Australia buys Ukraine-tested HIMARS missile system from US
SYDNEY: Australia said on Thursday (Jan 5) that it had snapped up a United States offer to obtain the same long-range mobile rocket system Ukraine has deployed on the battlefield against invading Russian forces.
The government said that the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) would deter attacks on Australia but could also be transported by plane for deployment worldwide.
“The effectiveness of the HIMARS system in the Ukraine conflict has certainly influenced the government’s decision,” Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy told public broadcaster ABC.
The government acted quickly to order the missiles to secure its place in the queue given a “massive increase” in global demand for HIMARS, Conroy said.
Australia hopes to deploy HIMARS, which includes launchers, missiles and training rockets, in 2026 to 2027, the government said.
The minister declined to give a price for the system, saying only that Australia would spend A$1 billion to A$2 billion (US$680 million to US$1.4 billion) on HIMARS and a separately contracted weapon, the Naval Strike Missile made by Norway-based Kongsberg, which is to equip its destroyers and frigates from 2024.
HIMARS would extend the Australian army’s strike range from 30km to 300km, and eventually to 500km with a future precision-strike missile, Conroy said.
Asked whether the HIMARS would be deployed in the Pacific region, where China has growing military and diplomatic clout, the minister said that the ease with which it could be transported anywhere in the world made it a “really fundamental asset”.
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