20111228 Air Force upgrading ¡¥Skyguard¡¦ system
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Air Force upgrading ¡¥Skyguard¡¦ system

GETTING AHEAD: The program includes the acquisition of programmable explosive projectiles intended to destroy incoming aircraft, guided missiles and other targets

By J. Michael Cole / Staff Reporter

Taiwan¡¦s ability to defend itself against Chinese aircraft and missile attacks is expected to receive a shot in the arm following the scheduled completion next year of an upgrade program for its ¡§Skyguard¡¨ short-range air defense system.

As part of the three-year, NT$3.08 billion (US$101.6 million) ¡§Tian Wu 7¡¨ (¤ÑªZ7) air defense upgrade program launched in 2009, Taiwan¡¦s air force has been converting the GDF-003 Oerlikon 35mm twin cannons that are part of the Skyguard Air Defense System to a GDF-006 configuration, which will use Advanced Hit Efficiency And Destruction (AHEAD) munitions to shoot down manned aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, cruise missiles, air-to-ground missiles and other targets.

Each AHEAD round consists of a shell filled with 152 tungsten pellets with a small programmable charge timed to detonate several meters in front of the target, sending an expanding cone of pellets forward to destroy the incoming projectile.

According to this month¡¦s edition of the Chinese-language Asia-Pacific Defense Magazine, the air force has 24 ¡§Sky Sentinel¡¨ radar units and 50 Oerlikon 35mm twin cannons. Each barrel can fire 550 rounds per minute at an altitude of about 4km and within a range of 8.5km.

The air force created 24 ¡§Skyguard¡¨ artillery units in the 1980s, mostly to provide protection at its airports. With assistance from the US in 1975, the pedestal-mounted ¡§Skyguard¡¨ system was also equipped with two pods, each with four AIM-7 ¡§Sparrow¡¨ surface-to-air missiles, mounted on the back of a High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle.

Developments in the People¡¦s Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force and China¡¦s growing arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles have made it evident that Taiwan¡¦s current air defense capabilities have become insufficient, analysts say.

Based on various estimates, China is targeting between 1,500 and 1,700 short and medium-range ballistic missiles at Taiwan, as well as a number of cruise missiles.

A budget report by the legislature says the ¡§Tian Wu 7¡¨ upgrade is scheduled for completion next year. The program also includes display and software upgrades for the ¡§Sky Sentinel¡¨ fire control units.

Swiss manufacturer Oerlikon was renamed Rheinmetall Air Defence AG following the merger with German automotive and defense firm Rheinmetall in 2009.

Taiwan¡¦s multilayer national air defense relies on a variety of systems, including the US-made PAC-2 and PAC-3 Patriot air defense systems, Hawk missiles, the Antelope, as well as the Tien Kung I and II ¡§Sky Bow¡¨ missiles produced by the Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology.

Military analysts generally agree that the opening phase of a Chinese attack against Taiwan would involve missile salvos against command-and-control centers, as well as airstrips and airbases to wipe out Taiwan¡¦s ability to control the airspace in the Taiwan Strait ¡X a key factor in determining the outcome of hostilities. As long-range defense systems could be overwhelmed by large numbers of incoming targets, second and third-line defenses, such as the ¡§Skyguard,¡¨ are necessary components.

In recent years the PLA has developed and begun deploying missile warheads equipped with several sub-munitions specifically designed to render runways inoperable.

Contacted for comment on the upgrade, Rick Fisher, a defense specialist at the International Assessment and Strategy Center in Washington said switching to AHEAD rounds was ¡§a critical improvement for Taiwan¡¦s anti-aircraft defenses.¡¨

¡§The AHEAD round is capable of defeating not just aircraft, but a range of missiles and precision guided munitions (PGMs) as well,¡¨ he told the Taipei Times.

¡§The AHEAD round is now the best system in Taiwan for providing point defense against air-launched precision guided missiles and bombs. You need a large number of 35mm guns, but the AHEAD system can still be considered an ¡¥asymmetrical¡¦ response to the PLA¡¦s mounting superiority in PGMs,¡¨ Fisher said.

While an AHEAD round is much more expensive than a regular 35mm round, it is still far less expensive than a PGM, he said.

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