- WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
United States has approved full-rate production of a new Hellfire missile
variant, touted by President George W. Bush for its ability to kill guerrillas
in urban settings, the missile's manufacturer said on Wednesday.
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- U.S. commanders in Iraq have asked for more of the rounds,
said Lt. Col. Kevin Curry, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon, who added
that early versions had already been used there in "limited numbers."
More than 1,870 Americans have been killed in Iraq since the war began
in March 2003.
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- The "thermobaric" Hellfire AGM-114N warhead
creates an intense, sustained pressure wave that can strike around corners
in "caves, bunkers and hardened multi-room complexes," the manufacturer,
Lockheed Martin Corp., said.
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- The Bush administration and Lockheed Martin, the Pentagon's
No. 1 supplier, have described the 27.5-pound (12.4-kg) warhead as highly
lethal in enclosed structures while causing only minimal damage nearby.
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- "In the coming years, there are going to be some
awfully surprised terrorists when the thermobaric Hellfire comes knocking,"
Bush said in a May 27 commencement address at the U.S. Naval Academy.
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- Lockheed is supplying the Army with 900 AGM-114N warheads
under a $90 million pre-production contract awarded in December. The contract
also included 180 AGM-114K missiles, the high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT)
round and conversion of 100 HEAT rounds to the thermobaric configuration.
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- The AGM-114N is one of four variants of the Hellfire
2 family of missiles that has been used in Iraq, with more than 1,000 missiles
fired to date, said Lockheed Martin's Orlando, Florida-based Missiles and
Fire Control business unit.
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- Unlike conventional warheads, which unleash a sharp pressure
spike that decays quickly, the thermobaric round includes a highly flammable,
fluorinated aluminum powder to make its explosion push harder and last
longer.
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- Designed, developed and built at Naval Air Systems Command
in China Lake, California, the thermobaric round was put on a fast track
to full production, said Jennifer Allen, a Lockheed spokeswoman.
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