Wednesday, March 13, 2019

A Look At The U.S. And Royal Navies Anti-Ship Missile Decoys



Warzone/The Drive: US Navy Destroyers And Royal Navy Ships Use These Big Blow-Up Anti-Ship Missile Decoys

They are a low-cost addition to ships' layered defenses used to counter anti-ship missiles and the Royal Navy want to invest in improved models.

The U.S. Navy's Arleigh Burke-class destroyers have a comprehensive suite of defenses to shield against anti-ship missiles, including chaff canisters, active decoys that generate confusing electromagnetic signatures, electronic warfare suites, and “hard kill” close-in weapon systems. But they also have the ability to launch passive radar-reflecting decoys that inflate like a huge, oddly-shaped beach ball to entice incoming missiles, a system that came by way of the United Kingdom. Now, the U.K. Royal Navy, which was first to adopt these decoys, is looking to buy an improved design as it looks to expand its global reach.

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WNU Editor: Apparently this is one of many measures that a ship can deploy in the event of a missile attack.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

In their dreams.
A hypersonic missile might be there so quickly that no decoy can be deployed, especially not like in the video in which it perhaps would take a minute to deploy and get away from that device.
A minute is an eternity in the hypersonic missile business. Might as well go home and learn Chinese if you don't catch up @ Europe. Either this, or properly team up with the US.. this middle ground helps no one

Bob Huntley said...

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