(Major Dan Mazurek’s post from the AUSTRALIAN DEFENCE on 03 August 2023.)
The ATACMS, fired as part of Exercise Talisman
Sabre, is a US-made long-range tactical precision surface-to-surface missile,
combining advanced technology and intelligence-driven targeting.
1st Brigade Commander Nick Foxall said capabilities such as this would have a big impact on the ability to deny access to enemies as the Army's focus in the north shifts to littoral operations. “Army is entering a new period, and exercises like Talisman Sabre, where we work with our partners and new capabilities, only enhance the defence of Australia,” Commander Foxall said.
The Defence
Strategic Review and the Government’s National Defence Statement response
identified the importance of defending Australia and its immediate region, and
to deter through denial any adversary’s attempts to project power through its
northern approaches.
Far-reaching capabilities such as the ATACMS, able to hit a land-based target with speed and precision over long distances, will be needed to meet the challenge of denying access to such a vast region. The Talisman Sabre shoot was dynamic and brought several pieces together to deliver the ATACMS missile on target in the Bradshaw Field Training Area in the Northern Territory.
First, two M142
high mobility artillery rocket systems (HIMARS) were loaded into two US Air
Force MC-130J Talon aircraft, which took off from Williamson Airfield in
Queensland's Shoalwater Bay Training Area, headed west towards a red-dirt
airfield in Delamere, NT.
Within moments of touchdown, the HIMARS proceeded past the runway to its designated firing point and fired the missile before reboarding the Talon for immediate departure. Major John Ronayne, the Officer in Command Long Range Strike on the ground at the Delamere firing point, said it was both a rehearsal for employing the system and a demonstration of capability.
“This event
represents how the alliance can employ and coordinate these types of systems
across vast distances as part of a multi-domain strike capability,” he said.
Hundreds of
kilometres away, on a ridge overlooking the target point, joint fires observers
and terminal attack controllers from 101st Battery, 8th/12th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, alongside partners
from the US Marine Rotation Force - Darwin, observed the surface-to-surface
missile thundering into the Australian outback and destroying the designated
target.
Government
direction in response to Defence Strategic Review recommendations supported
accelerated acquisition and expansion of
HIMARS and associated missiles to contribute to enhanced combat power
through long-range fires.
Australia to manufacture HIMARS missiles locally?
Australia is set
to buy 20 HIMARS (high mobility artillery rocket systems) plus an initial 130
rockets, with the prospect that manufacture of the missiles may eventually start
in Australia. HIMARS is one of the signature weapon systems of the Ukraine
conflict, delivering devastating precision strikes on Russian forces.
In Australian
service, HIMARS – one system is on display at the Avalon Airshow – will form a
component of a hybrid artillery force, alongside traditional gun systems. With
a capability to be transported aboard a RAAF C-130, HIMARS will give the ADF an
expeditionary capability to conduct distant “shoot and scoot” fire missions.
But in any
conflict, ADF missile stocks would likely be speedily exhausted, prompting
creation of the Guided Weapons and Explosive Ordnance enterprise to develop
local production of precision munitions. However, the US has been traditionally
reluctant to permit foreign manufacture of its most sensitive technology. That
may be changing.
Damien McMahon,
Lockheed Martin business development manager for the missiles and fire control
division said the company was working through GWEO to understand the
capabilities of local firms to develop rocket technology including motors,
control systems and warheads.
“We build the
systems and the missiles for this. The Commonwealth has asked us to help
provide them some advice so they can improve their understanding of whether
this is something GWEO would like to do,” he said.
As to the US
agreeing to allow release of this technology, Paula Hartley, Lockheed Martin,
vice-president for enterprise performance for the company’s missiles and fire
control division, said that was a conversation that was occurring between the US
and Australia “as we speak”. In an industry briefing on GWEO last week, another
Lockheed official went slightly further, declaring the US government was
turning a corner.
“It has become
far more open to opening up those supply chains and to allowing a build,
particularly of some of more sophisticated system, build them overseas
completely,” said Tim Cahill executive vice-president of Lockheed’s missiles
and fire control division.
The HIMARS launcher system comprises a five-tonne
wheeled vehicle, with rear-mounted launcher and crew of three. Basic weapon
loadout comprises six GMLRS missiles with range of 70 kilometres, a single
ATACMS with range of 300 kilometres or two PrSM with range of 400 kilometres.
HIMARS firing GMLRS, able to strike within 1-6 metres of a target, have proved
very effective in Ukraine.
Asked what
feedback Lockheed received on the performance of their missiles in Ukraine, Ms
Hartley said they only heard what everyone else heard through the media. “Highly
effective and very precise,” she said. Australia’s first HIMARS will arrive in
2025. The ADF is still considering their
place, one possibility being as part of a precision fires brigade based in
Edinburgh, South Australia.