From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 18): PHL now conducting study of possible
anti-ship missiles
A committee is now evaluating the best and most affordable missile which will be
hopefully installed on the country's two Hamilton-class cutters now in service
at the Philippine Navy (PN).
The Department of National Defense (DND) observer said that missiles being
evaluated are the anti-ship type which will give the BRP Gregorio Del Pilar
(PF-15) and BRP Ramon Alcaraz (PF-16) more capability in protecting the
country's maritime domain.
Having the anti-missiles will also give the two ships more firepower in
engaging would-be poachers and intruders.
The DND official declined to identify the exact type of missile being studied
and stressed that the matter is "top secret".
Some defense officials earlier said that the Harpoon is the ideal missile
system for the PN's Hamilton-class cutters as the weapon was already deployed
aboard the USCGC Mellon, the sister ship of the BRP Gregorio Del Pilar and BRP
Ramon Alcaraz, in January 1990.
The USCGC Mellon also received an anti-submarine warfare (ASW) suite,
including the AN/SQS-26 sonar and Mark 46 torpedoes.
The ASW suite and Harpoon capability were removed due to fiscal constraints
in the latter part of the 1990s, but served as a proof of capability for all
USCG cutters.
The Harpoon is an all-weather, over-the-horizon, anti-ship missile system,
developed and manufactured by McDonnell Douglas (now Boeing Defense, Space &
Security).
In 2004, Boeing delivered the 7,000th Harpoon unit since the weapon's
introduction in 1977. The missile system has also been further developed into a
land-strike weapon, the standoff land attack missile.
The regular Harpoon uses active radar homing, and a low-level, sea-skimming
cruise trajectory to improve survivability and lethality.
The missile's launch
platforms include:
* Fixed-wing aircraft (the AGM-84, without the solid-fuel rocket booster).
* Surface ships (the RGM-84, fitted with a solid-fuel rocket booster that
detaches when expended, to allow the missile's main turbojet to maintain
flight).
* Submarines (the UGM-84, fitted with a solid-fuel rocket booster and
encapsulated in a container to enable submerged launch through a torpedo tube).
* Coastal defense batteries, from which it would be fired with a solid-fuel
rocket booster.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=498619
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