The missile that stopped a Iran-bound tanker: Why the 'Hellfire' remains a US military mainstay

The missile that stopped a Iran-bound tanker: Why the 'Hellfire' remains a US military mainstay
Photo credit: X/@refueled
The AGM-114 Hellfire missile has come under attention after United States military released footage of a precision strike on Botswana-flagged oil tanker M/T Lexie in Persian Gulf. According to US Central Command (CENTCOM), the tanker was intercepted while heading toward Iran’s Kharg Island, the country’s main oil terminal.
The US military alleged that the vessel ignored repeated warnings, and in response US aircraft strike the engine room, disabling the tanker without sinking it. The incident is latest flash point in the ongoing conflict between Washington and Tehran.
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HellfireThe AGM-114 Hellfire, manufactured by Lockheed Martin, is a precision- guided air-to-air surface missile. The Cold-war era missile was designed to destroy Soviet Union’s vast tank armies, has evolved into to multirole weapons capable of engaging wide variety of targets with exceptional accuracy.The Hellfire entered service in 1984 and extensively used from Apache helicopters since then. The rise of armed drones after the 9/11 attacks, transformed the missile, with Predator and Reaper drones carrying hellfire in operations across Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Yemen.
Hellfire Missile
Hellfire Missile
The Hellfire is built to deliver accurate strikes while minimizing collateral damage. Its specification include:· Its around 1.63 meters (64 inches) long and weighs between 45kg and 49kg depending on the variant.· It uses a solid-fuel rocket motor for propulsion and reaches to the speeds of Mach 1.3 (1600 km/h).· Depending on the variant, the hellfire can engage the targets between 7km and 11km away.· The missile carries an 8-9 kg warhead of different types including HEAT anti-tank, blast-fragmentation and thermobaric for different mission requirements.· The missile uses semi-active laser guidance and millimeter- wave radar for guidance.· The missile can be fired from a wide range of platforms including Apache helicopters, Predator drones, Reaper drones, fixed wing aircraft, naval vessels and ground-based launchers.Modern conflict increasingly demands accurate strikes with limited collateral damage. Rather than destroying the vessel outright, the strike only disabled the critical component.The recent strike on M/T Lexie tanker using hellfire illustrate why even after 40 years of entering in service hellfire remains the mainstay of US military arsenal. It bridges the gap between destructive power and precision, ensuring its relevance on battlefield.
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