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Lockheed tapped by Navy for rapid missile technology development by Ed Adamczyk Washington (UPI) Mar 13, 2019 Lockheed Martin Corp. was awarded an $84.1 million contract by the U.S. Navy for design and engineering services on four existing missile systems, the Defense Department announced. The contract, awarded to the company's Missile and Fire Control division in Orlando, Fla., was announced on Tuesday. It calls for design and development studies, technology demonstrations and engineering services for rapid technology development of the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile, the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile, the Joint Air-to-Ground Missile and the Hellfire baseline weapon systems. Lockheed Martin has previously been awarded contracts to develop all four missile systems.. Last month the company was awarded a $33.4 million contract as part of a cost reduction initiative in support of the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile for the U.S. Navy. The contract includes the redesign, integration and test of radio frequency sensors. The LRASM is a long-range precision guided missile designed to autonomously detect and engage enemy warships based on their image recognition, infrared, radar and other sensor profiles. In September 2018, Lockheed received a $51 million contract for development of the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile, which included all-up round level systems, engineering, testing and integration services of the JASSM-XR hardware and associated firmware, including a new missile control unit and necessary hardware and infrastructure to support production. In the same month it received a $49.6 million modification to an existing contract for the purchase of Joint Air-to-Ground Missiles, a precision air-to-surface standoff strike missile designed for use by drones, helicopters and similar aircraft. The JAGM system can operate in bad weather and attack fixed and moving targets and is designed to be resistant to jamming and other countermeasures. The system has a terminal guidance system that provides a "fire-and-forget" ability, allowing the launching platform to fire and immediately evade any enemy fire. It uses laser and millimeter wave radar guidance, with a range of up to five miles. Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control also received a $547.9 million contract in 2017 for the production and delivery of over 7,000 Hellfire II air-to-ground attack missiles and their containers. The Hellfire is an air-to-ground short-range precision guided missile for use on helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles. It uses a laser-guidance system that can either be directed by a laser targeting pod on the launching aircraft or a separate laser designator used by ground forces or other aircraft. Work on the new development contract is expected to be completed by March 2024.
Australia approved for $240.5M AMRAAM purchase Washington (UPI) Mar 13, 2019 The U.S. State Department approved the sale of air-to-air missiles to Australia, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency announced on Wednesday. The proposed deal for Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles and related equipment is valued at $240.5 million. The Australian defense ministry has requested to purchase up to 108 missiles, six AMRAAM Air Vehicles Instrumented, and six spare AMRAAM guidance sections, as well as associated parts, hardware, engineering support and training. ... read more
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