Those are not impressive accomplishments. Those shoot downs are no different from target drones and there were no electronic countermeasures.
How do you explain this quote
> It’s, across all cases, not just the heart of the envelope, but the very, very edge cases against, you know, significant counter measures. The preponderance of the shots that, that have been taken recently.
Maj. Gen. Jon Norman, USAF (Ret.) is currently serving as
.
The
good major general wouldn't be
doing his job if he wasn't overselling the value proposition of his employer's products.
Though he may have been genuinely surprised by the performance of legacy AIM-120 variants from his youth against relatively modern threats — be it loitering munitions or missiles (re)manufactured these last few years leveraging previously unseen ECM capabilities, albeit not necessarily the most cutting edge ECM technologies and likely largely assembled from OTS Chinese made components — deployed by Russian and Iranian forces.
When you look across some of the conflicts that have occurred recently, we’ve employed AMRAAMs that are 20- 30 years old and they worked every single time. We’re seeing probability of hit, probability of kill, significantly higher than was predicted.
And that reliability that’s built in because of, of the partnership between the Department of Defense and industry that’s built into a weapon like AMRAAM it’s paid off significantly because we’ve been able to use very, very old AMRAAMs and they work right the first time, every time.
TBF, the legacy AIM-120 examples he spoke of may not have reasonably accounted for current Iranian and Russian ECM capabilities — even if they're not the most sophisticated — when they were manufactured in the 1990s and 2000s.
So has the AIM-120's performance been particularly impressive?
Not really.
However, has it performed well enough for someone in Jon Norman's position to eat up their own and more of their employer's bullshit?
Absolutely!
I wouldn't think too much of this: salesmen will exaggerate and embellish. It's what they do regardless of what they sell.