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US Army Space and Missile Defense Command Team Launch Black Daggers During Tests

The U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command (SMDC) target team leads the way for missile defense. The SMDC Technical Center’s Test Team launched two Black Dagger targets in support of missile defense from Fort Wingate, New Mexico, during March. The first launch supporting Integrated Fires Mission Command as part of Program Executive Office for Missiles and Space launched, March 12, and the second test supporting the Missile Defense Agency rocketed skyward, March 29. The second test supporting MDA’s Flight Test Terminal High Altitude Area Defense Weapon System-21 demonstrated the integration of an intercept flight test of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense weapon system, which fired two Patriot Advanced Capability-3 Missile Segment Enhanced interceptors against a Black Dagger.

“Both launches were extremely successful and met all target mission objectives. This was most definitely a team effort to fly both of these missions only a couple of weeks apart. We had some team members spend up to six straight weeks in the field, and most dealt with multiple deployments. I’m extremely proud of the entire team. We battled the elements: snow, ice, single digit temperatures on launch day, and several days of 40-50 mph winds. Add the elements on top of the technical challenges associated with launching missiles, and it creates a very complex problem.,” said Cain Crouch, chief of SMDC Tech Center’s Targets Division.

SMDC’s low-cost Black Dagger targets were used during the tests. The low-cost target consists of a Mark 70 Terrier first stage and a M124 second stage. Black Dagger is designed to fly a short-range ballistic missile flight path and built as a ballistic missile target capable of threat-matching for use in advanced missile defense systems testing. The Black Dagger, previously known as Boosted Zombie, target program started in 2013 as a Central Test and Evaluation Investment Program project. SMDC Test Execution Support Division developed the Black Dagger target, along with Sabre Zombie and Pathfinder Zombie targets as a suite of low-cost targets using government-owned rocket components that have reached the end of their useful life. Rather than demilitarizing the rocket components, TESD re-purposes the hardware, thereby, saving taxpayer money.

Black Dagger targets are threat representative SRBM targets designed to take old hardware set to be destroyed, and reuse it as target hardware and both of these targets performed exceptionally well. Black Dagger targets are part of our Zombie targets family. All Zombie targets take old hardware set to be demilitarized, and reuse this hardware as targets. This allows us to provide targets at a much lower cost than if we had to start with all new hardware. Both targets were very successful,” she added. “These targets flew two different trajectories, and both performed exceptionally well. Our first look show that everything on the target performed nominally for both missions. With both launches happening within a month of each other, Bosse mentioned that despite all the difficulties, the team performed with professionalism and enthusiasm.

A Black Dagger low-cost target launches from Fort Wingate, New Mexico, March 12 during a mission supporting Integrated Fires Mission Command as part of Program Executive Office for Missiles and Space.
A Black Dagger low-cost target launches from Fort Wingate, New Mexico, March 12 during a mission supporting Integrated Fires Mission Command as part of Program Executive Office for Missiles and Space. (Photo by U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command )
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