巴黎——法国正接近对其未来的火箭炮系统做出决定。军备局局长帕特里克·帕尤在周三的议会听证会上表示,法国本月对国产武器进行了初步测试,以便在未来几周内与外国系统进行对比。
帕尤称,法国研发的火箭炮系统周二进行的首次测试“进展顺利”,计划下周进行更多测试。赛峰集团(Safran)和MBDA正联合研发国产方案,而泰雷兹(Thales)和阿丽亚娜集团(ArianeGroup)则提出了竞争性方案。目前其他欧洲部队使用的替代方案包括韩华航空航天公司的“天橆”(Chunmoo)、以色列埃尔比特系统的PULS系统以及洛克希德·马丁公司的海马斯(HIMARS)。
帕尤表示:“陆军面临巨大压力,他们认为在大规模交战中这是绝对优先的需求,因为他们需要在最初几天内坚持住。这是他们必须具备的能力。因此问题在于成本、时间表以及交付能力。”法国的目标是采购26套系统和300枚弹药,到2030年逐步装备一个火箭炮营,以替换现有的9台Lance-Roquettes Unitaire(M270系统的改装版)。
远程战略愿景
法国还在研发射程为2500公里的陆基弹道导弹,今年已预算10亿欧元启动相关工作。该计划旨在研制一种携带可机动高超音速滑翔载具的弹道导弹。帕尤强调,在主权、速度、成本和时间表之间需要进行权衡,以做出最符合需求的战略选择。
PARIS — France is moving closer to a decision on its future rocket artillery system, with the country testing domestically developed weapons this month that will allow for a comparison with foreign systems in a few weeks’ time, the head of the country’s armaments agency said.The first tests of a French-developed rocket artillery system “went well” on Tuesday, with more testing planned for next week, Patrick Pailloux, the head of the Directorate General for Armament, said in a parliamentary hearing on Wednesday.Safran and MBDA are one of the teams working on a French-made rocket artillery system, with Thales and ArianeGroup developing a competing offer. Foreign alternatives already in active service with other European forces include Hanwha Aerospace’s Chunmoo, the PULS system from Israel’s Elbit Systems and Lockheed Martin’s HIMARS.“There is significant pressure from the Army, which considers this to be its absolute priority requirement in the event of a major engagement, because they’ll need to hold out during the first few days,” Pailloux said. “It is a capability they absolutely must have. So the question is, how much will it cost, what is the timeline, when will they be able to deliver?”The French goal is to buy 26 systems with 300 munitions, and gradually equip a rocket artillery battalion by 2030, according to Pailloux. France is in a hurry to replace its nine remaining units of the Lance-Roquettes Unitaire, a modified version of the M270 multiple launch rocket system, set to reach the end of their service life in 2027.“We’ll face a trade-off between sovereignty and speed, costs, timelines, and so on. We’ll have to make the best choice, or the least bad choice, given our needs.”France is also working on a land-based ballistic missile with a range of 2,500 kilometers, with €1 billion ($1.2 billion) budgeted to start work on the system this year. The plan is for a ballistic missile tipped with a maneuverable hypersonic glide vehicle, with the DGA’s math showing “this is likely to offer the best cost-military performance ratio,” according to Pailloux.While the published goal is for a ballistic missile in 2035, and France will have “no difficulty” to obtain a capability by then, “that is late, I admit,” Pailloux said. The DGA plans to accelerate the work to bring forward the date “as close as possible to 2030,” for example by having an initial version without anti-jamming measures, and those capabilities added later, according to the director.The DGA aims to order more than €6 billion worth of munitions this year, with plans to buy SCALP cruise missiles, AASM guided bombs, Exocet anti-ship missiles, MICA and Mistral air-defense missiles and Meteor air-to-air missiles. The budget also includes €320 million to finance an industrial ramp-up where “necessary and useful,” according to Pailloux.“We need to prepare for a major conflict by 2030, with the new understanding that we may find ourselves facing a war of attrition,” Pailloux said. “To put it