US Army and USAF intercept cruise missile for first time with JLENS-guided AMRAAM
The U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force intercepted for the first time an anti-ship  cruise missile surrogate using Raytheon's Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air  Missile (AMRAAM) cued by JLENS. An affordable, elevated, persistent  over-the-horizon sensor system, JLENS uses a powerful integrated radar system to  detect, track and target a variety of threats. "Integrating JLENS' precision detection and targeting information with the  combat-proven AMRAAM gives our military a new way to defend the fleet and our  allies from anti-ship cruise missiles that threaten vital waterways and critical  chokepoints," said Dave Gulla, vice president of Global Integrated Sensors for  Raytheon's Integrated Defense Systems business. During the July 17 test, the Army's JLENS acquired and tracked an anti-ship  cruise missile surrogate and passed targeting data to an Air Force F-15E via  Link 16, enabling the fighter pilot to fire an AIM-120C7 AMRAAM, culminating in  the weapon intercepting the target, meeting all test objectives. "JLENS has proven it can defend and extend the battlespace by integrating  with Patriot, Standard Missile-6, and now AMRAAM," said Dean Barten, the U.S.  Army's JLENS product manager. "This test enhances the cruise missile defense  umbrella, and when this capability is deployed, it will help save lives." "Integrating AMRAAM with JLENS enables the world's most capable air-to-air  missile to engage targets at the weapon's maximum kinematic range," said Harry  Schulte, vice president of Raytheon Missile Systems' Air Warfare Systems. "This test further demonstrates AMRAAM's operational flexibility and provides  today's warfighter with enhanced operational capability, cost effectiveness and  future growth solutions."
 
 
 
