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Cruise Missiles: The Million-Dollar Weapon

Cruise Missiles

First Posted: 03/25/11 09:59 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:40 PM ET

By Sharon Weinberger
Center for Public Integrity

In the opening days of the assault on Libya, the United States and the United Kingdom launched a barrage of at least 161 Tomahawk cruise missiles to flatten Moammar Gadhafi's air defenses and pave the way for coalition aircraft.

In fiscal terms, at a time when Congress is fighting over every dollar, the cruise missile show of military might was an expenditure of nearly a quarter of a billion dollars. Each missile cost $1.41 million, close to three times the cost listed on the Navy's website.

Raytheon Corp. is the manufacturer of the Tomahawk Block IV, a low-flying missile that travels at 550 miles per hour. During a decade of war in Afghanistan, Iraq, and now Libya, the Pentagon has increasingly relied on the Tomahawk. A year ago, Raytheon boasted of its 2,000th Block IV delivery to the Navy.

The 20-foot missile is particularly attractive for the military in current conflicts because it can be launched from submarines and surface ships at a safe distance and can be used to take out air-defense systems that could pose a threat to manned aircraft.

William Hartung, director of the Arms and Security Initiative at the New America Foundation and author of the book Prophets of War, said the use of the Tomahawk helps explain, in part, the high cost of the operations in Libya. "The no-fly zones in Iraq averaged about $1 billion or so per year, while the Libyan operation cost $100 million or more on the first day, largely due to the use of cruise missiles," Hartung said.

"I would stop short of calling it a boondoggle, as it does seem to be getting the job done, just at a very high cost," Hartung told the Center for Public Integrity.

Some members of Congress are nervous about yet another war, cost being one of their complaints.

"It is hard to imagine that Congress, during the current contentious debate over deficits and budget cutting, would agree to plunge America into still another war," said Rep. Dennis Kucinich, an Ohio Democrat, in a statement. "Our nation simply cannot afford another war, economically, diplomatically or spiritually."


Tomahawks have high accuracy rate

The Tomahawk was first used operationally in the 1991 Gulf War, when 288 cruise missiles were fired at Kuwait and Iraq to destroy Iraqi forces. The Navy claimed the missiles, which were used to target everything from air defense sites to Saddam's presidential palace, had an 85 percent accuracy rate.

The low-flying cruise missile was used again, in 1998, against Serb forces, and over 325 Tomahawks were launched against Iraq that same year in Operation Desert Fox. During the Iraq war in 2003, the number of Tomahawks used more than doubled compared to the first Gulf War, with over 725 of the cruise missiles launched at Iraq, according to Richard Myers, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The Tomahawk, which is guided to its target by GPS, has tended to work well for fixed sites, like air defense systems, but perhaps less well for so-called fleeing targets, which depends on precise and up-to-date intelligence. In August 1998, President Bill Clinton ordered U.S. Navy vessels in the Arabian Sea to strike suspected Al Qaeda sites in Sudan and Afghanistan in retaliation for the Africa embassy bombings.

"Though most of them hit their intended targets, neither Bin Ladin nor any other terrorist leader was killed," the 9/11 Commission wrote in its final report. "[Former National Security Advisor Sandy] Berger told us that an after-action review by [CIA] Director [George] Tenet concluded that the strikes had killed 20-30 people in the camps but probably missed Bin Ladin by a few hours."

In some cases, it's hard to judge the Tomahawk's record: Amnesty International claims 41 civilians were killed by a U.S. Tomahawk strike against Yemen in 2009, but neither U.S. nor Yemeni officials ever confirmed the attack, which was reportedly directed against Al Qaeda sites.

In Libya, the government claimed the recent Tomahawk strikes killed 48 civilians, though those reports have not been confirmed.


Missile cost nearly tripled since 1999

From the standpoint of helping set up the no-fly zone, the Tomahawk's use has been a success, according to U.S. officials.

The most current version of the Tomahawk has some noted improvements, most significantly its ability to be reprogrammed in flight via two-way satellite communication. It that sense, the Tomahawk is roughly similar to an unmanned drone aircraft, except that it doesn't ever come back.

It's not clear, however, how often its ability to be reprogrammed is actually used.

"In the real world, you're just not going to have the sort of precise intelligence that would tell you, after you launch a Tomahawk and it's halfway there, that now there's a bus full of widows and orphans" and it needs to be diverted, said John Pike, the director of GlobalSecurity.org. "That just doesn't happen."

The cost of the Tomahawk has long been an issue. The Navy, according to a public fact sheet on its website, places the price tag of a Block IV missile at $569,000, but that's in fiscal year 1999 dollars. However, Rob Koon, a spokesman for the Navy, on Wednesday placed the current price tag at $1.41 million.

A spokesman for Raytheon, citing current operational use of the Tomahawk, directed all questions about the Tomahawk to the Navy.

Whether the increasing use of the Tomahawk will translate to more orders is unclear. The Navy declines to discuss inventory numbers, citing operational security, but in February 2010, Raytheon announced that it had delivered its 2,000th Tomahawk Block IV missile to the Navy. The company's trademarked motto is "Customer Success is Our Mission."

With $25 billion in revenues and $1.84 billion in profits companywide in 2010, Raytheon is one of the five largest defense contractors and has benefited from the military's increasing reliance on cruise missiles. Missile sales have also been paralleled by its lobbying effort. Raytheon, now the world's biggest producer of guided-missiles, spent just shy of $7 million on congressional lobbying in 2010, compared to $2.32 million a decade earlier, according to the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org.

Raytheon has liberally sprinkled campaign contributions across Congress, including more than $2.1 million in 2009-2010. The contributions were balanced between parties, with 53 percent going to Democrats and 46 percent to Republican candidates, according to OpenSecrets.

Even in an era of staggering weapons costs, the price tag for a Tomahawk stands out because it's only used once. So, is the Tomahawk worth well over $1 million a shot?

"They are expensive rounds, but they give you the potential to attack heavily defended targets up front," said Barry Watts, a senior fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. "How do you value not putting a bunch of pilots in harm's way?"

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By Sharon Weinberger Center for Public Integrity In the opening days of the assault on Libya, the United States and the United Kingdom launched a barrage of at least 161 Tomahawk cruise missiles t...
By Sharon Weinberger Center for Public Integrity In the opening days of the assault on Libya, the United States and the United Kingdom launched a barrage of at least 161 Tomahawk cruise missiles t...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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jsarets 01:17 PM on 03/25/2011
The thing is that cruise missiles like the Tomahawk substitute for stealth fighters (like the $200M+ F-35 Lightning II) in the initial days of a conflict when the priority is to suppress enemy air defenses.

In this role, the Tomahawk open up the theater to less expensive and more practical air power such as F-16 Falcons and F/A-18 Hornets in the air superiority role and A-10 Warthogs and AH-64  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ChristopherJones
Yankee Liberal Athiest Punk Rocker
12:06 AM on 05/09/2011
How many are involved in the decision to push a button to burn down billions of dollars to kill with questionable military gains? The UN could have handled this. But we were so EAGER
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Lost Rights
2008 Dem Convention Denver, Expect this in 2012
06:07 AM on 03/31/2011
We get a tiny glimpse into the black box of Pentagon and MIC is doing with the tax dollars, which they secretly subvert to use for their own enrichment; the revolving door of 80% of the Generals going to million dollar jobs as lobbyists.
12:59 AM on 03/30/2011
I guess we have something to be proud of. Our education system is going down the drain (thx to Walker and his colleagues) but we can sure whip other nations with our missiles. Yeah, cool, right? Uh, cowabunga I guess. I'm feeling pretty good about our macho-ness. We are still better than everyone else? Might makes right.
iridium53
Semper Fi
11:26 AM on 03/28/2011
Stand-Off Weapon systems, like the Tomahawk, give the option of not sending in $75 million to $300 million aircraft - and the aircrew. Even at $1.5 mill they are cheap compared to the alternative.

The Tomahawk is extraordinarly accurate for non-moving targets. You can find video of early Tomahawks being recovered from tests in China Lake in what is a big football upright with a trampoline and a net.


Essentially, they can fly the Tomahawk in your window or down your chimney from 1,000 miles away.

In the first couple of days of Libya, the U.S. expended more than 150 Tomahawks - $225 Million? More profit for Raytheon.

Plus, unspecified expenditure of Anti-Radar missiles, precision guidance bombs, an F-15 down, fuel, ware and tear, etc. A good guess would be more than a $1 Billion in a week.

That's more $1 Billion in deficit that won't be spent on American poor, American homeless, American eduction.
That's 50% more than Obama's stimulus plan.

We pay. Somebody else benefits - Arab oil interests, and they raised our oil prices. Italy gets the oil - but they didn't invest much.

Why are the hungry and homeless and dying from the cold in America somehow less important to Americans, and Obama, than Libyan rebels?

Why are your children, your grandchildren, their education, your jobs, less important to Obama than Libyan rebels?
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Lost Rights
2008 Dem Convention Denver, Expect this in 2012
06:00 AM on 03/31/2011
Well written, and a tragedy. Our amazing President and Congress refuse to stop deficit spending on wars, blame us and let Wall St continue eating up all the available cash.
F&F.
11:43 PM on 03/27/2011
Putting aside whether you should be in a war or not, you have to compare the cost of the Tomahawk compared to whatever other system/s you use to take out the intended target.
Jets are expensive, pilots are expensive, especially when one gets killed. All the support facilities, bases, fuel, carriers, technicians etc. A Tomahawk can be fired from a cruiser hundreds of miles away & in the case of a physical structure, the next satellite pass will tell you if the shot worked. Sure, it would seem expensive, but seen in the light of different systems & the fact that no Americans are likely to get killed using them (unlike pilots, special forces etc) they're, frankly, a bargain----------tough for the enemy to defend because they fly under radar, are incredibly accurate (God Bless America!) so they have a high "kill" ratio.
05:55 PM on 03/27/2011
Ahhhh . . . the wonderful military/industrial complex. Without which there would be no wars. But being as they tend to stay hidden because, you know, secrecy and all that, they make billions when we wage war, and the complex says, "hey, gubment, we got a place we can test this new killing thingy. All ya gotta do is okay a new invasion, and we're in business again.
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polishlogician
No sugar tonight in my tea..
02:25 AM on 03/28/2011
I think there were wars before the military/industrial complex...
12:03 PM on 03/31/2011
Of course there were, but who controls the wars now?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrDkon2008
A true social liberal
04:12 PM on 03/26/2011
And we don't have money for education! Bombs not educate kids. What a wonderful way to live! I suppose keeping kids ignorant is what the powers that be want. That way the next generation will not realize that they are getting screwed.
11:49 PM on 03/27/2011
The public schools have certainly raised plenty of ignorant kids, I won't dispute that.
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Lost Rights
2008 Dem Convention Denver, Expect this in 2012
06:01 AM on 03/31/2011
Why educate cannon fodder?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rodnacious
02:54 PM on 03/26/2011
The Cruise Missile is used for one reason, hence, its one time effectiveness acceptable... the missile eliminates obstacles to infiltration by our pilots - the kill ratio of our planes by the enemy is reduced to nil when these missiles are deployed beforehand!

The price for one F-15 with pilot - 29.9m plus the two to three million put into the education of each pilot; it makes the cost of each missile advantageous compared to the price of one F-15 with pilot - don't you think! Considering that and what it takes to put ground forces into the arena... well, you do the math.
Vyslichajici
private american citizen
11:23 PM on 03/26/2011
no, i don't think so. you do this math. no f15 plus no pilot plus no cruise missile equals zero.
lots of us (to understate the case) would prfer that budget be spent on libyan militarism.
11:52 PM on 03/27/2011
No military, no freedom--------no math needed. Enough of the liberal claptrap, it's a dangerous world. Have the argument whether some war is right or wrong, but you better be able to defend yourself in case you need to. Freedom ain't free.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rodnacious
07:50 PM on 04/01/2011
To: Vyslichajici and Lost Rights...

I am sure that you have your reasons for feeling the way you do and that's cool! Thanks for demonstrating the rights that the people of Libya and the rest of the Middle East are dying to exercise!
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Lost Rights
2008 Dem Convention Denver, Expect this in 2012
06:02 AM on 03/31/2011
The price of none is 0.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
10:43 AM on 03/26/2011
"Disaster capitalism" indeed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
12:16 AM on 03/27/2011
fanned
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
09:07 AM on 03/26/2011
Nothing like a military action against a fourth-rate army or air force to get that important data on performance in combat.  Blowing up rocks or abandoned trucks or old tanks in the middle of the Mojave Desert just isn't the same thing as blowing up some real people or moving targets.
10:18 AM on 03/26/2011
So you think that is why Obama ordered these attacks on Libya without the consent of Congress? Interesting thesis.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
09:49 AM on 03/27/2011
I don't know about Mr. Obama's rationale.  It may be that humanitarian considerations  are the basis for his decision.  But, I do believe that Raytheon, the manufacturer of the Tomahawk missiles, will certainly be monitoring their performance as they are the latest generation of air-to-ground weaponry, and will use that data to improve, correct, and create yet another generation of missiles to push for purchase by the Congress.

Every wondered why it is that we do not attack North Korea, Iran or some of the really, really bad regimes in the world?  Grenada?  Panama? C'mon.  Ever wondered why it is that we intervene in the Middle East or Europe to prevent genocide but let Rwanda, the Congo, the Sudan, and the rest of Black Africa slaughter without protest?
11:44 PM on 03/25/2011
We have over 3000 of tomahawk missils , they will not need to reorder more so do not run out and buy Raytheon stock.unless they can find more targets .
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PuSencer
Where are we going in this handbasket?
08:25 PM on 03/26/2011
i wouldn't bet against the pentagon's ability to find military targets
11:47 PM on 03/27/2011
POTUS is the Comm. in Chief, the Pentagon can't shoot at anything or anyone without his approval. Put the blame where it belongs.
08:29 PM on 03/25/2011
If Bush were president, you people would already be marching somewhere.

Let's see the truth - let's see some protests!

If not - then just admit you're just partisans - same as Repubs!
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1logicalthinker
with occasional humorous overtones :)
12:13 AM on 03/26/2011
I was marching in an anti-war protest last Saturday, along with thousands of others. Where were you?
10:19 AM on 03/26/2011
I bet you and all of your peace loving buddies voted for Obama in 2008 and plan to repeat your folly in 2012.
Tinsdale
"Character is Destiny."- Heraclitus
07:40 PM on 03/25/2011
Meanwhile, back in the USA....

"DETROIT – Robert Bobb has spent the past two years closing dozens of schools and firing principals in an effort to fix the failing Detroit Public Schools. Yet, he still hasn't solved the problem for which he was hired — erasing a legacy budget deficit that now stands at $327 million."

Source: AP. March 20,2011
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Squigibo
Blocked by RWNJ's Everywhere
07:36 PM on 03/25/2011
I'm still waiting on the cheap gas we were supposed to get for murdering several hundred thousand Iraqi people.
Tinsdale
"Character is Destiny."- Heraclitus
08:10 PM on 03/25/2011
Ah,yes...

"The Wolfowitz Theory" :

The sum cost of any U.S. Middle East incursion will be equal to or less than the amount of oil revenue gained.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
09:10 AM on 03/26/2011
The Iraqi oil ministry betrayed the trust of the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Wolfowitz by actually running a competitive bid for the oil leases.  The U.S. companies lost out to Russia and other foreign companies.

Oops.  I guess the oil companies didn't bribe the right officials.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
Give peace a chance
07:25 PM on 03/25/2011
"How do you value not putting a bunch of pilots in harm's way?"
I was thinking more like how do you value not invading other countries to begin with.
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laterthanyouthink
My snark font is: ON
01:15 AM on 03/26/2011
Seems simple enough ...