Marines Seek Anti-Ship HIMARS: High Cost, Hard Mission
  By  Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.  on November 14, 2017 For the first time since December 1941, when Wake Island’s shore gunners sank the invading destroyer  Hayate, Marine Corps artillery wants to kill ships. That could be a big boost for the Navy, which confronts ever more powerful  Russian and Chinese fleets.
    Army artillery  is also exploring anti-ship missiles, and the Marines may buy the same  one. The difference is that it’s the Marines who work most closely with  the Navy and who  land in hostile territory to seize  forward bases  to support the fleet. That role makes Marines the first choice for the  first wave, while the larger but slower Army provides backup.
  t also means the Marines need a highly mobile system that can come  ashore with the grunts and keep moving to evade retaliatory fire while  staying connected to Navy fire control  networks.  That’s a much more demanding mission than static coastal defense, the  role of most anti-ship missile batteries around the world from  Norway to  Japan. 
  While the Marines haven’t committed to buying anything yet, they have requested information papers from industry,  due on Nov. 30th, exploring a wide range of options. It might be the Army’s  ATACMs, the Norwegian  Naval Strike Missile,  or something else. Based on interviews with four Marine officials,  however, it’s clear they’d prefer a missile that can be fired from their  existing HIMARS launcher, the truck-based  High-Mobility Artillery Rocket System.  Why? Because even if the Marines buy the minimum of new equipment for  this new mission, it’s going to be “incredibly expensive” and tactically  challenging.     For a small service like the Marine Corps, anti-ship missiles are  “incredibly expensive,” said Kevin McConnell, deputy director of fires  and maneuver on the Marine’s  Combat Development & Integration  staff. “Even if you consider (doing) a coordinated procurement with the  Navy, it still becomes something far larger….than anything we’ve ever  undertaken for ground (forces).”
  A missile meant to find and a hit moving target, like a ship, is much  more costly than one that just has to strike static GPS coordinates.  Prices depend on variant and production run, but reported costs for the  standard Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) missile, used by  both the Marines and Army, range from about $100,000 to  $200,000 a shot. The larger Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS), fired from the same HIMARS and MLRS launchers, costs roughly  $750,000 to  $820,000.  In contrast, McConnell told me, “your bottom-basement going rate on a  Harpoon missile or a Naval Strike Missile is somewhere around $1.5  million.”
   But buying the missile is just the start. You need to integrate it  with a launcher, a fire control network and a supply chain. Don’t forget  training and wargames and staff planning.
   “This type of mission is well beyond anything Marine artillery  currently does, so, in some regards, in my opinion, finding the right  piece of ordnance is the easy part,” said Pete Dowsett, the senior  analyst for HIMARS in the Fires program at  Marine Corps Systems Command.  “The more complicated part is the logistics tail… the training…how do  those fire missions come from a sensor that we’re not normally linked  to…. It’s a pretty complex problem.”
   Above all, the Marines told me, their new anti-ship mission must work  with and for the Navy. That requires “integration into the naval  cooperative engagement network,” McConnell said. “I can’t fathom trying  to locate and shoot at ships without the Navy running that show.”
  Serving the Navy
   For decades, the Navy has helped Marines land and fight ashore — as  far inland as Afghanistan. Now the Marine Corps wants to return the  favor by helping clear the seas.
   Even 10 years ago, the Navy didn’t need the help. Now it does.  Regional powers like Iran threaten coastal waters with shore-based  missiles and short-ranged but high-speed patrol boats. Near-peers like  Russia and China boost their ocean-going battle fleets with submarines,  destroyers, and even aircraft carriers.
   “For the past 70 years, the US Navy has had undisputed sea control  when it wanted. That’s no longer the case,” said Art Corbett, who works  in the concepts division of the  Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory. For the Marines, he said, “the last time we fought for sea control with the Navy was the Solomons campaign” in 1942.
  The two services’ joint concept for  Littoral Operations in a Contested Environment  (LOCE, pronounced “Loki”) is reviving this concept of Marines  supporting the fleet. “Any time Marines are going to be pointing  missiles seaward, we’re going to be doing this, probably, at the  direction of and in coordination with the Navy,” Corbett said. “This is…  a naval, networked capability.”
   Sharing targeting data with the fleet, Marine Corps anti-ship  missiles would be in many ways an extension of the Navy’s Distributed  Lethality concept. Distributed Lethality seeks to upgun every possible  platform at sea — “ if it floats, it fights”  — including lightweight Littoral Combat Ships and even currently  unarmed auxiliaries, to multiply both the Navy’s options and an enemy’s  problems.
   The Marines would provide additional “distributed” firepower from  Expeditionary Advance Bases. Carved out of hostile territory by landing forces, kept small and camouflaged to avoid enemy fire, EABs would support  F-35B jump jets, V-22 tiltrotors, and drones,  as well as anti-ship missiles for the fleet. It’s a high-tech version  of Henderson Field on Guadalcanal (part of the Solomons) in 1942. Like  Henderson Field, the EABs would provide a permanent presence ashore,  inside the contested zone, to support Navy ships as they move in and out  to raid and withdraw. The forces ashore are the anvil; the fleet is the  hammer.
   Shore-based anti-ship missiles wouldn’t be as mobile as ones on  ships. But they might be more survivable. Islands don’t sink, after all.  Plus, especially in jungle, mountainous, or urban terrain, the land  provides far more hiding spaces for a truck-sized HIMARS than the open  sea provides for a  400-foot-long ship.  Once you launch a rocket, however, the enemy can see your location on  radar and infra-red, so the missile batteries must practice “shoot and  scoot” tactics: move to a firing point, launch, and move again to a  hiding place before enemy retaliation rains down.
   Executing such operations in practice, however, requires specialized and costly technology.
  Technology & Its Limitations
   The good news is that lots of friendly countries already have  shore-based anti-ship missiles. The bad news is they may not fit with  how the Marine Corps wants to operate: mobile, flexible, and aggressive.
   The Marine Corps  Request For Information asks  for the state of the art because “we know many nations around the  Pacific, many in Europe…have all had this kind of capability for  decades,” McConnell said. “We would like to make sure it aligns with the  Marine Corps concepts of being expeditionary, being able to move at  will and being transportable by a variety of means. That was the subject  of the RFI.”
   “Several nations…. have created this standalone capability,”  McConnell said (emphasis ours). “They command and control the missile,  the radars, the sensors, in a unit that (only) does that kind of  mission, that is permanently oriented on — to use an old term — coastal  defense.”
   “That kind of exquisite solution” — tailored for a single mission —  is probably too expensive and too inflexible for the Marines, McConnell  continued. Neither the Marines nor the Army can create a whole new type  of unit for “a niche capability,” he said. Instead, the goal is to add  anti-ship capability to existing rocket artillery without taking away  any of its current capabilities to strike targets ashore.
   There are two ways to do this, said Joe McPherson, deputy program  manager for fires (i.e. artillery) at Marine Corps Systems Command: “One  is modifying our existing missiles and the other would be trying to  attempt to bring in missiles that already do this mission.”
  Preferably, any new missile would be able to fire from the existing  Army and Marine Corps launchers, the wheeled HIMARS and tracked MLRS. “I  wouldn’t at this point exclude something like  Raytheon-Kongsberg Naval Strike Missile,” said McConnell. “There is a potential that it’s capable of being modified to fire from a HIMARS.”
   The Kongsberg NSM is competing for the Navy’s Over-The Horizon (OTH) weapon, which will go on  the Littoral Combat Ship and future frigates.  The Marines are working closely with the Navy, McPherson told me, and  the specifications they’ve set are sufficiently close to the Marine  Corps’ needs that “whatever missile they pick” is worth considering for a  joint buy, which would significantly reduce costs.
   Another potential joint buy is with the Army. In the short term, the  Army and the Pentagon’s Strategic Capabilities Office are upgrading the  ATACMS,  the biggest missile the HIMARS and MLRS can launch, with a range of  roughly 187 miles. The long-term solution might be the Army’s  Long-Range Precision Fires (LRPF) missile, supposed to be be half the size with 67 percent more range.
   However, the  Marine Corps RFI  only asks for “ranges of 80 miles or greater,” which means they are at  least considering lighter, cheaper missiles that a unit could carry more  of, trading range for staying power. The Marines are also willing to  consider a less sophisticated and therefore less expensive warhead: one  good enough to destroy small craft, like missile boats, and damage  larger vessels, but probably unable to penetrate the defenses of a  full-size warship with sufficient precision to deliver a killing blow.
  “That might be the capability we end up with,” McConnell told me.  “That might be enough.” (Especially, I might add, if Army units fire  longer-ranged ATACMS or LRPF missiles from further back).
   Would an 80-mile missile be useful? Absolutely, said  Bryan Clark, a retired Navy commander now with the  Center for Strategic & Budgetary Assessments. “The 80 (nautical mile) minimum range could be relevant in scenarios in the  Persian Gulf,  Mediterranean, and possibly the  South China Sea,”  all relatively narrow waterways, he said. “That would be enough to  threaten ships beyond realistic ranges for enemy helicopters and assault  craft to attack the EAB (in retaliation).”
   The downside is that even an 80-mile missile would need a relatively  large launcher, like the HIMARS, and despite having “High Mobility” in  its name, Clark is not sure the 12-ton truck is mobile enough for  Expeditionary Advance Base operations. (The tracked MLRS is more mobile  over rough terrain but weighs 22 tons). “I hope responses to the RFI will address mobility of the fires launcher,” he said.
   “The main thing we’re looking for is really what’s in the realm of  the possible, both near-term solutions and far-term,” McPherson said of  the RFI. Once the data comes back in December, the Marine officials  said, they’ll look at their options and start work on an  official requirement.
  breakingdefense.com |