The United States Air Force recently conducted a live-warhead test of the “Rusty Dagger,” one of the two Extended Range Attack Munitions (ERAM) being developed under a crash programme.The ERAM is a standoff cruise missile, with over 3,000 units planned for supply to Ukraine. The “Rusty Dagger” was tested less than 16 months after the programme’s initial contract was awarded. In a statement on January 30, the USAF confirmed that the test, which took place on January 21, met all primary objectives, including a full warhead detonation, and provided critical data to advance a cost-effective, long-range strike capability. It described the ERAM as a “next-generation, air-launched cruise missile designed to provide affordable mass to the fight.” The missile delivers a precision-guided, stand-off capability against high-value fixed targets, fulfilling a critical operational need by offering a long-range, cost-effective strike option that can be rapidly produced in large numbers to strengthen US deterrence. Reports indicate that each ERAM missile would cost roughly $250,000 per shot, significantly lower than other long-range systems, which can run into millions for a single launch. Norway, the Netherlands, and Denmark will provide financial assistance to Ukraine to procure the missile system.
Trending
- The Ayyappa awaits: Sabarimala supreme’s sanctum nears Supreme Court’s final verdict | India News
- Elon Musk's xAI loses second cofounder in 48 hours
- NCERT textbook on ‘corruption in judiciary’ withdrawn after CJI rebuke: Report | India News
- New Zealand 0/0 in 0.0 Overs | New Zealand vs Sri Lanka Live Score, T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8: Sri Lanka win toss, opt to field first against New Zealand in must win game
- Ctet Re-Exam Date: CBSE announces CTET Paper-2 re-exam 2026 for affected candidates with new admit cards; check details here
- Vijay Deverakonda: Inside Vijay Deverakonda’s vacation cheat meals |
- UP’s power surge: From 6GW to 8.3GW capacity, 24/7 urban supply fuels industrial boom | India News
- Control Your Threads Feed With New Dear Algo Feature
