Improved Hellfire Headed To Kuwait

http://www.defencetalk.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/hellfire-missile-systems.jpg" alt="[linked image]">&w=365&h=245&zc=1
AGM-114R3 Hellfire II
July 15, 2012: Kuwait is buying 300 AGM-114R3 Hellfire II missiles. This version has a new warhead that is effective against personnel and structures, as well as armored vehicles. Kuwait has been using the Hellfire, and AH-64 helicopter gunships, for nearly a decade. But its existing Hellfires are older models.
The U.S. Army is converting thousands of its older AGM-114K Hellfire missiles to the new AGM-114R standard. The AGM-114R completed its final testing three years ago. Hellfires are the most frequently used American missiles these days. The AGM-114R (Hellfire II) missiles use either an armor-piercing or blast/fragmentation (for use against non-armored targets and bunkers) warhead. The ones fired from UAVs usually have the blast warhead. The Hellfire II weighs 48.2 kg (106 pounds), carries a 9 kg (20 pound) warhead and has a range of 8,000 meters.
Hellfire II has several new features. For example, it has an electronics package (a circuit board and internal sensors) that monitors and reports the status of missile components. This Captive Carry Health Monitoring package constantly tracks the status of the missile, and the environment (heat, vibration and humidity). Maintenance personnel can jack into the missile and get a report at any time, making it easier to keep missiles fit for action. Older versions of the missile required this information to be logged manually, and much more effort to insure that the missile was ready for combat.
In addition to UAVs, the Hellfire is most commonly used by the AH-64 helicopter gunship. An AH-64 can carry up to sixteen Hellfires at once. Predator, Reaper and Sky Warrior UAVs are the best known users of Hellfire. The missile is popular for use in urban areas, because the small warhead (containing only about a kilogram/2.2 pounds of explosives) reduces civilian casualties. The missile is accurate enough to be sent through a window (OK, you have to be really good, and lucky, to do this) because of its laser guidance. The AGM-114R has also been tested fired from a ground mount (a simple tripod device).
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htairw/articles/20120715.aspxNemo me impune lacesset,
![[linked image]](http://i41.photobucket.com/albums/e255/MikePappa1/NFLPool.png) | | "The chief aim of all government is to preserve the freedom of the citizen. His control over his person, his property, his movements, his business, his desires should be restrained only so far as the public welfare imperatively demands. The world is in more danger of being governed too much than too little.
It is the teaching of all history that liberty can only be preserved in small areas. Local self-government is, therefore, indispensable to liberty. A centralized and distant bureaucracy is the worst of all tyranny.
Taxation can justly be levied for no purpose other than to provide revenue for the support of the government. To tax one person, class or section to provide revenue for the benefit of another is none the less robbery because done under the form of law and called taxation."
John W. Davis, Democratic Presidential Candidate, 1924. Davis was one of the greatest trial and appellate lawyers in US history. He also served as the US Ambassador to the UK. | ![[linked image]](http://www.network54.com/Realm/WAFF_Awards/2011/BestPoster.png) |