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AGM-154 JSOW

Raytheon · Air-to-Surface · USA · Modern (1992–2009)

AGM-154 JSOW — Air-to-Surface
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The AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) is a glide bomb that resulted from a joint venture between the United States Navy and Air Force to deploy a standardized medium-range precision-guided weapon, especially for engagement of defended targets from outside the range of standard anti-aircraft defenses, thereby increasing aircraft survivability and minimizing friendly losses. It is intended to be used against soft targets such as parked aircraft, trucks, armored personnel carriers (APCs), and surface-to-air missile sites (SAMs). Prior to launch, it is given a destination through either a predesignated waypoint or a point marked through a targeting pod. It glides, using two wings that pop out for added lift, to the marked destination and dispenses submunitions in a short, roughly linear pattern. The designation of the Joint Standoff Weapon as an "air-to-ground missile" is a misnomer, as it is an unpowered bomb with guidance avionics, similar to the older GBU-15.

Specifications

Category
Missiles
Sub-Category
ASM
Domain
Defence
Era
Modern (1992–2009)
Country
USA
Manufacturer
Raytheon
Operator
USA/Finland
Primary Role
Air-to-Surface
Status
In Service
Service Entry
1999
Produced
3000
Unit Cost (2026$)
$550K
Propulsion
Turbojet
Engine
No engine (glide weapon); optional Williams J400 turbojet
Thrust / Power
500 lbf
Launch
Air-launched
Length (ft)
13.5
Wingspan (ft)
8.7
Empty Weight (lb)
700
MTOW (lb)
1065
Payload (lb)
145
Endurance (hr)
0.14
Service Ceiling (ft)
40000
Range (mi)
70
Max Speed (mph)
499
Max Speed (Mach)
0.65
Armament
BLU-97 cluster / unitary