The U.S. and Netherlands have formalised a Letter of Offer and Acceptance (LoA) agreement for the purchase of Lockheed Martin’s Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile Extended Range (JASSM-ER).

According to a press release, this agreement marks the Netherlands as the fifth international customer for the JASSM-ER system.

Scott Redmerski, JASSM program director at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, expressed enthusiasm about the partnership, stating, “We’re honoured to partner with the U.S. Government to provide the Netherlands Armed Forces with the combat-proven and mission-effective weapon system to meet their ever-evolving strategic defence needs.”

The JASSM-ER, an advanced generation of the missile system, boasts enhancements to both hardware and software, providing increased capabilities and more flexible options to support diverse mission sets.

With over 20 years of successful collaboration with the U.S. Air Force, the company say that JASSM continues to deliver significant long-range, precision engagement capabilities for air-to-ground missions.

The system is designed to destroy high-value, well-defended targets from a significant standoff range, ensuring aircrews remain out of danger from hostile air defence systems without compromising lethality or reach.

According to the U.S. Military, The Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM) Extended Range (ER) is a next-generation cruise missile enabling the U.S. Air Force to destroy the enemy’s war-sustaining capabilities from outside its area air defences.

There are multiple variants that make up the JASSM family of missiles; AGM-158A baseline (BL), AGM-158B Extended Range (ER), AGM-158B-2, and AGM-158D. It is precise, lethal, survivable, flexible, and adverse-weather capable.

They add that the system allows both fighter and bomber aircraft to strike critical, high-value, heavily defended targets early in a campaign.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

10 COMMENTS

  1. Excellent capability. Our new misile is c5-10 years fom deployment. Until then we have Storm Shadow or Tomahawk.

    • No. We’ll spend another five years developing an alternative to a proven weapon, change it a the last minute and order half as many as originally planned at three times the price😇

      • US Navy has already begun the integration process for LRASM and JASSM-ER onto F35 with initial fit checks completed and funding allocated in FY22 budget, integration is in progress. LRASM is also currently being integrated on to P8 Posiedon, we could really use that capability!!

        • Neither LRASM or JASSM will arrive on P-8 or F-35 earlier than 2028. In fact with F-35 it may in fact be even later as the TR-3 saga rolls on with the concommitant delays…

          • Keep in mind that the integration work for the LRASM on the P8 has been going on for several years and the the latest reporting (June 2024) says that integration testing is wrapping up with summer. On the F-35 however that’s anyone’s guess.

    • Why doing so? Eurofighter can carry Storm Shadow. Just buy more storm Shadow.. no de elopement cost, just production…

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