The first Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS) launcher on a German truck has arrived in the United States, ready for integration into a future test scenario, executives said.
MEADS is in the process of concluding the design and development phase of the U.S., German and Italian program.
Based on the success of the intercept test last November at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., MEADS authorities are planning to use two launchers in the two-target flight test scheduled for later this year (Defense Daily, Nov. 30).
The original launcher is in the Italian configuration and has been used in previous tests, and originally, only the Italian-configured launcher was planned for use in this year’s flight test.
In addition to the Italian and German configuration launchers, there is also a U.S. design that is easily transportable and tactically mobile. Should there be a follow-up phase and subsequent tests, this U.S. launcher could be used, Marty Coyne, Air and missile defense business development director for Lockheed Martin [LMT] , told Defense Daily. The launcher is identical for all three nations, he added.
Each MEADS launcher can carry up to eight PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) Missiles and achieve launch readiness in just minutes.
The MEADS launchers have two main features that stand out from the air and missile defense (AMD) launchers currently fielded.
MEADS Launcher on German Truck Photo: MEADS International |
The first is the ability of the MEADS launchers to self-load. An integrated crane arm can pick up and release expended missile packs, then grab and position a full eight-missile reload within minutes. The second is the ability to launch the PAC-3 MSE in a near-vertical position to defend assets in all 360 degrees of possible attack space.
In two previous tests at White Sands Missile Range, the MEADS launchers have demonstrated unprecedented over-the-shoulder launches of a PAC-3 MSE against targets attacking from behind.
“360-degree coverage has become increasingly important as our nations deal with evolving threats from highly maneuverable cruise missiles to easily re-locatable short- and medium-range tactical ballistic missiles,” said NATO MEADS Management Agency (NAMEADSMA) General Manager Gregory Kee. “As our forces enter future conflicts, the threat will no longer stay in front of them–that’s why the investment in MEADS 360-degree technology is so important.”
Using its 360-degree defensive capability and advanced radars, MEADS can defend up to eight times the coverage area of other systems while deploying far fewer system assets, the company said. MEADS needs fewer deployed personnel and less equipment to get to the fight sooner.
“MEADS can see and intercept 21st century threats from farther away without blind spots,” said MEADS International President Dave Berganini. “The networked, plug-and-fight MEADS system elements continue to demonstrate capabilities of an AMD force of the future that also dramatically reduces operational and support costs.”
MEADS International, a multinational joint venture headquartered in Orlando, Fla., is the prime contractor for the MEADS system. Major subcontractors and joint venture partners are MBDA in Germany and Italy, and Lockheed Martin in the United States. MBDA Germany is the Design Authority for the MEADS launcher.
The MEADS program management agency NAMEADSMA is located in Huntsville, Ala.