<p>Lagging behind Russia in developing hypersonic weapons, the US Navy is rushing to field its first, with installation on a warship starting as soon as late next year.</p>.<p>The United States is in a race with Russia and China to develop these weapons, which travel at speeds akin to ballistic missiles but are difficult to shoot down because of their maneuverability.</p>.<p>The Russian military says it already deployed hypersonic missiles and claimed Saturday to have used one for the first time in combat against a target in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The Pentagon couldn't confirm a hypersonic weapon was used in the attack.</p>.<p>The American military is accelerating development to catch up.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/explained-what-are-hypersonic-missiles-1092950.html" target="_blank">Explained | What are hypersonic missiles?</a></strong></p>.<p>The US weapon would launch like a ballistic missile and would release a hypersonic glide vehicle that would reach speeds seven to eight times faster than the speed of sound before hitting the target.</p>.<p>In Maine, General Dynamics subsidiary Bath Iron Works has begun engineering and design work on changes necessary to install the weapon system on three Zumwalt-class destroyers.</p>.<p>The work would begin at a yet-to-be-named shipyard sometime in fiscal year that begins in October 2023, the Navy said.</p>.<p>Hypersonic weapons are defined as anything travelling beyond Mach 5, or five times faster than the speed of sound.</p>.<p>That's about 3,800 mph. Intercontinental ballistic missiles far exceed that threshold but travel in a predictable path, making it possible to intercept them.</p>.<p>The new weapons are maneuverable.</p>.<p>Existing missile defense systems, including the Navy's Aegis system, would have trouble intercepting such objects because maneuverability makes their movement unpredictable and speed leaves little time to react.</p>.<p>Russia says it has ballistic missiles that can deploy hypersonic glide vehicles as well as a hypersonic cruise missile.</p>.<p>The US is “straining just to catch up” because it failed to invest in the new technology, with only a fraction of the 10,000 people who were working on the programme in the 1980s, said US Rep. Jim Cooper, a Tennessee Democrat who's chair of a subcommittee that monitors the program.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/10-million-have-fled-their-homes-in-ukraine-un-1093055.html" target="_blank">10 million have fled their homes in Ukraine: UN</a></strong></p>.<p>“If we want to pursue parity, we will need to back this effort with more money, time, and talent than we are now,” he said.</p>.<p>The Russian invasion of Ukraine serves as a backdrop as the Pentagon releases its budget proposal that lays out its goals for hypersonics and other weapon systems later this month.</p>.<p>The three stealthy Zumwalt-class destroyers to be equipped with the new weapons have plenty of space to accommodate them — thanks to a design failure that works to the Navy's advantage in this instance.</p>.<p>The ships were built around a gun system that was supposed to use GPS-guided, rocket-boosted projectiles to pound targets 145 kilometers away.</p>.<p>But those projectiles proved to be too expensive, and the Navy cancelled the system, leaving each of the ships with a useless loading system and a pair of 155-mm guns hidden in angular turrets.</p>.<p>The retrofit of all three ships will likely cost more than $1 billion but will give a new capability to the tech-laden, electric-drive ships that already cost the Navy $23.5 billion to design and build, said Bryan Clark, a defense analyst at the Hudson Institute.</p>.<p>“The engineering is not that hard. It'll just take time and money to make it happen,” Clark said.</p>.<p>The Navy intends to field the weapons on the destroyers in the 2025 fiscal year and on Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarines in the 2028 fiscal year, the Navy said.</p>.<p>The destroyers would be based in the Pacific Ocean, where they would be a deterrent to China, should it become emboldened by Russia's attack on Ukraine and consider attacking Taiwan, Clark said.</p>.<p>The US focus on hypersonic weapons represents a pivot after hesitating in the past because of technological hurdles. Adversaries, meanwhile, continued research and development.</p>.<p>Russia fired off a salvo of Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles in late December, heralding the completion of weapon testing.</p>.<p>But Russia may be exaggerating the capability of such super weapons to compensate for weakness in other areas, said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute.</p>.<p>For the time being, Russia doesn't have many of the weapons, and it's unclear how effective they are, he said. </p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Lagging behind Russia in developing hypersonic weapons, the US Navy is rushing to field its first, with installation on a warship starting as soon as late next year.</p>.<p>The United States is in a race with Russia and China to develop these weapons, which travel at speeds akin to ballistic missiles but are difficult to shoot down because of their maneuverability.</p>.<p>The Russian military says it already deployed hypersonic missiles and claimed Saturday to have used one for the first time in combat against a target in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The Pentagon couldn't confirm a hypersonic weapon was used in the attack.</p>.<p>The American military is accelerating development to catch up.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/explained-what-are-hypersonic-missiles-1092950.html" target="_blank">Explained | What are hypersonic missiles?</a></strong></p>.<p>The US weapon would launch like a ballistic missile and would release a hypersonic glide vehicle that would reach speeds seven to eight times faster than the speed of sound before hitting the target.</p>.<p>In Maine, General Dynamics subsidiary Bath Iron Works has begun engineering and design work on changes necessary to install the weapon system on three Zumwalt-class destroyers.</p>.<p>The work would begin at a yet-to-be-named shipyard sometime in fiscal year that begins in October 2023, the Navy said.</p>.<p>Hypersonic weapons are defined as anything travelling beyond Mach 5, or five times faster than the speed of sound.</p>.<p>That's about 3,800 mph. Intercontinental ballistic missiles far exceed that threshold but travel in a predictable path, making it possible to intercept them.</p>.<p>The new weapons are maneuverable.</p>.<p>Existing missile defense systems, including the Navy's Aegis system, would have trouble intercepting such objects because maneuverability makes their movement unpredictable and speed leaves little time to react.</p>.<p>Russia says it has ballistic missiles that can deploy hypersonic glide vehicles as well as a hypersonic cruise missile.</p>.<p>The US is “straining just to catch up” because it failed to invest in the new technology, with only a fraction of the 10,000 people who were working on the programme in the 1980s, said US Rep. Jim Cooper, a Tennessee Democrat who's chair of a subcommittee that monitors the program.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/10-million-have-fled-their-homes-in-ukraine-un-1093055.html" target="_blank">10 million have fled their homes in Ukraine: UN</a></strong></p>.<p>“If we want to pursue parity, we will need to back this effort with more money, time, and talent than we are now,” he said.</p>.<p>The Russian invasion of Ukraine serves as a backdrop as the Pentagon releases its budget proposal that lays out its goals for hypersonics and other weapon systems later this month.</p>.<p>The three stealthy Zumwalt-class destroyers to be equipped with the new weapons have plenty of space to accommodate them — thanks to a design failure that works to the Navy's advantage in this instance.</p>.<p>The ships were built around a gun system that was supposed to use GPS-guided, rocket-boosted projectiles to pound targets 145 kilometers away.</p>.<p>But those projectiles proved to be too expensive, and the Navy cancelled the system, leaving each of the ships with a useless loading system and a pair of 155-mm guns hidden in angular turrets.</p>.<p>The retrofit of all three ships will likely cost more than $1 billion but will give a new capability to the tech-laden, electric-drive ships that already cost the Navy $23.5 billion to design and build, said Bryan Clark, a defense analyst at the Hudson Institute.</p>.<p>“The engineering is not that hard. It'll just take time and money to make it happen,” Clark said.</p>.<p>The Navy intends to field the weapons on the destroyers in the 2025 fiscal year and on Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarines in the 2028 fiscal year, the Navy said.</p>.<p>The destroyers would be based in the Pacific Ocean, where they would be a deterrent to China, should it become emboldened by Russia's attack on Ukraine and consider attacking Taiwan, Clark said.</p>.<p>The US focus on hypersonic weapons represents a pivot after hesitating in the past because of technological hurdles. Adversaries, meanwhile, continued research and development.</p>.<p>Russia fired off a salvo of Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles in late December, heralding the completion of weapon testing.</p>.<p>But Russia may be exaggerating the capability of such super weapons to compensate for weakness in other areas, said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute.</p>.<p>For the time being, Russia doesn't have many of the weapons, and it's unclear how effective they are, he said. </p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>