Modern, dedicated Gunship Aircraft

kwaigonegin

Colonel
Could you imagine seeing this in action in say Iraq, raining down peace pamphlets! ;)

A tool like this would be effective against the likes of ISIS who doesn;t really possess serious AA infrastructure and blindly driven by insane ideologues.

We need to reanimate the corpse of LeMay to authorized a mission like this. In our politically correct world such tool though amazingly effective will be hamstrung by politics and policies.

But I guarantee you C17 flying cruisers like what TE alluded to or A400M gunships will bring an end to ISIS pretty quickly. Cities like Alleppo, Ramadi, Kobani etc would not have fallen if we have a few of these birds loitering around the neighborhood. It would actually save many many innocent lives in the long run not to mention saving a lot of $$.

Dropping a couple of SDBs, lobbing a few JDAMs here and there or Tomahawk strikes can only do so much not to mention ineffective as we can see from the proliferation of ISIS.
 

Scratch

Captain
The evolution continues, with lasers on gunships :)

Learning from the navy, that so far has been the forerunner among the US services with research into directed energy weapons, the US AFSOC now wants to eventually put one on an AC-130.
They aim for having one available by 2020. With up to 200kW of power, weighing around 5.000lbs, which I think, is about the weight of the 105mm gun.
The initiative will also seek to put sensors on the aircraft able to detect threats in a 360° sphere to utilize the laser in defensive applications as well.

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AFSOC Leveraging Lessons from Navy for AC-130J Laser
By Lara Seligman 2:29 p.m. EST December 3, 2015

WASHINGTON — Air Force Special Operations command is working with the Navy to leverage lessons learned from the deployment of a shipboard laser weapon system to inform the development of a miniaturized version that could be mounted on an AC-130 gunship.

The Air Force plans to install a high-energy laser on the Lockheed Martin special operations gunship by 2020, AFSOC chief Lt. Gen. Bradley Heithold said Dec. 3. Heithold announced the pursuit earlier this year, but gave additional details during a presentation at the Association of Old Crows annual symposium in Washington, including the test aircraft to be used in the program.

“I believe that we can put a high-energy laser, offensive and defensive, on an AC-130 by the close of this decade,” Heithold said. “That’s the challenge – we can do this in five years, inside five years.”

For years, the Navy has been ahead of the curve on developing directed energy weapons. A team at Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division designed, developed and integrated the Navy’s Laser Weapon System, which deployed aboard the Afloat Forward Staging Base USS Ponce last year just off the coast of Iran. The 5th Fleet is already operating the laser, a powerful system capable of destroying or disabling targets with dazzling accuracy. ...
 

Scratch

Captain
In other news, BAE systems is now for the first time exporting it's APKWS to a non US customer. The concept adds a laser seeker to a 70mm unguided rocket, producing a small, inexpensive, low yield, guided weapon.
Jordan will recieve some for their CN-235 based gun ships. That follows the same path as the US putting Hellfire and Griffin missiles on different special mission Hercules aircraft, like the USMC KC-130 Harvest Hawk. These airfarmes offer decent range and long loiter at rather low cost. They have the space for good sensors and operators on board.

They can be an important part (and to a large extent combine the pillars) of the ISTAR structure and have a hunter-killer functionality.

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APKWS rockets delivered to Jordan for CN235 gunships
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BAE Systems has delivered its Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) to Jordan to provide precision guided rocket capability for two special operations Airbus Defence & Space CN235 light gunships.

This marks the first international sale of the weapon system, which has previously only been used by US forces, with 110 APKWSs in use with the US Navy from a May 2014 order.

The APKWS – which converts a 2.75in unguided rocket into a precision guided weapon – has been requested by 13 other nations, US Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) says. In the last year, foreign military sales agreements have been signed with Iraq, the Netherlands and Tunisia, it adds. ...

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