Fri, Sep 26, 2003
Translation: 'Don't Mess With It'
The U.S. Navy has given the Raytheon Company-developed Evolved
SEASPARROW Missile (ESSM) its highest assessment, "suitable and
effective." This assessment, from the U.S. Navy's Commander,
Operational Testing and Evaluation Forces, comes shortly after the
conclusion of the Operational Testing and Evaluation (OPEVAL)
conducted earlier this year and paves the way for a full-rate
production decision scheduled for later this month.
In March 2003, the Navy conducted two successful Technical
Evaluation (TECHEVAL) firings of ESSM from the USS Shoup (DDG 86).
The subsequent OPEVAL (Operational Evaluation) tested not only the
missile, but the ship's system, launcher and crew.
"The deployment of the Evolved SEASPARROW Missile will bring
added safety to U.S. Navy ships and sailors and the ships and
sailors of our consortium partners," said Capt. Barney Cramp,
Project Manager for the NATO SEASPARROW Program Office. "ESSM has
been a unique and innovative program, pooling the requirements and
resources of 10 nations to develop a much-needed capability more
economically than if any of the countries attempted to develop the
capability separately. ESSM has demonstrated time and again its
ability to destroy anti-ship missiles, current and projected, over
the course of its numerous at-sea flight tests both on the U.S.
Navy Self Defense Test Ship and on the USS Shoup."
ESSM is bringing transformational anti-ship missile defense
capabilities to the naval fleets of the United States and its NATO
allies. The missile is being developed for the U.S. Navy and nine
of the other 11 member nations of the NATO SEASPARROW Consortium.
ESSM will be deployed on Aegis Flight IIa Arleigh Burke-class
guided missile destroyers, Aegis Ticonderoga class cruisers,
aircraft carriers and the Navy's newest destroyer, DDX. Raytheon
began developing ESSM at its Missile Systems business in Tucson
(AZ), in 1995. Raytheon delivered the first production ESSM to the
Navy in September 2002.
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