C-130J Transporter Drops Cruise Missile from Cargo Bay in U.S.A.F. Test

  • Defensemirror.com Bureau
  • 06:29 AM, November 12, 2022
  • 827
C-130J Transporter Drops Cruise Missile from Cargo Bay in U.S.A.F. Test
Palletized effects system falls from the cargo hold of MC-130J Commando II during a live-fire demonstration for ATREUS 22-4, Nov. 9, 2022 @U.S.A.F.

A U.S.A.F. MC-130J Commando II airdropped a Rapid Dragon deployment system containing Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile-Extended Range (JASSM-ER) long-range cruise missile for the first time during tests held at Andoya Space Range, Norway, on November.

The demonstrations were led and developed by the Air Force Strategic Development Planning and Experimentation (SDPE), part of the Air Force Research Laboratory’s (AFRL) Integrated Capabilities Directorate, in partnership with U.S. Special Operations Command Europe (SOCEUR).

The operational MC-130J aircrew from the 352nd Special Operations Wing airdropped a Rapid Dragon deployment system containing long-range cruise missiles which were sequentially released on a range over the Norwegian Sea as part of U.S. European Command approved, U.S. Special Operations Command led Operational Series ATREUS, the Air Force said in a statement.

C-130J Transporter Drops Cruise Missile from Cargo Bay in U.S.A.F. Test

In addition to SDPE and SOCEUR, participants supporting this event included U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) Det 1, Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), the Naval Surface Warfare Center-Dahlgren; Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, Systima Technologies, ASR-Pioneer, and Andøya Space Center.

“The Rapid Dragon Experimentation Program is appropriately named, as it advanced rapidly from a concept on paper to a live fire using a developmental prototype in 24 months. Now less than three years from the program inception, Rapid Dragon is being used by SOCEUR in the Arctic Circle,” said Dr. Dean Evans, Rapid Dragon program manager.

Although the Rapid Dragon Experimentation Program has been focused on kinetic munitions, the program’s efforts are now expanding from Palletized Munitions to Palletized Effects, which include kinetic and non-kinetic munitions; intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, or ISR, platforms; cargo resupply; humanitarian aid delivery.

C-130J Transporter Drops Cruise Missile from Cargo Bay in U.S.A.F. Test

ATREUS began in April 2021 to identify and conduct training opportunities on capabilities found throughout the theater that enable response options to the U.S. and NATO allies and partners. Previous ATREUS training events have focused on the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), capability with participation from Romania, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Latvia.

This is the seventh iteration of ATREUS in the European theater but the first combined and joint effort with participation from ally nations of Norway, Poland, Romania, and the United Kingdom as well as United States Air Force Europe-Air Forces Africa, United States Indo-Pacific Command, Air Force Special Operations Command, U.S. Special Operations Command Pacific, and U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command.

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