Reports indicate Pakistan may soon receive AIM-120 AMRAAM air-to-air missiles from the United States — a development with regional
security and air-power balance implications.
What is the AIM-120 AMRAAM?
The AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM) is an active radar-homing, medium-range missile designed for
beyond-visual-range (BVR) aerial combat. First fielded by the U.S. military in the early 1990s, AMRAAM replaced older radar-guided missiles and has become one of the world’s most widely adopted BVR systems.
Key characteristics
- Guidance: Active radar seeker with a two-way datalink — supports mid-course updates and then autonomous terminal guidance
(“fire-and-forget”). - Propulsion & Speed: Solid-fuel rocket motor; capable of very high supersonic speeds (typical quoted top speeds exceed Mach 4).
- Range: Effective engagement ranges commonly cited in the ~100–160+ km class under optimal launch conditions (actual range varies with launch altitude and aircraft/sensor geometry).
- All-weather capability: Designed for day/night and adverse weather operations.
- Platform integration: Employed on a wide range of fighters — U.S. F-15, F-16, F-22, F-35; European types like Typhoon and Gripen; and many other export customers.
- Users: Fielded by 30+ countries across NATO, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and elsewhere.
- Tactical features: High agility against manoeuvring targets, networked targeting via datalink, and reduced pilot workload due to autonomous terminal homing.
Why it matters strategically
- Air-superiority and deterrence: AMRAAM significantly enhances an aircraft’s BVR engagement capability, affecting local air superiority calculations.
- Interoperability: Transferring AMRAAMs often accompanies or implies closer tactical/maintenance alignment with U.S. or NATO systems.
- Regional balance: Introduction of modern BVR missiles into a neighbour’s inventory can change threat perceptions, force postures, and air defence planning.
- Export controls & diplomacy: Sales are subject to U.S. export approvals and can be used as instruments of foreign policy.