Aerial Warfare

Royal Australian Artillery Received National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS)

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Royal Australian Artillery Received National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS)
Royal Australian Artillery Received National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS)

After waiting years for a glimpse of Army’s newest air-defence system, 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, gunners got their first look at the National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS) during a trial and certification activity last month near Jervis Bay. Air defenders were invited to get hands-on with the equipment during the activity, which was designed to test system components before the regiment takes initial delivery this month. Qualification training is set to start soon after. 16th Regiment will relocate from Woodside Barracks to new purpose-built facilities at RAAF Edinburgh once construction is complete. The regiment is expected to field two batteries once full operational capability is reached by 2026.

Soldiers from 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, NASAMS training team, demonstrate the operation of the NASAMS Mk II Canister Launcher. Photos: Corporal Jacob Joseph
Soldiers from 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, NASAMS training team, demonstrate the operation of the NASAMS Mk II Canister Launcher. (Photo by Corporal Jacob Joseph/Australian Government Department of Defence)

“The introduction into service of NASAMS represents a step change in ground-based air defence capability for the ADF, providing the ability to sense and effect at much greater ranges with state-of-the-art equipment. The whole team is very excited about this journey. This familiarisation activity is about allowing those conducting the initial training to learn more about the equipment and interact with the CASG and Defence Industry teams – it was a very valuable trip,” Commander 110th Battery Major Brett Watson said.

“We’ve been waiting for NASAMS for quite some time, so it’s good to finally see the equipment and get it going. I’m really looking forward to seeing the first missile live-fire, but even just doing the tests, getting it slewing and opening the missile-bay doors was really cool to watch,” Lance-Bombardier Mitchell North said.

Sergeant Brett Little, from 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, 110 Air Defence Battery, inside the NASAMS Fire Distribution Centre at the Beecroft Weapons Range, NSW.
Sergeant Brett Little, from 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, 110 Air Defence Battery, inside the NASAMS Fire Distribution Centre at the Beecroft Weapons Range, NSW. (Photo by Corporal Jacob Joseph/Australian Government Department of Defence)

NASAMS is used by more than a dozen militaries, including the US and Ukraine. Army will operate an enhanced version of the Norwegian design, which includes Australian radar technology, a Hawkei-based launcher and infrared/optical sensor. A mixture of AMRAAM or Sidewinder missiles can be loaded on a Hawkei high-mobility launcher; or MK II canister launcher, deployed from a HX77 heavy truck enabling mission flexibility with up to six missiles carried per platform. Each troop will operate three canister or high-mobility launchers and 110th Battery will be the first kitted out with NASAMS. NASAMS is capable of operating independently, but will also be integrated with joint air-defence under the future Project AIR 6500, which will synchronise capabilities to provide layered air defence.

Royal Australian Artillery Received National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System (NASAMS)
Army soldiers from 16th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, receive training on a NASAMS Mk II Canister Launcher at the Beecroft Weapons Range. (Photo by Corporal Jacob Joseph/Australian Government Department of Defence)
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