Everything about Precision-guided Munition totally explained
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Precision-guided munitions (
PGMs,
smart munitions,
smart bombs,
guided bomb units or
GBUs) are guided weapons intended to maximize damage to the target while minimizing civilian damage. Because the damage effects of an
explosive weapon fall off with distance according to a
power law, even modest improvements in accuracy (and hence reduction in miss distance) enable a target to be effectively attacked with fewer or smaller bombs. Thus, even if some bombs miss, fewer air crews are put at risk and the harm to civilians is somewhat reduced. The creation of precision-guided munitions resulted in the renaming of older bombs as "
gravity bombs", "dumb bombs" or "iron bombs".
Types of precision-guided ammunition
Recognizing the difficulty of hitting moving ships during the
Spanish Civil War, the Germans were first to develop steerable munitions, using
radio control or wire guidance. The U.S. tested
TV-guided (
GB-4),
semi-active radar-guided (
Bat), and
infrared-guided (
Felix) weapons.
Radio-controlled weapons
The Germans were first to introduce PGMs in combat, also, using the 1,400-kg (3,100 lb)
Fritz X to successfully attack the Italian
battleship Roma in 1943. The closest
Allied equivalent was the 1000-lb (450 kg)
AZON (AZimuth ONly). In addition, the U.S. tested the rocket-propelled
Gargoyle; it never entered service.
The
United States Army Air Force experimented with radio-controlled remotely guided planes in
Operation Aphrodite, but had few successes; the German
Mistel (Mistletoe) "parasite aircraft" was no more effective.
The U.S. programs restarted in the
Korean War, where nuclear war would have been unthinkable. In the
1960s, the
electro-optical bomb (or
camera bomb) was reintroduced. They were equipped with
television cameras and flare sights, by which the bomb would be steered until the flare superimposed the target. The camera bombs transmitted a "bomb's eye view" of the target back to a controlling aircraft. An operator in this aircraft then transmitted control signals to steerable fins fitted to the bomb. Such weapons were used increasingly by the
USAF in the last few years of the
Vietnam War because the political climate was increasingly intolerant of civilian casualties, and because it was possible to strike difficult targets (such as bridges) effectively with a single mission; the
Thanh Hoa Bridge, for instance, was attacked repeatedly with iron bombs, to no effect, only to be dropped in one mission with PGMs.
Although not as popular as the newer
JDAM and
JSOW weapons, or even the older
Laser-guided bomb systems, weapons like the
AGM-62 Walleye TV-guided bomb are still being used, in conjunction with the
AAW-144 Data Link Pod, on
US Navy F/A-18 Hornets.
Infrared-guided weapons
In World War Two, the U.S.
National Defense Research Committee developed the VB-6 Felix, which used infrared to home on ships. While it entered production in 1945, it was never employed operationally.
Laser-guided weapons
In
1962, the US Army began research into
laser guidance systems and by
1967 the USAF had conducted a competitive evaluation leading to full development of the world's first
laser-guided bomb, the
BOLT-117, in
1968. All such bombs work in much the same way, relying on the target being illuminated, or "painted," by a laser target designator on the ground or on an aircraft. They have the significant disadvantage of not being usable in poor weather where the target illumination can't be seen, or where it isn't possible to get a target designator near the target. The laser designator sends its beam in a series of
encrypted pulses so the bomb can't be confused by an ordinary laser, and also so multiple designators can operate in reasonable proximity.
Laser-guided weapons didn't become commonplace until the advent of the microchip. They made their practical debut in Vietnam, where on 13 May 1972 when they were used in the second successful attack on the Thanh Hoa Bridge ("Dragon's Jaw"). This structure had previously been the target of 800 American sorties (using unguided weapons) and was partially destroyed in each of two successful attacks, the other being on 27 April 1972 using
Walleyes. That first mission also had laser-guided weapons, but bad weather prevented their use. They were used, though not on a large scale, by the
British forces during the
1982 Falklands War. The first large-scale use of smart weapons came in
1991 during Operation
Desert Storm when they were used by coalition forces against
Iraq. Even so, most of the air-dropped ordnance used in that war was "dumb," although the percentages are biased by the large use of various (unguided)
cluster bombs. Laser-guided weapons were used in large numbers during the
1999 Kosovo War, but their effectiveness was often reduced by the poor weather conditions prevalent in the southern Balkans.
There are two basic families of laser-guided bombs in American (and American-sphere) service: the
Paveway II and the Paveway III. The Paveway III guidance system is more aerodynamically efficient and so has a longer range, however it's more expensive. Paveway II 500-pound LGBs (such as GBU-12) are a cheaper lightweight PGM suitable for use against vehicles and other small targets, while a Paveway III 2000-pound penetrator (such as GBU-24) is a more expensive weapon suitable for use against high-value targets. GBU-12s were used to great effect in the first
Gulf War, dropped from
F-111F aircraft to destroy Iraqi armored vehicles in a process referred to as "tank plinking."
Radar/Infrared/IR Imaging/Electro-Optical Guided Weapons
Precision guidance has been applied to weapons other than conventional bomb warheads. The
Raytheon Maverick heavy anti-tank missile has among its various marks guidance systems such as electro-optical (AGM-65A), imaging infra-red (AGM-65D), and laser homing (AGM-65E). The first two, by guiding themselves based on the visual or IR scene of the target, are
fire-and-forget in that the pilot can release the weapon and it'll guide itself to the target without further input, which allows the delivery aircraft to escape return fire.
Millimeter-wave radar
The Lockheed-Martin
Hellfire II light-weight anti-tank weapon in one mark uses the radar on the
Boeing AH-64D Apache Longbow to provide fire-and-forget guidance for that weapon.
Satellite-guided weapons
Lessons learned during the first Gulf War showed the value of precision munitions, yet they also highlighted the difficulties in employing them — specifically when visibility of the ground or target from the air was degraded. The problem of poor visibility doesn't affect satellite-guided weapons such as
Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) and
Joint Stand-Off Weapon (JSOW), which make use the
United States'
GPS system for guidance. This weapon can be employed in all weather conditions, without any need for ground support. Because it's possible to
jam GPS, the guidance package reverts to
inertial navigation in the event of GPS signal loss. Inertial navigation is significantly less accurate; the JDAM achieves a published
Circular Error Probable (CEP) of 13 m under GPS guidance, but typically only 30m under inertial guidance (with free fall times of 100 seconds or less).
The precision of these weapons is dependent both on the precision of the measurement system used for location determination and the precision in setting the coordinates of the target. The latter critically depends on intelligence information, not all of which is accurate. According to a CIA report, the accidental
bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade during
Operation Allied Force by NATO aircraft was attributed to faulty target information. However, if the targeting information
is accurate, satellite-guided weapons are significantly more likely to achieve a successful strike in any given weather conditions than any other type of precision-guided munition.
Advanced guidance concepts
Responding to after-action reports from pilots who employed laser and/or satellite guided weapons,
Boeing has developed a Laser JDAM (LJDAM) to provide both types of guidance in a single kit. Based on the existing JDAM configurations, a laser guidance package is added to a GPS/INS guided weapon to increase the overall accuracy of the weapons. Raytheon has developed the Enhanced Paveway family, which adds GPS/INS guidance to their Paveway family of laser-guidance packages. These "hybrid" laser and GPS guided weapons permit the carriage of fewer weapons types, while retaining mission flexibility, because these weapons can be employed equally against moving and fixed targets, or targets of opportunity. For instance, a typical weapons load on an F-16 flying in the
Iraq War included a single 2,000-lb JDAM and two 1000-lb LGBs. With LJDAM, and the new
Small Diameter Bomb, these same aircraft can carry more bombs if necessary, and have the option of satellite or laser guidance for each weapon release.
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