Thursday, January 5, 2023

Famed HIMARS Rocket-Artillery For Australia!

     (Staff article from the AUSTRALIAN DEFENCE MAGAZINE on 04 October 2022.)

The US High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) has proved one of the standout weapons of the Ukraine conflict, delivering devastating precision fires on Russian positions, including munitions depots and command posts.

Australia is set to acquire HIMARS, maybe 20 launchers, though the government has yet to give the official go-ahead. With the growing desire for greater self-sufficiency, Australia may also seek to manufacture HIMARS missiles.

James Heading, Lockheed Martin Australia director of programs, strategic capabilities office for missiles and fire control, said  there was active consideration around production of the missiles themselves, though not the launch vehicle.

“We are certainly trying to explore what Australian actually wants. Part of that resilience in the supply chain obviously goes straight to energetics,” he told reporters at the 2022 Land Forces Conference in Brisbane. “The hardest thing to ship in any conflict are the energetics. We want to look at the rocket motors and the warheads. We already have the teaming agreement with Lockheed Martin and Thales.”

Heading said work was already under way on the rocket booster for the LRASM long range anti-ship missile. “It’s all well and good to talk about rocket motors but what about the casings and the fins and the body and all sort of things. We are exploring to see what the capabilities and capacities are here in Australia.” Heading said Australia was more than capable of producing the critical guidance system but that would depend on what technology the US government would allow to be released.

Early in the program, the Australian military discussed placing the rocket launcher aboard an in-service Australian vehicle rather than a US FMTV truck. For reasons of cost, delivery time and integration risk, it was decided to stick with the US vehicle.

HIMARS is a wheeled vehicle with capability to carry and launch six GMLRS missiles, each with a range of 70 kilometres, or two PRSM missiles with a range of up to 499 kilometres or a single ATACMS missile with a range of 300 kilometres.

HIMARS High Mobility Artillery Rocket System

The High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) provides artillery forces with precision fire power, enhanced responsiveness, mobility, protection, and also networks soldiers and air and land weapon platforms, thus facilitating the delivery of information, and fires in the battlefield.

The key features of the HIMARS are:

Enhanced Fire Power:

The HIMARS carries a single pod of six Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS) rockets and is designed to launch the entire MLRS family of munitions. The Guided MLRS M31 Unitary rockets used are 227mm surface-to-surface inertial guided and Global Positioning System-aided weapons. Each rocket contains a single 200-pound class controlled fragmentation high explosive unitary warhead capable of providing lethal and precise fires. The HIMARS is able to strike targets as far as 70 km away.

Enhanced Responsiveness:

The HIMARS requires less than 20 seconds to be prepared for firing and a full launcher load of six rockets can be fired within 45 seconds.

Enhanced Mobility:

The HIMARS is powered by a 6.6-litre, six-cylinder turbo-charge diesel engine that delivers 330 horsepower, providing a top speed of 94km/h. This allows for rapid withdrawal after launching of munitions, enhancing crew and equipment survivability.

Enhanced Protection:

The HIMARS is equipped with the Increased Crew Protection cabin, which is designed to protect the three-man operating crew against plume gases, rocket launch debris and small arms.

Enhanced Networking Capabilities:

The HIMARS is equipped with the Battlefield Management System (BMS) which enables it to connect with the Artillery Headquarters and Strike Observer Mission Teams on the ground as well as other air and land platforms, such as infantry fighting vehicles, main battle tanks, attack helicopters and fighter aircraft. With enhanced situational awareness and transmission of key battlefield information provided by the BMS, the HIMARS can respond quickly to call-for-fires and deliver precision fires on enemy targets.

U.S. HIMARS Rockets in Ukraine

On New Year’s Day, Ukraine used American-made rockets to kill dozens—and possibly hundreds—of Russian soldiers within its borders.

Russian officials said the strike resulted in the deaths of 63 service members, while Ukrainian officials suggest the casualties are in the hundreds- nearly 400. It marks one of Ukraine’s deadliest attacks on Russian forces in the war. Officials from both countries say that HIMARS rockets, which are satellite-guided weapons with a range of about 50 miles, were used in the attack.

The U.S. first provided Ukraine with long-range HIMARS rockets back in June; they offered roughly twice the range of the weaponry that Kyiv were previously using. Here’s what to know about HIMARS rockets, and why they have become essential for Ukraine’s war operations.

What are HIMARS rockets?

HIMARS, produced by Lockheed Martin, stands for High Mobility Artillery Rocket System.

“HIMARS is one of the world’s most advanced rocket artillery systems; its range is farther than anything the Ukrainians had, so when that was transferred they did get the ability to strike targets deeper behind the front-lines and much more accurately,” says Ian Williams, deputy director of CSIS’s Missile Defense Project.

They are considered most effective for attacking stationary targets such as infrastructure and troops in a concentrated area. HIMARS rockets have been integral for Ukraine in a defensive and offensive capacity in the war against Russia, experts say. “HIMARS have liberated strategically significant Ukrainian cities and territory that likely otherwise wouldn’t have happened… It’s a glowing report card,” says George Barros, an analyst on the Russia and Ukraine portfolio at the Institute for the Study of War.

How has Ukraine used HIMARS rockets against Russia?

HIMARS rockets have been particularly effective in fighting Russia’s offensive in Donbas by allowing Ukraine to attack Russian supply and ammunition depots.

They were also crucial in forcing Russia to withdraw from Kherson. “That was only possible because the Ukrainians had this extended strike capability to degrade those bridges. Without the HIMARS, I don’t think the Ukrainians would have liberated Kherson,” Barros says.

Until the New Year’s Day attack, HIMARS rockets had mostly been used to target Russian infrastructure. “What’s different about the recent strike is that they hit an area where there happened to be a lot of Russian military personnel, so there was a very high casualty count,” Williams says. “What we’ve seen until now is HIMARS being used to target Russian logistics and weapon and artillery stockpiles.”

The U.S. role in supplying HIMARS to Ukraine

The U.S. has supplied at least 20 HIMARS rockets to Ukraine. Their announcement to provide the weapons in June was part of a larger $700 million military aid package.

U.S. officials say that there are certain restrictions placed on the HIMARS rockets provided to Ukraine. They can’t fire ATACMS missiles, which have a range of almost 200 miles. The U.S. also sought Ukrainian assurances that HIMARS would not be fired into Russian territory.

Analysts say these kinds of restrictions are the U.S.’ way of preventing their support for Ukraine from growing into a larger conflict between the U.S. and Russia.

Some call for the U.S. to continue to limit the kinds of weapons provided to Ukraine. “The United States should avoid encouraging or facilitating a Ukrainian effort to fully expel Russian forces from all of its territory, including Crimea, a war aim that would run too high a risk of prompting [Russian President Vladimir] Putin to undertake even more reckless actions, including the possible use of nuclear weapons,” said Charles Kupchan, the top National Security Council official for Europe during the Obama administration, according to the Wall Street Journal.

But Williams says the idea that U.S. weapons used to strike targets inside of Russia, as opposed to homegrown systems, could be seen as more escalatory is flawed. “I don’t think that’s the case personally but that seems to be a line that the [Biden] administration has drawn,” he says.

As the war continues, Ukraine’s access to effective weaponry will be key in shaping their response to Russian aggression. Even with the HIMARS, they are requesting Western allies to also provide them with tanks; the U.S. has refused.

Barros worries that restrictions on weapons may hamstring Ukraine’s efforts to fight back effectively. “We’re not going to get into World War III with Russia by sending Ukrainian weapons [and]… sending them longer range artillery,” he says.

Hundreds of Russian Recruits Killed by HIMARS on NYE

In a strike at the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Eve, between 60 and 400 Russian conscript troops were killed in an attack on a makeshift barracks inside Ukraine by missiles launched from the HIMARS weapons system.

The attack, using US-provided weapons and likely based on US-provided targeting data, sends the world a message: Washington wants the bloodbath in Eastern Europe to escalate in the new year. In the day since the attack, the magnitude of the disaster has become clear amid recriminations within the Russian political and media establishment over who was to blame for the debacle.

The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed that 63 service members were killed in the strike, while the Ukrainian Ministry of defense claimed that four hundred were killed. Some Russian journalists reported that the casualties ranged between 200 and 600 people.

Whatever the true number, it may be the deadliest single airstrike to date in the war, which has already killed or injured 200,000 residents of the two countries that both were part of the Soviet Union only 30 years ago.