"Initially,
we are talking about a big 'super-holding' based on Tactical Missiles
Corporation and NPO Mashinostroyenie," said Rogozin, who oversees Russia's
military-industrial complex.
Discussions
on the creation of such a super-holding have been underway at least six months,
Rogozin said.
"We
have found an acceptable solution on how to form this super-holding," he
said. "The main idea for this holding is hypersonic technology."
Development
of hypersonic weapons - meaning those capable of flying at several times the
speed of sound, generally with scramjet engines - has been a pet theme of
Rogozin.
In May,
during a visit to Tactical Missiles Corporation's NPO Raduga missile design
bureau, Rogozin called on Russia's defense industry to develop hypersonic
air-breathing weapons as a future strike system.
He
picked out American development work in the X-51, Falcon, HiFire and HyFly
programs as examples of what he described as the perspective threat posed by
U.S. hypersonic development work.
"The
undertaking of this work allows us to lay the basis for the creation of a
national competitor in hypersonic weapons," he said.
He has
since frequently repeated his call for hypersonic weapons to be developed as a
replacement for the Russian Air Force's existing long-range bomber fleet.
"I
think we need to go down the route of hypersonic technology and we are moving
in that direction and are not falling behind the Americans," he said on
Rossiya 24 TV in August. "We will use this technology when developing a
new bomber."
"The
question is whether we will copy the Americans' forty-year experience and
create a [Northrop] B-2 analog...or will we go down a new, ultramodern
technology route, looking to the horizon, and create a machine able to
penetrate air defenses and carry out a strike on any aggressor," he added.
Aerospace
analysts contacted by RIA Novosti say hypersonic technology is more likely to
be relevant to an air-launched weapon itself, rather than a manned aircraft.
Tactical
Missiles Corporation, based in Korolyov, Moscow Region, was formed in 2002 by
amalgamating a number of defense design and production enterprises, of which
the main ones were Korolyov-based Zvezda-Strela (tactical air-to-surface
missiles), Moscow-based Vympel (tactical air-to-air missiles), NPO Raduga (cruise
missile design), and Region (tactical air-launched weapons).
NPO
Mashinostroyenie, based at Reutov just east of Moscow, has designed and
produced most of the Russian Navy's submarine-launched cruise missiles as well
as satellites and other space systems, and has previously conducted extensive
research into hypersonic weapons technology, including making a prototype
hypersonic air-launched missile called GELA.
NPO
Mashinostroyenie is also the Russian partner in the BrahMos joint venture with
India to develop the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, based on the Russian
3M55 Oniks. BrahMos has said it is developing a hypersonic successor system to
its existing supersonic missiles in partnership with India.
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