related bodies of water.
Hell, I wish they had 50 armed helicopters and 50 ships. That would put a real hurt on Peking’s plans.
I think most of the ships at the bottom of Leyte Gulf, are American and Japanese.
What’s up with that wacky exhaust port? Straight up in to the rotors ?!?!
The reported costs don’t make sense. Two helicopters are 1/3 the cost of two frigates?
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