UK deploys APKWS anti-drone weapons on RAF Typhoon jets in the Middle East
The Facts
- The UK has deployed the Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) on RAF Typhoon jets operating in the Middle East.
- The Ministry of Defence says APKWS is being used to counter drone threats and can destroy targets more precisely at a lower cost than missiles currently in use.
- The system has been deployed on operational sorties by RAF 9 Squadron Typhoon jets in the Middle East.
- The Ministry of Defence and industry partners BAE Systems and QinetiQ moved the system from testing to operational deployment in less than two months.
- RAF Typhoon pilots carried out successful tests of the weapon before deployment, including a ground-target test in March and air-to-air firing in April.
- The deployment is part of the UK's response to the growing use of relatively inexpensive drones in regional conflicts, including Iranian-made Shahed drones.
- One reason the new system matters is cost: BBC and other reports say the UK had previously used missiles costing about £200,000 each against drones, while APKWS rockets used by other countries have been estimated at around $30,000 each.
- What remains unresolved from the available reporting is how effective APKWS will be in sustained real-world operations against incoming drones, beyond the tests and the government's confirmation that it is now in operational use.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- Cheaper, more precise ways to counter relatively inexpensive drones are a real operational need, and this deployment is meaningful because it tries to match a growing threat without relying on far more expensive missiles, even as sustained effectiveness remains unproven.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: whether the main takeaway is defense policy finally addressing the cost imbalance of drone warfare, or the speed and competence with which the Ministry of Defence and industry partners turned testing into operational use.
Context
What is APKWS?
APKWS stands for Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System. It uses laser guidance to turn unguided 70mm rockets into precision weapons, and the UK is fitting it to RAF Typhoon jets for counter-drone missions gov.uk,UK Defence Journal,Euractiv.
Why is the UK adding this system now?
The UK says the system is meant to help protect British citizens, forces, interests and regional partners in the Middle East as drone attacks remain a threat. Multiple reports link the move to the wider challenge posed by relatively cheap Iranian-made Shahed drones in the region Hindustan Times,gov.uk,Middle East Eye.
Why does cost matter in this story?
Recent reporting says the UK had used missiles costing about £200,000 each to shoot down some drones during the 2024 Israel-Iran conflict, while APKWS rockets used elsewhere have been estimated at roughly $30,000 each. That makes the new system closer in cost to the drones it is meant to intercept BBC,BBC,Yahoo.
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