Posted : January 2014
Author : the admin
The new weapon delivery system is reportedly designed to be
launched as the final stage of China’s
intercontinental ballistic missile, which would approach its target at a
velocity of up to 10 times the speed of sound. Hypersonic speed range lies between Mach 5 and Mach 10, or
3,840 to 7,680 miles per hour. A Pentagon spokesman confirmed the Chinese test launch but
declined to provide details. “We routinely monitor foreign defense activities and we are
aware of this test,” Lt. Col. Jeffrey Pool, a Marine Corps spokesman, told
the Washington Free Beacon. “However, we don’t comment on our intelligence or
assessments of foreign weapon systems,” Pool said in a statement. “We encourage greater transparency regarding their defense
investments and objectives to avoid miscalculation,” he added.
Hypersonic vehicles, which are also being designed by the US, India
and Russia,
are developed for precise targeting, rapid delivery of weapons, and are being
tested to outmaneuver hostile missiles and space defenses. “A boost glide missile theoretically would be intended to
counter existing mid-course missile defenses,” Mark Stokes, a former US Air
Force officer told the Washington Free Beacon. Strokes explained that China is developing two hypersonic
flight vehicle programs – one believed to be of a post-boost vehicle designed
to be deployed from a missile that pursues its target from near space, or some
62 miles from earth.
Basing his hypothesis on emerging reports from China, Stokes believes that hypersonic glide vehicles could reach Mach 12 speeds of up to 9,127 miles per hour, potentially compromising a US missile defense. “The beauty of the HGV is that it can perform hypersonic precision strikes while maintaining a relatively low altitude and flat trajectory, making it far less vulnerable to missile defenses,” Rick Fisher, an analyst at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, told the Washington Free Beacon. “With the integration of strategic analysis and planning into technical research, China’s pursuit of hypersonic and high-precision weaponry promises to be faster and more focused than that associated with its previous [anti-satellite] and [ballistic missile defense] related research and programs,” Lora Saalman, a specialist on Chinese strategic systems with the Carnegie Endowment Saalman said in an email to the publication. “This recent test is a manifestation of this trend.”
The Chinese are “actively seeking global military power to challenge the United States, and it is not yet in any mood to talk, or engage in arms control, about it,” Fisher said. In May, the Pentagon’s assessment of Chinese capabilities suggested that China built the world’s largest shockwave hypersonic wind tunnel capable of generating test flying conditions of up to Mach 9 speeds. Two Chinese technical papers from December 2012 and April 2013 revealed that the country is developing precision guidance systems designed to be directed via satellite. The second Chinese paper concluded that hypersonic weapons pose “a new aerospace threat.”
Current American hypersonic research is being conducted
through the FALCON program in association with the Pentagon and Air Force. The US is in the
process of perfecting Lockheed HTV-2, an unmanned, missile-launched aircraft
capable of gaining speeds of up to Mach 20, or 13,000 miles per hour. The US
Air Force is also testing the X-37B Space Plane, which has been orbiting earth
since December 2012. At the same time Boeing is working on the X-51 WaveRider, a
jet-fueled, air-breathing hypersonic rocket developed for the Air Force to be
used for hypersonic attack and reconnaissance missions. Russia
too has confirmed the development of similar ultrasonic technology. The Air Force National Air and Space
Intelligence Center
said in its annual report that Russia
is building “a new class of hypersonic vehicle” that would “allow
Russian strategic missiles to penetrate missile defense systems.”
“We are experiencing a revolution in military science,” Russian deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin said last June, after the 4th test of an advanced road-mobile ICBM, a “missile defense killer” called the RS-26 Rubezh (‘frontier’). “Neither current nor future American missile defense systems will be able to prevent that missile from hitting a target dead on.” Moscow is also developing the S-500 air and space defense system, with interceptors capable of shooting down hypersonic missiles.
“We are experiencing a revolution in military science,” Russian deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin said last June, after the 4th test of an advanced road-mobile ICBM, a “missile defense killer” called the RS-26 Rubezh (‘frontier’). “Neither current nor future American missile defense systems will be able to prevent that missile from hitting a target dead on.” Moscow is also developing the S-500 air and space defense system, with interceptors capable of shooting down hypersonic missiles.
~Blog Admin~
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