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SAM-A-19 Plato

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anti-ballistic missile
SAM-A-19 Plato
TypeAnti-ballistic missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
Used byUnited States Army
Production history
DesignerSylvania Electric Products
Designed1956

TheSAM-A-19 Plato was ananti-ballistic missile project developed by theUnited States Army in the mid 1950s. By modern standards, it would be considered atheatre ballistic missile (TBM) defense system (TBMD), providing protection to the Army field units fromWarsaw Bloc short and medium-range weapons.

The Army had first consideredanti-ballistic missiles as early as 1946, in order to protect against attack byV-2 missiles and similar weapons. This work, Project Thumper andProject Wizard, was handed off to theUS Air Force when that command was created in 1948. Delays and changes of mission for Wizard led to the Army re-considering their own needs, and started the Plato study in 1952.Sylvania won a development contract in 1956, and the proposed missile was assigned the designation SAM-A-19.

When rapid deployment of theatre weapons during the late 1950s placed the Army at risk, Plato was still nowhere near ready for deployment. Plato was canceled in February 1959 in favor of modifications to theHawk andHerculesanti-aircraft missiles to provide some level of protection while a much more capable system,FABMDS, was developed. FABMDS was in turn canceled due to mobility concerns, and replaced by SAM-D, today'sPatriot.

History

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Early work

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As part of a sweeping review of post-war requirements, on 20 June 1945 the Army Ground Forces Equipment review listed the requirement for "High velocity guided missiles… capable of… destroying missiles of the V-2 type, should be developed at the earliest practicable date."[1] In July of that year, theUS Army Signal Corps started basic research into two radar systems for ABM use.[1] In January 1946 the Commanding General of the Army Ground Forces (AGF) established a requirement for a study program on the V-2 problem. In early February, the Joint Committee on New Weapons and Equipment, the "Stillwell Board" run byJoseph Stilwell, restated the antimissile requirement in its report on a Proposed National Program for Guided Missiles. By 1 April Secretary of WarRobert P. Patterson had signed off on the program, and at the end of May the Stilwell Board published a requirement for an antimissile with a 100,000 yard range.[2]

In March 1946 the Air Forces startedProject Thumper (also known as MX-795) to consider the problem of defending against ballistic missiles like the V-2, using the "collision intercept" method.General Electric won the contract for Thumper, which is the first known ABM effort.[3] Thumper was followed in April by a similar contract awarded to theMichigan Aeronautical Research Center (MARC) under the nameProject Wizard (MX-794).[4] A funding crisis in 1947 caused both projects to see reduced interest, and in the summer they were turned into long-term studies, with General Electric receiving $500,000 a year and the MARC $1,000,000 a year.[1]

The Army Air Force and Ordnance Department had earlier split up programs based on whether they were "airplane like" or "rocket like", but Thumper and Wizard broke this rule and were developed under the AAF. Both projects moved to the Air Force when that force was created out of the Army Air Force in 1948. The Air Force cancelled Thumper in 1949, citing the overlap with the more advanced Wizard, and re-directed remaining funds to theirGAPA anti-aircraft project. Wizard continued largely as a technology study with no actual hardware development.

Project Plato

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Throughout this period the Army remained concerned about ballistic missile attack, as well as the need for some form of defensive system. In an 8 February 1950 memo to the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the Army admitted that there "was no guided missile or other device in sight for protection against enemy supersonic guided missiles" and that the problem was "the extreme technical difficult in meeting or overtaking a missile travelling at supersonic speed.". In light of this, an existing Signal Corp radar project and other development was defunded.[2]

The Army continued to press for such a system and launched numerous research projects to develop working solutions. In addition to the radar work at the Signal Corps, in 1950 they started a study to see if theBomarc missile might fill the role. Initial specifications for a mobile "Anti-Missile Missile" system for defense againstballistic missile attack were defined in 1951;[5] This was followed by a September 1952 contract with theAerophysics Development Corporation ofCurtiss-Wright to study the overall system, and a November 1952 contract with the Signal Corps to once again consider the radar problem.[6]

On 20 October 1952 when an Army G-4 meeting reiterated the need for such a system and initiated Project Plato to coordinate the various studies.[7] When the Aerophysics report was returned on 15 May 1953 it gave them further impetus to research the radar systems, considered to the real problem, and sent out another contract to Bendix Aircraft in June 1953 to consider this. Their report returned in 1955 with the conclusion that the radar was possible.[6]

Studies bySylvania Electric Products in 1953 and theCornell Aeronautical Laboratory in 1954 led to the conclusion, in May 1956, that such a project was feasible;[7] Sylvania's design for the XSAM-A-19 missile was selected for development in September 1956. The XSAM-A-19 was expected to reach speeds of up to Mach 8; the issues withhypersonic control and thermodynamics were a major part of the project studies.[5]

The project was partially announced to the public in February 1958, with it being announced that "Plato" was a mobile system that would use theNike Zeus missile;[8] in February 1959, before construction had begun on the prototype SAM-A-19 missiles, the project was canceled; theNike Herculessurface-to-air missile would be adopted as an interim ABM.[5] As of 2003[update], the official histories of Project Plato were still classified.[5]

Cancellation

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As the Plato missile was designed to fly at speeds of Mach 6 to 8, a relatively unknown area, most of the Plato work after 1956 was concerned with aerodynamic and thermodynamic studies. Plato studies continued until February 1959, when very little progress had been made. Reports early that year demonstrated a rapid buildup of short- and medium-range missiles and rockets in theWarsaw Pact forces. Although first identified as a threat over a decade earlier, it took considerable time for the expected problem to actually evolve. In spite of this long delay the Army was nowhere near ready to deploy the Plato system.

In something of a panic, the Army canceled Plato in favor of upgrades to the existing Hawk and Hercules missiles. This would be a stop-gap measure only, a true solution to the TBM problem was still needed.

FABMDS

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General Electric FABMDS

Despite the cancellation of Plato, the requirement for a definitive ABM system remained, and the Army started the Field Army Ballistic Missile Defense System project in September 1959.[9] Studies of FABMDS were run through May 1960, and proposals for the project, which was defined as being fully mobile and capable of undertaking four simultaneous intercept with a 95%probability of kill (PK); in September 1961,General Electric's submission was judged the best of the proposals.[9]

The proposed FABMDS was a large,solid-fueled missile, capable of interceptingtheatre andmedium-range ballistic missiles; 20 feet (6.1 m) in length with a diameter of 22 inches (560 mm), it was to be equipped with anuclear warhead and could intercept incoming missiles at altitudes of up to 120,000 feet (37,000 m).[9] By October 1962, however, the technology available was officially deemed incapable of producing a cost-effective system;[9] in addition, the requirement had been altered to require capability for defense against aircraft, which was considered compromising to the effectiveness of the system against missile targets,[10] and the FABMDS program was canceled.[9] It was replaced by the Army Air Defense for the 1970s (AADS-70) program, which became Surface-to-Air Missile-Development (SAM-D) and eventually produced theMIM-104 Patriot missile system.[11]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^abcLeonard 2010, p. 114.
  2. ^abLeonard 2010, p. 117.
  3. ^Leonard 2010, p. 92.
  4. ^Leonard 2010, p. 91.
  5. ^abcdParsch 2003a
  6. ^abLeonard 2010, p. 118.
  7. ^abUSACMH 1975, p. 117.
  8. ^""Significant Progress" In "PLATO" Missile Announced by Department of Army - Sylvania".Brookville American. Brookville, IN. 17 February 1959. Retrieved2017-12-11.
  9. ^abcdeParsch 2003b
  10. ^Davis 1986, p.3.
  11. ^Delaney 2015, p.64.

Bibliography

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  • History of Strategic and Ballistic Missile Defense, Volume I: 1945–1955. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History. 1975.ISBN 978-1507662380.
  • Davis, W.A. Jr. (1986).Regional Security and Anti-Tactical Ballistic Missiles: Political and Technical Issues. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis.ISBN 9780080351759.
  • Delaney, William P. (2015).Perspectives on Defense Systems Analysis. MIT Lincoln Laboratory Series. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.ISBN 978-0-262-02935-3.
  • Parsch, Andreas (27 February 2003)."Sylvania Electric SAM-A-19 Plato".Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles, Appendix 1: Early Missiles and Drones. Designation-Systems. Retrieved2017-12-08.
  • Parsch, Andreas (13 June 2003)."FABMDS".Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles, Appendix 4: Undesignated Vehicles. Designation-Systems. Retrieved2017-12-08.
  • Leonard, Barry (2010).History of Strategic and Ballistic Missile Defense: Volume I: 1945-1955(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2013-11-10. Retrieved2020-03-28.
United States Army missile and rocket designations 1948–1963
1948–1951 missile system
1951–1955 missile system
1955–1963 missile system
Unguided rockets, 1940–1963
Undesignated types
  • 1 Not assigned
  • 2 Designation uncertain
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