The Air Force and Raytheon began operational testing of the Miniature Air Launched Decoy Jammer and completed four successful flights in four attempts, announced the company on Sept. 24. More MALD-J flight tests are scheduled for the remainder of the year, states the company’s release. The MALD-J adds radar jamming capability to the basic MALD platform, which Air Combat Command cleared for real-world operations in July. “MALD saves lives by saturating enemy integrated air defense systems, causing them to pursue the wrong target instead of attacking our aircraft,” said Harry Schulte, Raytheon’s vice president of Air Warfare Systems. He continued, “With MALD-J, we are building on this combat-proven decoy to provide the warfighter with even more capability.” Overall, the decoy and jammer variants have “achieved 13 successful flight tests in 13 attempts” so far this year, states the release. (See also Miniature Advances.)
The Air Force’s Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile is behind schedule and may significantly overrun its expected cost, which could partially explain why the service is reviving the hypersonic AGM-183 Air-Launched Rapid-Response Weapon.