An example of a specialized weapon expanding its capabilities
to match new and illusive target is the AGM-88 High Speed Anti-Radiation
(HARM) missile. This weapons, originally developed to suppress
and kill active (emitting) radars, associated with surface-to-air
(SAM) missiles and anti-aircraft artillery is being enhanced
to assume the role of an active, homing missile designated Advanced
Anti-Radiation Guided Missile (AARGM AGM-88E). The primary advantage
of the original missile was its range and speed, providing strike
fighters supersonic 'fast kill' capability when engaging enemy
air defenses. Its main drawback was the analog radar homing
seeker, which could not 'memorize' the target location. Furthermore,
the analog seeker homes in on the strongest signal, thus lacking
the capability to aim at the target's most vulnerable spot.
The AARGM upgrade currently in development for the HARM addresses
these weaknesses and introduces many additional capabilities
transforming the missile into a modern network-enabled weapon.
Primarily, the analog RF seeker is replaced by a digital receiver,
providing advanced features such as autonomous detection (not
dependent on aircraft radar warning receivers) and target recognition
(Target ID). The new seeker supports a conformal antenna, clearing
the nose cone for a Millimeter Wave (MMW) seeker. With the two
seekers AARGM supports 'blended strike solutions', implementing
INS/GPS for midcourse navigation and active or passive RF techniques
for the terminal phase (active MMW or passive RF seeker).
With the new seekers the missile can 'memorize' a target signature
and location, therefore pursuing the attack even when the target
ceases to emit (switched off). It also has the ability to employ
a selective aimpoint, by attacking the target's most vulnerable
parts (i.e. the processor) rather than the emitting elements
(radar antennae). The weapon's geolocation capability enables
the AARGM to memorize Impact Avoidance Zones (IAZ), eliminating
much of the risks of fratricides and collateral damage typically
restricting the use of standoff weapons in close proximity to
friendly forces or in situations where the risk of collateral
damage is too high.
As a fully netted weapon, the AARGM's uses an Integrated Broadcast
Service Receiver (IBS-R) enabling the missile to receive target
updates from remote sources, just before launching. AARGM is
also equipped with Weapon Impact Assessment (WIA) capability,
sending a terminal attack-message burst via satellite, just
prior to detonation. WIA provides attack planners with preliminary
assessment of the lethal effects employed against planned enemy
targets.
The development of the conversion of HARM into AARGM began
in 2003 supporting F/A-18A/D, with further support for F/A-18E/F/G,
F-35 and EA-6B. Support for Tornado IDS/ECR was introduced in
2005 under a cooperative development agreement between the US
and Italy. Germany is also interested in the program. In nine
test firings, the missile demonstrated 100% success rate. The
program is scheduled for an operational assessment in summer
2008.