Lockheed shoots down test drone using container-launched missile


June 3 (Reuters) - Defense ⁠major Lockheed Martin said on Wednesday that it ⁠had successfully launched a missile from a shipping ‌container and intercepted a test drone amid rising demand for low-cost counter-drone solutions.

The Pentagon has long backed containerized weapons systems deployed ​from standard shipping containers as ⁠a low-cost and mobile ⁠defense capability.

Here are some details:

• The joint-air-to-ground missile was launched ⁠from ‌a 10-foot container in a system called "GRIZZLY containerized launcher."

• It intercepted a one-way attack ⁠drone that can strike a target by ​crashing into ‌it.

• The launcher uses commercial off-the-shelf materials, reducing ⁠logistics footprint ​and acquisition cost.

• It can be mounted on ground sites or maritime platforms and hold up to eight munitions ⁠at once, allowing it to deliver ​a relatively large volume of fire.

• The missile test used sensors and software from Sanctum Counter-Unmanned Aerial System, ⁠jointly developed with Microsoft, as well as R-40 radars made by Utah-based startup Fortem Technologies to track and engage the target.

• The Pentagon had also signed ​a framework agreement with four ⁠other defense companies in May, including Leidos, to launch ​the Low-Cost Containerized Missiles program, which ‌aims to procure 10,000 missiles ​over three years, starting in 2027.

(Reporting by Aishwarya Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy Leo)

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