The US Missile Defense Agency (MDA) awarded Raytheon $87 million to purchase long-lead materials needed to produce up to 17 Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IIAs that will be used for testing and initial deployment. A follow-on contract for the additional materials, parts and components is expected by early 2016. “Our Japanese partners have been tremendous allies in this development programme, and together we’ve taken ballistic missile defense to the next level,” said Dr. Taylor W. Lawrence, Raytheon Missile Systems president. “When the SM-3 Block IIA deploys in 2018, we will have a greater degree of protection than ever before.”
The SM-3 Block IIA has larger rocket motors and a bigger, more capable kill vehicle that allows it to take out threats sooner in flight and protect larger regions of land. “The SM-3 Block IIA can be used at sea or on land with no modification to the missile,” said Amy Cohen, Standard Missile-3 programme director. “The SM-3 is the only ballistic missile defense interceptor that can be deployed both ways, and that flexibility is a tremendous asset.”
The programme is on track for both land and sea deployment in 2018 in line with Phase 3 of the US’ Phased Adaptive Approach for missile defense of US deployed forces and allies in NATO Europe.
The SM-3 Block IIA has larger rocket motors and a bigger, more capable kill vehicle that allows it to take out threats sooner in flight and protect larger regions of land. “The SM-3 Block IIA can be used at sea or on land with no modification to the missile,” said Amy Cohen, Standard Missile-3 programme director. “The SM-3 is the only ballistic missile defense interceptor that can be deployed both ways, and that flexibility is a tremendous asset.”
The programme is on track for both land and sea deployment in 2018 in line with Phase 3 of the US’ Phased Adaptive Approach for missile defense of US deployed forces and allies in NATO Europe.