The US Air Force is turning cargo planes into flying munitions trucks able to unleash a mass of standoff weapons

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The US Air Force is turning cargo planes into flying munitions trucks able to unleash a mass of standoff weapons
A C-17 Globemaster III cargo plane sets off flaresU.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Zachary Wolf
  • The US Air Force has been experimenting with turning cargo and transport aircraft into munitions trucks able to drop large quantities of standoff weapons in bundles.
  • The Air Force Research Laboratory revealed Wednesday that Air Force Special Operations Command dropped nearly half a dozen palletized munitions out of a MC-130J multi-mission combat transport/special operations tanker in January.
  • The service has reportedly also conducted demonstration palletized munition drops with a C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft.
  • The Air Force said in February in a request for information on palletized munitions, sometimes called a "bomb bay in a box," that "delivering standoff type weapons in mass, from non-traditional delivery platforms, is one potential option to deliver mass firepower and could prove pivotal in future conflicts."
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The US Air Force has been experimenting with turning its cargo and transport planes into munitions trucks able to drop devastating bundles of standoff weaponry, the service has revealed.

The Air Force Research Laboratory said Wednesday that Air Force Special Operations Command successfully dropped simulated palletized munitions from a MC-130J Commando II multi-mission combat transport/special operations tanker in a test at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah in January.

The aircrew dropped five wooden pallets carrying six simulated munitions in three airdrops, ARFL said in a statement. The munitions pallets, also known as Combat Expendable Platforms, were deployed using a roller system.

Four of the six munitions on a pallet were simulated "Cargo Launch Expendable Air Vehicles with Extended Range (CLEAVERs)," which AFRL explained are "long-range, high-precision weapons" able to "destroy moving and non-moving targets."

The US Air Force is turning cargo planes into flying munitions trucks able to unleash a mass of standoff weapons
A pallet carrying CLEAVER deployed from MC-130J Aircraft.Air Force

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Col. Garry Haase, the director of AFRL's Munitions Directorate, said in a statement that "CLEAVER represents a different approach to launching large numbers of long-range weapons, which will bring a new dynamic to the high-end fight."

AFRL explained that the Air Force's palletized munition experimentation effort is intended to result in cargo and transport aircraft "carrying large quantities of network-enabled, semi-autonomous weapons."

Palletized munitions, described as a "bomb bay in a box" in a February request for information, could be released from outside the threat zone.

The RFI said that "delivering standoff type weapons in mass, from non-traditional delivery platforms, is one potential option to deliver mass firepower and could prove pivotal in future conflicts," especially against peer adversaries.

"It's all about capacity, and you've got to create enough capacity so that long-range punch is really a punch," Maj. Gen. Clint Hinote, deputy director of the Air Force Warfighting Integration Capability office, said of the strike concept at a Mitchell Institute event Wednesday, Breaking Defense reported.

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In addition to the MC-130J airdrop test, the Air Force has reportedly also tested the "palletized munitions" concept with a C-17 Globemaster III military transport aircraft.

"What we see is that no matter how big our bomber force is, the capacity that the joint force needs is always more and more," Hinote said Wednesday, according to Defense News. "This is why we think that there is a real possibility here for using cargo platforms to be able to increase the capacity of fires."

"We are in discussions right now about how do we proceed to prototyping and fielding," he said.

In future tests, ARFL revealed, AFSOC intends to release "CLEAVER glider vehicles, powered vehicles, and full-up vehicles with optional warhead and terminal guidance."

Read the original article on Business Insider
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