The Sunday Telegraph

UK to deploy hypersonic missile by 2030

- By Tony Diver US EDITOR

BRITAIN plans to equip the Armed Forces with a homegrown hypersonic cruise missile by the end of the decade, The Sunday Telegraph has learnt.

Military bosses want a weapon capable of reaching speeds exceeding Mach 5 as the Government races to catch up with China, Russia and the US.

The Ministry of Defence has insisted that the weapon be designed and built entirely in Britain, and is understood to have set a deadline of 2030 for it to enter service.

A planned £75billion increase in the defence budget over the next six years could be used to help fund the project, Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, believes. A Government defence source said: “Cutting-edge projects like this are only possible because of the massive new investment the Government has made this week in defence innovation.

“With Labour refusing to match our investment, continuing this project would be impossible under Keir Starmer – the military would be forced to cut the hypersonic programme, in a move that would make Putin’s dreams come true.”

The missile plans are understood to be at an early stage, with no decision taken on whether it would be launched from land, sea or air.

One option is a weapon that could be fitted to a fighter jet, such as a Typhoon or F-35, which would have a shorter range and smaller payload than a larger weapon launched from the ground. The missile could also be launched from one of the UK’s warships.

The project is being managed directly by MoD headquarte­rs in Whitehall rather than by one of the three armed services.

Since late last year, the MoD has been running a consortium of around 80 companies to come up with possible designs. The Hypersonic Technologi­es and Capability Developmen­t Framework Agreement was launched in December in what has been described as a “national mission”.

Sources involved in the project said the constructi­on of the missiles would be especially difficult because some of the materials required do not yet exist, and must be developed from scratch to withstand the high temperatur­es that come with hypersonic speeds.

Engineers are also working on a British version of a “scramjet” engine, which uses compressed air moving at supersonic speeds to aid the combustion of liquid or solid fuel.

The MoD declined to comment in detail on the plans, citing national security concerns, but a spokesman said: “We are pursuing hypersonic technologi­es to further develop UK sovereign advanced capabiliti­es. We continue to invest in our equipment to meet current and future threats.”

Most missile projects work as internatio­nal collaborat­ions between the UK

and at least one foreign ally, making the hypersonic cruise missile project unusual.

A separate project could see the UK acquire an even faster and more sophistica­ted type of hypersonic weapon, known as a glide vehicle, via the Aukus partnershi­p with the US and Australia.

Hypersonic missiles, which operate at significan­tly faster speeds than standard cruise missiles, have the ability to evade an opponent’s air defences by travelling at more than 4,000 miles per hour and manoeuvrin­g in mid-flight.

The US has already successful­ly tested a hypersonic cruise missile it says is vital to keep pace with technology in Russia and China, which both claim to have developed similar technology. Joe Biden, the US president, has described Russian hypersonic missiles launched at Ukrainian cities as being “almost impossible to stop”.

The US has several hypersonic missile programmes. They have suffered months of delays and failures, but a recent test flight over the Pacific Ocean was a success, and Washington hopes to have its first hypersonic weapons in service as early as next year.

Earlier this month, North Korea claimed it had successful­ly tested a new hypersonic missile that could evade air defences, but this has been called “greatly exaggerate­d”. China has developed land, sea and air-based hypersonic weapons, including the DF-ZF glide vehicle that entered service in 2018 and is said to be capable of speeds approachin­g Mach 10. At that speed, a missile could in theory travel the circumfere­nce of the Earth in about three hours.

Western experts have cast doubt on claims by Russia and North Korea to have produced a true hypersonic missile, with Moscow’s Kinzhal claim to the title dubbed “at best questionab­le”.

The UK is prepared to invest up to £1 billion in its hypersonic project through the defence consortium in the next seven years, but sources said missiles could be purchased from the US if a future defence review found a more urgent need. Once the UK has developed its own hypersonic weapon, it will be shared with the US and Australia in exchange for collaborat­ion on projects including AI, quantum technology, hypersonic­s and undersea drones.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom