Albuquerque Journal

THOR, built in ABQ, is headed for base-defense testing by 2024

Army to invest in AFRL’s microwave anti-drone system

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The Army could be field-testing a new microwave weapon to protect military bases from swarms of incoming drones as soon as 2024, after an on-site demonstrat­ion of the system at Kirtland Air Force Base.

Army Lt. Gen. L. Neil Thurgood watched the weapon in action Feb. 11 in a remote canyon on the 52,000-acre base. The Air Force Research Laboratory’s Directed Energy Directorat­e at Kirtland built the system — called the Tactical High Power Operationa­l Responder, or THOR — to provide effective, immediate protection against multiple targets that simultaneo­usly threaten military installati­ons.

That’s a growing problem that requires new, modern tools to defend troops and infrastruc­ture, prompting the Army to invest in emerging “directed energy” systems, including

both microwave and laser weapons, said Thurgood, who heads Hypersonic­s, Directed Energy Space and Rapid Acquisitio­n and oversees the Army Rapid Capabiliti­es and Critical Technologi­es Office.

Laser weapons, however, are effective only against single targets, whereas microwave systems like THOR offer defense against many threats at once.

“The Army’s directed energy capabiliti­es will need to provide a layered defense with multiple ways to defeat incoming threats,” Thurgood said in a statement after watching THOR in operation. “Highenergy lasers kill one target at a time, and high-powered microwaves can kill groups or swarms, which is why we are pursuing a combinatio­n of both technologi­es.”

After meeting with THOR developers at Kirtland, Thurgood said the Army intends to invest in the system in partnershi­p with AFRL starting in fiscal year 2022, which begins in October, said Kelly Hammett, who heads AFRL’s Directed Energy Directorat­e.

The Army goal is to deploy THOR alongside laser defense and other systems for a platoon to test them directly in the field by FY 2024.

“They intend to procure enough systems for a platoon unit in 2024 to do experiment­ation with a mix of weapons,” Hammett told the Journal. “They will put microwave and lasers together in a single unit to assess how to deploy it all.”

Actual procuremen­t of multiple systems for the battlefiel­d likely won’t happen until 2026 at the earliest, because the goal now is to fully evaluate and further develop them into field-ready tools. But the testing that begins in 2024 will be directly imbedded in military operations.

“They’re not games,” Hammett said. “The weapons will be directly protecting soldiers at whatever scale is possible at that time.”

That marks a major milestone for the AFRL, and for the developmen­t of directed energy weapons in general. The AFRL has worked for decades to build laser defense systems in cooperatio­n with private defense contractor­s like Boeing and Northrop Grumman. And it’s worked for many years as well on microwave systems with national and local companies, including Raytheon Technologi­es Corp., before that company closed its Albuquerqu­e offices last year.

AFRL spent $15 million to build THOR in cooperatio­n with global engineerin­g firms BAE Systems and Leidos, and with the Albuquerqu­e firm Verus Research. It first unveiled the weapon in a live media demonstrat­ion in June 2019, allowing local journalist­s to watch and photograph the system as it effortless­ly knocked a hovering drone out of the sky with an invisible and inaudible electromag­netic wave. The microwave instantane­ously disables drone electronic­s, sending the vehicles tumbling to the ground.

The system works like a flashlight; the wave spreads out to disable anything within its electromag­netic cone, THOR program manager Amber Anderson said at the 2019 demonstrat­ion.

“The system output is powerful radio bursts, which offer a greater engagement range than bullets or nets, and its effects are silent and instantane­ous,” Anderson said in a statement following Thurgood’s Kirtland visit this month.

THOR’s microwave antennas and foundation are housed in a 20-foot shipping container that can be stowed in a military cargo plane and transporte­d on a flatbed truck. It can be assembled in the field by just two people in three hours, according to AFRL.

The user interface is designed for minimal training. A handheld remote control rotates the antennas in all directions as needed, providing 360-degree defense against drones. The firing mechanism and overall system control are operated from a laptop.

With the Army and AFRL now set to collaborat­e on further testing and developmen­t, more contract opportunit­ies will emerge for local and national companies, Hammett said. Requests for bids will be published as the next fiscal-year funding cycle approaches.

“We’ll make all the documents, specificat­ions and designs that we sunk into the current generation of technology available to private companies to do the work,” Hammett said. “We want to be poised for rapid success, not start from scratch.”

When the military actually begins procuring and deploying THOR, it could provide huge opportunit­ies for New Mexico companies to participat­e in manufactur­e and sale of the systems. But the state still needs to improve the local business environmen­t to win those investment­s, Hammett said.

“On the positive side, New Mexico does have a lot of available land, resources, know-how and worker expertise, which offers ready access to what’s needed,” Hammett said. “That makes Albuquerqu­e attractive, but landing those contracts is not a surety.”

 ?? JOHN COCHRAN/U.S. AIR FORCE ?? Army Rapid Capabiliti­es and Critical Technologi­es Office leaders enter the portable control center of AFRL’s Tactical High Power Operationa­l Responder to see the system’s drone-killing capabiliti­es.
JOHN COCHRAN/U.S. AIR FORCE Army Rapid Capabiliti­es and Critical Technologi­es Office leaders enter the portable control center of AFRL’s Tactical High Power Operationa­l Responder to see the system’s drone-killing capabiliti­es.

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