U.S. Army Finally Replace Its Legendary Tank Killer With More Lethal Weapons

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U.S. Army Finally Replace Its Legendary Tank Killer With More Lethal Weapons

The u.s army is preparing to say goodbye to an old friend. The tube launched optically tracked wire guided tow anti-tank missile has served the army for 50 years, tracking and destroying enemy armor in jungles deserts and even cities. The service wants a new missile that can travel twice as far but also kill tanks closer than ever.

In the early 1970s the army fielded what was then the heaviest longest-range anti-tank missile in the world. The army facing down thousands of soviet tanks in europe needed a weapon system that could kill tanks accurately at long ranges even beyond the range of tank guns, that missile was the BGM-71 TOW.

The BGM-71 TOW which was 5 inches in diameter fit in a large launch tube connected to a command unit. The gunner placed the crosshairs on an enemy tank and fired the missile. The gunner could move the crosshairs to keep them centered on a moving enemy tank and as the missile sped downrange it trailed a thin wire that allowed it to receive the gunner's course adjustments.

The TOW was revolutionary it had a hit probability of about 90 percent out to its maximum range of 3700 meters. Once the tow reached its target its shaped charge warhead could penetrate the heaviest of enemy armor. the missile was more accurate and deadlier than a tank gun but it couldn't match a tank gun's rate of fire.

U.S. Army Finally Replace Its Legendary Tank Killer With More Lethal Weapons
M2 Bradley

An attack helicopter could carry up to eight tow missiles. vehicles like the armored personnel carriers, the M2 Bradley fighting vehicle, dedicated anti-tank vehicles and the humvee could also carry the weapon. Although built for the battlefields of western europe the tow's baptism of fire took place in the skies over vietnam with the helicopter mounted toes killing north vietnamese tanks in the 1972 easter offensive.

The u.s then supplied the missiles to israel during the 1973 Yom Kippur war. the israelis discovered tow couldn't fly over salt water in this case, the suez canal which affected the control wires and caused the missiles to veer off course. u.s forces later used tow missiles in the Gulf War, Afghanistan and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Tow missiles famously besieged the house where enemy were holed up blowing up the building during a joint raid by Delta Force and the 101st airborne division. The army has gradually updated the TOW over the years. The missile warhead is now capable of penetrating reactive armor using a tandem charge that first explodes the protective armor tile and then a second that penetrates the tank's main armor belt. The army also replaced the trailing control wire with a wireless connection.

The missile still has the original mode shortcomings including a relatively slow speed 21 seconds to reach its maximum range of 2.2 miles. While the army has tried to swap out the tow before the end of the cold war and the collapse of the mighty soviet army made the replacement a low priority. Now as army times reports the army wants a tow replacement once more. The close combat missile system heavy will have a range of 10,000 meters almost three times the range of the tow while keeping the same dimensions as the existing missile. This will allow the army to use it from existing launch systems including the M2 bBadley and the new joint tactical light vehicle.

In addition to range the army wants a faster missile, a tow missile traveling to ten thousand meters would take nearly a minute to reach its target. If the gunner comes during that time it could throw off the soldiers aim, wasting the missile, more concerning russian tanks and armored vehicles including the T-90M main battle tank can now fire missiles of their own to ranges of up to 5000 meters decisively out ranging the toe. The army wants the missile to arm at just 100 meters likely to allow close range shots during city fights and on small islands. The missile must also survive active protection systems and jammers that would attempt to shoot down or jam them.

The service would like ccmsh to have several guidance modes, including the tow's command line of sight a fire and forget mode and a missile capable of being fired first and then accepting targeting data in flight. The army also wants an autonomous attack capability that would allow the missile to steer itself to a set of coordinates and then attack any nearby enemy armored vehicles. The army will likely feel the tow's replacement either a new missile of an existing one sometime in the early 2030s. One missile that fits many of the criteria is the israeli-made spike R2 which has the range requirement in several of the launch and targeting modes good.


 
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