Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

OpFires

Operational Fires is a hypersonic ground-launched system developed by DARPA for the United States Armed Forces. The system deploys a boost glide vehicle. The prime contractor for the program is Lockheed Martin. The missile's range is thought to be up to 1,000 miles.

Last revised
Jun 14, 2026
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Operational Fires (OpFires)
OpFires successfully executed its first flight test in July 2022
TypeHypersonic glide vehicle medium-range ballistic missile1
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In serviceExperimental program which concluded in FY20222
Used byUnited States
Production history
DesignerDARPA
Specifications

Enginerocket motor
Operational
range
1000 miles (1609 kilometers)
Maximum speedhypersonic
Launch
platform
specialized pallet for Palletized Load System

Operational Fires (abbreviated as OpFires) is a hypersonic ground-launched system developed by DARPA for the United States Armed Forces.3 The system deploys a boost glide vehicle. The prime contractor for the program is Lockheed Martin.4 The missile's range is thought to be up to 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers).5

OpFires intends to produce a medium-range hypersonic missile that costs less and with less range than the Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW) to strike larger numbers of targets at operational ranges. It will reuse the glide body from the AGM-183 ARRW. The unique aspect of OpFires is use of a "throttleable" rocket motor, where thrust can be turned off at a desired point mid-flight instead of needing to wait until all fuel is burned to make it better able to hit a short-range target.6

History

The system was successfully tested in July 2022 from a Palletized Load System-based launcher vehicle at White Sands Missile Range.47 The system achieved all test objectives, including first ever use of a U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) logistics truck as a medium-range missile launcher, missile canister egress, stable flight capture, and use of U.S. Army inventory artillery fire control systems to initiate the test mission. Lockheed Martin built the system, which includes a Northrop Grumman rocket motor, and conducted the test.8

See also

See also

References

References