HIMARS ni nini?

HIMARS ni nini?

M142 HIMARS

American artillery rocket system

"M142" redirects here. For other uses, see M142 (disambiguation).

The M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) is a light multiple rocket launcher developed in the late 1990s for the United States Army and mounted on a standard United States Army Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV) truck frame.

Quick Facts Type, Place of origin ...

The HIMARS carries one pod with either six GMLRS rockets or one ATACMS missile. It is based on the United States Army's FMTV five-ton truck, and is capable of launching all rockets specified in the Multiple Launch Rocket System Family of Munitions (MFOM). HIMARS ammunition pods are interchangeable with the M270 MLRS; however, it is limited to a single pod as opposed to the standard two for the M270 and its variants.

The launcher can be transported by Lockheed C-130 Hercules aircraft. The chassis was initially produced by BAE Systems Mobility & Protection Systems (formerly Armor Holdings Aerospace and Defense Group Tactical Vehicle Systems Division), the original equipment manufacturer of the FMTV. It was produced by the Oshkosh Corporation from 2010 to 2017. Both chassis and launcher system are now produced by Lockheed Martin Missiles & Fire Control in Camden, Arkansas.

Development

The HIMARS was developed as a private venture by Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control to meet a U.S. Army requirement. The system first appeared publicly in 1993. In 1996, the U.S. Army Missile Command awarded Lockheed Martin a $23.2 million contract to build four prototypes. The vehicles were delivered to the XVIII Airborne Corps for a two-year evaluation. In July 1998, the Army conducted a test firing of the ATACMS. In December 1999, the Aviation and Missile Command awarded Lockheed Martin a $65 million contract for engineering and manufacturing development. Under this contract, Lockheed Martin delivered six HIMARs in late 2001 for Army evaluation. In April 2003, the Army awarded Lockheed Martin a $96 million contract to begin low-rate initial production. Around this time, the Marine Corps placed an order for two units for evaluation purposes.

Design

The HIMARS is similar in design to the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS), with the main exception being that it is a wheeled vehicle as opposed to tracked vehicle. The HIMARS carries one ordnance pod, which is identical to the pods used by the M270. The windows are made of sheets of sapphire laminated with glass and polycarbonate.

The HIMARS was also tested as a unified launch system for both artillery rockets and the SLAMRAAM surface-launched variant of the AMRAAM anti-aircraft missile.

In October 2017, a Marine Corps HIMARS fired a rocket while at sea against a land target for the first time from the deck of the amphibious transport dock USS Anchorage, demonstrating the system's ability to operate while on ships to deliver precision fire from a standoff range against shore defenses. The vehicle's targeting software was reworked so it can better fire while on a launch platform that is in motion.

Operational history

Afghanistan and the Middle East

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A HIMARS launcher with armored cab

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A HIMARS launcher being loaded into a C-130 Hercules aircraft in 2011

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Reloading a HIMARS with a pod of six rockets

In February 2010, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for Afghanistan indicated in a press release that two rockets fired from a HIMARS were believed to have fallen 300 metres short of their intended target, killing 12 civilians during Operation Moshtarak. ISAF suspended the use of the HIMARS until a full review of the incident was completed. A British officer later said that the rockets were on target, that the target was in use by the Taliban, and that use of the system had been reinstated. Reports indicated that the civilian deaths were due to the Taliban's use of human shields; the presence of civilians at that location had not been known to the ISAF forces. A report in the New York Times in October 2010 credited the HIMARS with aiding the NATO offensive in Kandahar by targeting Taliban commanders' hideouts, forcing many to flee to Pakistan, at least temporarily.

In November 2015, the U.S. Army revealed that it had deployed the HIMARS to Iraq, firing at least 400 rockets at Islamic State (ISIL) targets since the beginning of that summer. HIMARS detachments were sent to Al Asad Airbase and Al-Taqaddum Air Base in Al Anbar Governorate. In March 2016, a U.S. Army HIMARS fired rockets into Syria for the first time in support of Syrian rebels fighting ISIL, from launchers based in neighboring Jordan.

In January 2016, Lockheed announced that the HIMARS had reached 1 million operational hours with U.S. forces, achieving a 99 percent operational readiness rate.

In April 2016, it was announced that the U.S. would be deploying the HIMARS in Turkey near the border with Syria as part of the battle with ISIL. In early September, international media and the U.S. State Department reported a newly deployed HIMARS had engaged ISIL targets in Syria near the Turkish border.

In October 2016, HIMARS were stationed at Qayyarah Airfield West, some 65 kilometres (40 mi) south of Mosul, taking part in the Battle of Mosul.

In June 2017, a HIMARS was deployed at Al-Tanf, Syria, to support U.S.-backed rebels in the area.

On 24 May 2018, a HIMARS strike killed 50 Taliban fighters and leaders in Musa Qala, Afghanistan. Three rockets struck the building within a 14-second timespan.

In September 2018, US support forces coordinated with Syrian Democratic Forces fighting to defeat ISIS in east Syria in the Deir ez-Zor campaign, sometimes striking ISIS positions with GMLRS rockets 30 times per day. The HIMARS used in this support operation were located in the Omar oilfields, some 25 km (16 mi) north of the ISIS-controlled targets.

Ukraine

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Ukrainian HIMARS in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, early July 2022

On 31 May 2022, the US announced that it would be supplying HIMARS to Ukraine with M31 GMLRS unitary rockets. The next day, it was reported that four units would be sent. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl said that the US would be able to send more systems as the fighting evolves. On 23 June, the first HIMARS arrived in Ukraine, according to Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov. On 25 June 2022, Ukraine started deploying the system against Russian forces during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. According to Ukraine's Chief of General Staff, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, "Artillerymen of the Armed Forces of Ukraine hit ... military targets of the enemy on our, Ukrainian, territory". The Ukrainian military claimed that this first strike, on a Russian base in Izyum, killed over 40 soldiers. The day before, a second batch of four was announced to be delivered in mid-July.

On 1 July, a US defense official told reporters that Ukraine had been using the system to destroy Russian command posts: "selecting targets and then accurately hitting them ... degrading Russian capability". On 18 July, Zaluzhnyi said: "An important factor contributing to our retention of defensive lines and positions is the timely arrival of M142 HIMARS, which deliver surgical strikes on enemy control posts, ammunition and fuel storage depots."

Another four were announced for delivery on 8 July; the weeks-long process to train Ukrainian troops on how to use the platform is a limiting factor, which is why they are delivered in batches of four at a time. Ukraine is restricted by the US from firing HIMARS rockets into Russian territory to avoid escalating the conflict, but Russian forces within Ukraine are legitimate targets. A fourth batch of four was announced on 20 July, bringing the total number of HIMARS committed to Ukraine to 16. Ukrainian Defense Minister Reznikov claimed that the country needed "at least 100" of the system and that by that point, eight systems had destroyed 30 command stations and ammunition storage facilities, decreasing the intensity of Russian shelling and slowing their advance. In that announcement, it was revealed that the number delivered had reached 12 launchers. That number had increased to 16 by 1 August.

On 30 August, 2022, the Washington Post reported on Ukrainian claims to have successfully used decoy HIMARS units made out of wood to draw at least 10 Russian 3M-54 Kalibr cruise missiles. One US diplomat was reported to state that Russian sources had claimed more HIMARS destroyed than the US had sent. A Pentagon official had earlier in the month asserted that no HIMARS had been destroyed at that time.

On 8 September, US General Mark Milley told reporters: "We are seeing real and measurable gains from Ukraine in the use of these systems. For example, the Ukrainians have struck over 400 targets with the HIMARS and they've had devastating effect".

Rockets and missiles

The HIMARS can fire the following rockets and missiles:

MLRS

The M28 rockets are a variant of the unguided M26 rockets of the M270 system. Each rocket pod contains 6 identical rockets.

M28 practice rockets. An M26 variant with three ballast containers and three smoke-marking containers in place of the submunition payload.

M28A1 Reduced-Range Practice Rocket (RRPR) with blunt nose. Range reduced to 9 km (5.6 mi).

M28A2 Low-Cost Reduced-Range Practice Rocket (LCRRPR) with blunt nose. Range reduced to 9 km (5.6 mi).

GMLRS

Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) rockets have an extended range and add GPS-aided guidance to their Inertial Navigation System. GMLRS rockets were introduced in 2005 and the M30 and M31 rockets are, except for their warheads, identical. As of 1 December 2021 50,000 GMLRS rockets have been produced, with yearly production now exceeding 9,000 rockets. Each rocket pod contains 6 identical rockets.

M30 rockets carrying 404 DPICM M101 submunitions. Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). 3,936 produced between 2004 and 2009, production ceased in favor of the M30A1. The remaining M30 rockets are being updated with either the M30A1 or M31A1 warhead.

M30A1 rockets with Alternative Warhead (AW). Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). GMLRS rocket that replaces the M30's submunitions with approximately 182,000 pre-formed tungsten fragments for area effects without unexploded ordnance. Entered production in 2015. This warhead is superior not just because it doesn't use cluster munitions but is also superior to a normal high explosive round: "A high explosive round is very impressive because it produces a big bomb and large pieces of shrapnel, but this round is small pellets and covers a much larger area."

M30A2 rockets with Alternative Warhead (AW). Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). Improved M30A1 with Insensitive Munition Propulsion System (IMPS). Only M30 variant in production since 2019.

M31 rockets with 200 lb (91 kg) high-explosive unitary warhead. Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). Entered production in 2005. The warhead is produced by General Dynamics and contains 51 pounds (23 kg) of PBX-109 high explosive in a steel blast-fragmentation case.

M31A1 rockets with 200 lb (91 kg) high-explosive unitary warhead. Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). Improved M31 with new multi-mode fuze that added airburst to the M31's fuze point detonation and delay.

M31A2 rockets with 200 lb (91 kg) high-explosive unitary warhead. Range: 15–92 km (9.3–57.2 mi). Improved M31A1 with Insensitive Munition Propulsion System (IMPS). Only M31 variant in production since 2019.

ER GMLRS rockets with extended range of up to 150 km (93 mi). Rockets use a slightly increased rocket motor size, a newly designed hull, and tail-driven guidance while still containing six per pod. It will come in unitary and AW variants. The first successful test flight of an ER GMLRS occurred in March 2021. Lockheed Martin anticipates adding the ER to its production line in the fiscal year 2023 contract award, and is planning to produce the new rockets at its Camden facility. Full operational capability is planned for 2025. In 2022 Finland became the first foreign customer to order ER GMLRS.

ATACMS

Main article: ATACMS

The Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) is a series of 610 mm surface-to-surface missile (SSM) with a range of up to 300 km (190 mi). Each rocket pod contains one ATACMS missile. As of 2022, only the M48, M57, and M57E1 remain in the US military's arsenal.

M39 (ATACMS BLOCK I) missile with inertial guidance. The missile carries 950 M74 Anti-personnel and Anti‑materiel (APAM) bomblets. Range: 25–165 km (16–103 mi). 1,650 M39 were produced between 1990 and 1997, when production ceased in favor of the M39A1. During Desert Storm 32 M39 were fired at Iraqi targets, and during Operation Iraqi Freedom a further 379 M39 were fired. The remaining M39 missiles are being updated to M57E1 missiles. The M39 is the only ATACMS variant, which can be fired by all MLRS and HIMARS variants.

M39A1 (ATACMS BLOCK IA) missile with GPS-aided guidance. The missile carries 300 M74 APAM bomblets. Range: 20–300 km (12–186 mi). 610 M39A1 were produced between 1997 and 2003. During Operation Iraqi Freedom 74 M39A1 were fired at Iraqi targets. The remaining M39A1 missiles are being updated to M57E1 missiles. The M39A1 and all subsequently introduced ATACMS missiles can be used only with the M270A1 (or variants thereof) and the HIMARS.

M48 (ATACMS Quick Reaction Unitary; QRU) missile with GPS-aided guidance. The missile carries the 500 lb WDU-18/B penetrating high-explosive blast fragmentation warhead of the US Navy's Harpoon anti-ship missile. Range: 70–300 km (43–186 mi). 176 M48 were produced between 2001 and 2004, when production ceased in favor of the M57. During Operation Iraqi Freedom 16 M48 were fired at Iraqi targets; a further 42 M48 were fired during Operation Enduring Freedom. The remaining M48 missiles remain in the U.S. Army and US Marine Corps' arsenal.

M57 (ATACMS TACMS 2000) missile with GPS-aided guidance. The missile carries the same WDU-18/B warhead as the M48. Range: 70–300 km (43–186 mi). 513 M57 were produced between 2004 and 2013.

M57E1 (ATACMS Modification; MOD) missile with GPS-aided guidance. The M57E1 is the designation for upgraded M39 and M39A1 with re-grained motor, updated navigation and guidance software and hardware, and a WDU-18/B unitary warhead instead of the M74 APAM bomblets. The M57E1 ATACMS MOD also includes a proximity sensor for airburst detonation. Production commenced in 2017 with an initial order for 220 upgraded M57E1. The program is slated to end in 2024 with the introduction of the Precision Strike Missile (PrSM), which will replace the ATACMS missiles in the US arsenal.

PrSM

Main article: Precision Strike Missile

The Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) is a new series of GPS-guided missiles, which will begin to replace ATACMS missiles in 2024. PrSM carries a newly designed area-effects warhead and has a range of 60–499 km (37–310 mi). PrSM missiles can be launched from the M270A2 and the HIMARS, with rockets pods containing 2 missiles. As of 2022 the PrSM is in low-rate initial production with 110 missiles being delivered to the US military over the year. PrSM will enter operational service in 2023.

Specifications

More information Crew, Weight ...

Related developments

Lockheed Martin UK and INSYS had jointly developed a demonstrator rocket artillery system similar to HIMARS for the British Army's "Lightweight Mobile Artillery Weapon System/Rocket" (LIMAWS(R)) program. The system consisted of a single MLRS pod, mounted on a Supacat SPV600 chassis. The LIMAWS(R) program was canceled in September 2007.

Operators

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HIMARS operators in blue

Current operators

[https://upload] United StatesUnited States Army

Active duty

17th Field Artillery Brigade (17th FAB)

5th Battalion 3rd Field Artillery Regiment (5-3rd FAR)

1st Battalion 94th Field Artillery Regiment (1-94th FAR)

18th Field Artillery Brigade (18th FAB)

3rd Battalion 27th Field Artillery Regiment (3-27th FAR)

3rd Battalion 321st Field Artillery Regiment (3-321st FAR)

75th Field Artillery Brigade (75th FAB)

1st Battalion 14th Field Artillery Regiment

Army National Guard (ARNG)

Active duty

45th Field Artillery Brigade (Oklahoma Army National Guard)

1st Battalion, 158th Field Artillery Regiment (Oklahoma Army National Guard)

4th Battalion, 133rd Field Artillery Regiment (Texas Army National Guard)

65th Field Artillery Brigade (Utah Army National Guard)

5th Battalion 113th Field Artillery Regiment (North Carolina Army National Guard)

115th Field Artillery Brigade (Wyoming Army National Guard)

1st Battalion 121st Field Artillery Regiment (Wisconsin Army National Guard)

2nd Battalion 300th Field Artillery Regiment (Wyoming Army National Guard)

130th Field Artillery Brigade (Kansas Army National Guard)

2nd Battalion 130th Field Artillery Regiment (Kansas Army National Guard)

138th Field Artillery Brigade (Kentucky Army National Guard)

3rd Battalion 116th Field Artillery Regiment (Florida Army National Guard)

1st Battalion 623rd Field Artillery Regiment (Kentucky Army National Guard)

142nd Field Artillery Brigade (Arkansas Army National Guard)

1st Battalion 181st Field Artillery Regiment (Tennessee National Guard)

169th Field Artillery Brigade (Colorado Army National Guard)

3rd Battalion 157th Field Artillery Regiment (Colorado Army National Guard)

197th Field Artillery Brigade (New Hampshire Army National Guard)

3rd Battalion 197th Field Artillery Regiment (New Hampshire Army National Guard)

1st Battalion 182nd Field Artillery Regiment (Michigan Army National Guard)

United States Marine Corps

1st Battalion 10th Marine Regiment

2nd Battalion 10th Marine Regiment

5th Battalion 11th Marine Regiment

3rd Battalion 12th Marine Regiment

2nd Battalion 14th Marine Regiment

[https://upload] RomaniaRomanian Land Forces (54)

8th Tactical Operational Missile Brigade operates the 310 km (190 mi) variant

[https://upload] SingaporeSingapore Army (24)

23rd Battalion, Singapore Artillery (23 SA)

[https://upload] UkraineUkrainian Ground Forces (16)[https://upload] United Arab EmiratesUnited Arab Emirates Army (12)[https://upload] JordanRoyal Jordanian Army (12)

29th HIMARS Battalion, Jordan Royal Artillery Command

Future operators

[https://upload] Australia

Australian Army: The Pentagon reported that the Australian Army had asked to purchase 20 HIMARS, with the sale being approved by the U.S. State Department on 26 May 2022.

[https://upload] Estonia

On 15 July 2022, United States approved the sale of 6 HIMARS to Estonia as part of package estimated at $500 million.

[https://upload] Poland

Polish Land Forces: On 29 November 2018 the US State Department approved the sale to Poland.

[https://upload] Taiwan (Republic of China)

On 21 October 2020, the US government approved the sale of 11 HIMARS to Taiwan.

See also

List of U.S. Army rocket launchers

References

External links

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MGM-29 Sergeant

Tactical ballistic missile

Field Artillery Branch (United States)

United States Army service branch responsible for self-propelled and towed artillery

S-400 missile system

Mobile surface-to-air missile air defense

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Moto wa HIMARS
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Wazungu ni wapumbavu sana. Yaani hayo mabomba ya mabati ndio yauzwe milioni miambili? Halafu wanapigana wao huko na mabomba yao, halafu sisi huku tunateseka maisha yanakuwa magumu. Kumbe wanarushiana mabomba ya mabati tu. Wajinga sana.


Yaani tunateseka. Kwasababu watu wanarushiana mabomba ya mabati .

Bora wangeandaa pambano la ngumi kati ya Putin na rais wa Ukraine. Atakaye shinda ndio aongoze.



Yaani tunateseka na maisha magumu kisa watu wanarushiana mabati ya milioni miambili. Wajinga sana

Au hizi Vita za kijingajinga, ndio dalili ya siku za mwisho?
"akili ndogo sana" upo mkuu,..siku nyingi kweli,


Nitakuja kukusabahi,
 
Hii shughuli bila Shaka itakua imefanywa na HIMARS

Melitopol, temporarily occupied by Russian troops, a powerful explosion rang out near the airfield today.
"The occupiers in Melitopol are clearly jealous of Chornobayivka, so they keep smoking at the airfield. A powerful explosion was just recorded there. We hope that the ruscists are gone, as well as their equipment. We are waiting for good news from the Armed Forces of Ukraine!" Melitopol Mayor Ivan Fedorov posted on Telegram.

As reported, the enemy equipment is constantly being rotated through the temporarily captured Melitopol in Zaporizhzhia region. Earlier, the Melitopol mayor said that the Russian military were taking their families out of the town massively. Collaborators also try to leave for Crimea.
 

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Kwani air defence systems haziwezi kutungua makombora ya HIMARS? Kama ni ndiyo hizo systems za kulinda anga za nini sasa? Mwenye kujua atufafanulie kitaaluma kabisaaaaa!
 
Kama umesoma economics, kuna jamaa anaitwa friedman - huyu jamaa anakwambia US ndo taifa pekee duniani ambalo linaweza kufunga mipaka na kufanya biashara ndani kwa ndani for years.
Unajua information za u super power wa Usa , zipo bali wengi wetu hatufatilii ndo maana kuna watu wana under eatimate power ya Usa. Mwaka 1997 kulikuwa na mvutano mkubwa baina ya bunge na bajeti ya wizara ya ulinzi, juu ya ujenzi wa ndege ya kivita , Northrop Grumman, wizara ilikuwa inataka bajeti ya kutengeneza ndege 50 kwa mwaka , na bunge lilikuwa linataka ziitengenezwe ndege 5 kwa mwaka ,, ndege hii moja kwa miaka ile ilikuwa inagharimu karibu dola bilioni 2.1
 
Kiufupi
HIMARS ni mfumo mzima wa kurusha maroketi pia Makombora.

Ina Rocket za M31 ambazo ndo Ukraine imepewa, zina range 80km.
Pia inaweza kurusha Makombora makubwa kama Army Tactical Missile (ATACMS) ambalo hili linakwenda umbali Hadi 300km likiwa na mlipuko mkubwa zaidi,hili tunaweza fananisha na kombora la Urusi linaitwa Iskander.
Na sasa wanatengeza kombora jipya "Precision Strike Missile" nalo litarushwa kupitia HIMARS,zitaanza kutumika kuanzia mwakani Range yake ni 500km.

Himars sio mfumo mpya Marekani imeutumia Sana kwenye vita ilizopigana Kama kule Iraq, Afghanistan,nk. Kinachofanya iwe deadly ni uwezo wake wa kurusha Makombora na kukimbia,wenyewe wanaita Shoot and Scoot (Unaweza Rusha Maroketi yote sita ndani ya sekunde 20 na kukimbia). Hivyo ni vigumu Kwa adui kujua mfumo upo wapi pia si rahisi kwa adui kuziharibu,ndio maana ikaitwa High Mobility Artillery Rocket launchers System (HIMARS).

Maroketi yake Yana speed Sana yanakimbia Kwa Kasi ya mara mbili zaidi ya sauti (Mach 2) hayafuati ballistic trajectory pia yana Radar cross section ndogo hivyo inakua ngumu kwa mifumo ya adui kuyatungua ndio maana unaona kule Ukraine maghala ya silaha ya Urusi na command posts zinalipuliwa na HIMARS na air defense system zinapata taabu kuyadaka haya maroketi.

Maroketi yake yanatumia GPS kufikia target. Na Kama ikatokea GPS imekua jammed pia yana uwezo wa kupiga target kupitia INS.
Kwa kuongezea tuu gharama ya kombora moja la Himas ni USD 160,000 yakiwa 6 ni 960,000usd sasa fikiria pigo moja in around billion 2 za kibongo ,watu tukiwaambia vita gharama wanaona masihara,vita iishe tuu mapema maana Fujo ni nying dunia ilikua imetulia zake ila korona na Russia wamekua mwiba
 
Kwa kuongezea tuu gharama ya kombora moja la Himas ni USD 160,000 yakiwa 6 ni 960,000usd sasa fikiria pigo moja in around billion 2 za kibongo ,watu tukiwaambia vita gharama wanaona masihara,vita iishe tuu mapema maana Fujo ni nying dunia ilikua imetulia zake ila korona na Russia wamekua mwiba
USA na NATO Walisema watawapa. Misaada Ukraine kwa. Miaka mitano. Russia lazima awe masikini tuu.
 
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