BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front)
U.S. Central Command has formally requested approval to deploy
the Army's Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW), nicknamed Dark Eagle, to
the Middle East to strike Iranian ballistic missile launchers
reportedly repositioned beyond the range of existing Precision Strike
Missile (PrSM) systems. If approved, it would mark the first operational
combat deployment of an American hypersonic weapon. However, the
request exposes a deeper institutional failure: the Pentagon failed to
develop operational conventional intermediate-range systems despite
having seven years (2019-2026) after the INF Treaty's termination and
explicit Congressional authorization dating to 2015. The
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which terminated August 2,
2019, had banned both nuclear and conventional ground-launched
intermediate-range systems—but research and development were always
permitted. The Pentagon did not systematically pursue that legal
pathway. Now, facing an operational gap created by Iranian launcher
relocation, CENTCOM is requesting deployment of an immature hypersonic
system as a stopgap solution. Dark Eagle has not been declared
combat-ready, Pentagon testing authority forecasts insufficient
operational effectiveness data until early 2027, available inventory is
fewer than eight missiles per battery, unit costs exceed $15 million,
and recent test data indicate persistent reliability challenges. The
deployment reflects both genuine tactical necessity and deep
institutional failure in strategic planning.
The Operational Context: An Avoidable Gap
The immediate justification for CENTCOM's Dark Eagle request is
straightforward. During Operation Epic Fury—the 38-day air and missile
campaign beginning February 28, 2026—U.S. and Israeli forces employed
the Precision Strike Missile extensively against Iranian targets. The
PrSM, a Lockheed Martin ballistic missile integrated onto the HIMARS
rocket artillery platform, carries a range of approximately 500
kilometers (310 miles) and was deployed in its first combat use during
those operations.
In response to the opening strikes, Iranian forces relocated their
ballistic missile launchers to positions deeper within the country,
reportedly beyond PrSM reach. This tactical adjustment created what
CENTCOM characterizes as an operational gap: existing conventional
strike systems cannot reach dispersed or hardened launcher positions now
positioned inland at extended range.
The Dark Eagle, with a reported range of 1,725 miles (2,775
kilometers)—with classified assessments suggesting potential ranges
exceeding 3,500 kilometers—would restore the ability to hold those
targets at risk. For CENTCOM, the operational logic is clear and
tactically valid.
Yet this operational gap was predictable and largely avoidable. The
explanation lies in the history of arms control, treaty law, Pentagon
institutional decision-making, and Congressional action dating back more
than a decade.
The Treaty Context: Why PrSM Is Capped at 500 Kilometers
The Precision Strike Missile's 500-kilometer range ceiling is not an
engineering constraint or a cost optimization. It is a direct artifact
of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, signed in 1987 by
President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.
The INF Treaty required both superpowers to eliminate and forswear
all ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of
500-5,500 kilometers. Critically, the treaty applied equally to systems
armed with nuclear warheads and systems armed with conventional
warheads. A special clarification adopted during ratification in 1988
made explicit that the treaty covered all missiles falling under its
definition "irrespective of whether they were equipped with nuclear,
conventional, or 'exotic' warheads."
When the Pentagon began developing what would become the PrSM in the
mid-2010s—during the Obama and early Trump administrations—the INF
Treaty remained in force and would remain so until August 2, 2019.
Consequently, early development contracts specified a range of "499
kilometers"—deliberately just shy of the prohibited threshold. The
missile's motor, fuel load, airframe design, and aerodynamics were
optimized around this constraint. PrSM Increment 1, now operational and
deployed to the Middle East, remains locked at this INF-compliant
ceiling.
Extended-range variants—PrSM Increment 2 (also known as the
Land-Based Anti-Ship Missile, or LBASM), designed for ranges approaching
1,000 kilometers—are in development but will not be operational until
2027 at the earliest, according to recent Army statements. Secretary of
the Army Pete Hegseth only recently (May 2025) directed acceleration of
Increment 2 fielding to 2027, moving it up from the previously planned
2028 target. This acceleration came after the Iran war had already
expended 45 percent of PrSM Increment 1 stockpiles.
This timeline creates the critical gap: a system designed under
treaty constraints became insufficient once the treaty ended, but its
successor system remains years from operational deployment.
The Legal and Institutional Failure: A Seven-Year Planning Missed Opportunity
Here is where the Pentagon's institutional failure becomes clear. The INF Treaty prohibited three specific activities: possession, production, and flight-testing of intermediate-range ground-launched systems. However, the treaty explicitly did not prohibit research and development.
Throughout the treaty period (1988-2019), the United States was
legally free to conduct theoretical research, computer modeling,
conceptual design, and materials science related to intermediate-range
missile systems. The threshold of violation came only at production
(manufacturing hardware) or testing (launching operational prototypes).
The Pentagon could have used this R&D exemption to prepare detailed
designs and concept maturity for conventional intermediate-range systems
that could transition to production upon treaty withdrawal.
Instead, the Pentagon largely did not. Congressional pressure
eventually forced the issue. When the U.S. formally alleged Russian INF
violations in 2014, and as those allegations accumulated through
2015-2018, Congress began authorizing explicit Pentagon action. The
FY2015 and FY2016 National Defense Authorization Acts called on the
Pentagon to study and plan for development of possible military options
in response to Russian non-compliance. Most significantly, the FY2018
National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 115-91, Section 1243)
specifically authorized the Defense Department to commence
"treaty-compliant research and development" on conventional,
ground-launched, intermediate-range missile systems and mandated that
the Pentagon begin a "program of record" to develop new systems.
This Congressional authorization in 2018—a full 14 months before
the treaty terminated—gave the Pentagon explicit legal and budgetary
authority to initiate serious development work on conventional
intermediate-range systems designed for operational deployment after
August 2019.
The Pentagon initiated some R&D funding and conceptual work, but
evidently without the strategic priority or institutional commitment
required to deliver operational systems by 2025-2026.
Why? Several institutional factors converged:
- Service parochialism: No single military service had
dominant institutional interest in ground-launched intermediate-range
conventional systems. The Army had immediate fires requirements
addressed by ATACMS and later PrSM. The Air Force and Navy possessed
existing air-launched and sea-launched systems reaching intermediate
ranges without treaty constraints. There was no powerful advocate within
the Pentagon hierarchy for advancing this capability category.
-
Peacetime planning atrophy: The 1991-2014 period,
following the Soviet collapse, was marked by multiple out-of-area
conflicts (Iraq, Afghanistan, Balkans) but not peer-competitor strategic
competition. Strategic planning for potential China and Russia
contingencies was subordinated to immediate Middle East operational
demands. By the time peer-competitor threats were recognized (circa
2015-2017) as central to Pentagon strategic thinking, institutional
momentum for ground-launched system development had never been
established.
-
The hypersonic priority: Once the Trump
administration (2017 onward) began identifying hypersonic weapons as a
strategic priority—a response to Russian and Chinese hypersonic
deployments and a symbol of technological leadership—institutional
resources, budget allocations, and prestige flowed to Dark Eagle and
related programs. This created a perverse incentive: advancing an
immature hypersonic system forward provided visibility and budget
justification, while completing conventional system development that had
been de-prioritized for a decade received less institutional attention.
-
Organizational distance from strategic planning:
Operating commands and service requirements branches typically work
within the operational environment they inherit. They do not track arms
control treaty implications or exploit R&D exemptions. If senior
strategic planning staffs (Office of Secretary of Defense Policy, Joint
Chiefs, regional commands) had recognized and articulated the
requirement for operational conventional intermediate-range systems
before 2019, service investment would have followed. Instead, treaty
language—even where legally avoidable—became an excuse for
organizational inaction.
The Deeper Problem: Seven Years to Develop Alternative Systems Was Available
Consider what the Pentagon should have accomplished on a realistic timeline:
2018-2019 (Treaty withdrawal period): Congress had
already authorized R&D. The Pentagon could have initiated aggressive
development of conventional ballistic and cruise missile systems
designed for the post-treaty environment. Naval Strike Missile variants,
extended-range Tomahawk concepts, and conventional ballistic missile
designs could all have been prioritized.
2019-2023 (Post-treaty acceleration): With treaty
constraints removed, prototype testing could have accelerated. Existing
booster technology (the Lockheed Martin two-stage design shared between
PrSM and Dark Eagle) could have been integrated with conventional
guidance systems. The baseline for PrSM Increment 2 design was already
mature; aggressive production scheduling could have moved first
operational units to the field by 2023-2024.
2023-2026 (Current operational window):
Extended-range conventional systems could be operational in theater by
the time Iranian launchers relocated. Instead, Army leadership only
recently (May 2025) directed acceleration of Increment 2 fielding from
2028 to 2027—after the operational gap had already emerged and after
PrSM Increment 1 stocks had been largely expended.
This is not a timeline constrained by physics, technology, or law. It
is a timeline constrained by institutional priorities and budget cycles
that valued hypersonic demonstration over conventional system
completion.
The Development Trajectory: Dark Eagle's Troubled History
The Dark Eagle program has accumulated approximately $12 billion in
development funding since 2018, making it one of the Pentagon's most
resource-intensive advanced conventional weapon initiatives. Yet the
program's testing history reveals a troubled development arc marked by
delays, failures, and incomplete evaluation.
Between October 2021 and September 2023, multiple planned flight
tests either failed outright or were scrubbed during pre-flight checks.
An October 2021 booster test was classified as a "no test" after the
Common Hypersonic Glide Body failed to deploy; a June 2022 full-system
test also resulted in failure. March and September 2023 launch attempts
at Cape Canaveral were halted during pre-flight checks, attributed to
mechanical engineering issues with the Lockheed Martin-produced
transporter-erector-launcher (TEL).
These setbacks forced the Army to abandon its original fielding
target of fiscal year 2023. A successful end-to-end flight test in June
2024, conducted from the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Hawaii and
terminating in the Marshall Islands, marked the program's major
breakthrough. A second successful test occurred in December 2024 at Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station—the first to employ actual battery
operations equipment and a TEL in an operational configuration. A third
test succeeded on March 26, 2026, also from Cape Canaveral.
Three successful end-to-end tests constitute meaningful progress. Yet
the Pentagon's own testing authority has delivered a sobering
assessment. The Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E)
concluded in its 2024 report: "There is not enough data available to
assess the operational effectiveness, lethality, suitability, and
survivability of the LRHW system." DOT&E projects that sufficient
data for comprehensive evaluation will not accumulate until early
2027—nine months or more from the current request date.
This assessment is critical. DOT&E's caution reflects an
acknowledged gap in weaponeering data—specifically, uncertainty about
the probability of a Dark Eagle missile actually destroying its intended
target. As DOT&E noted, this "uncertainty in weaponeering tools
could result in excessive employment requirements or failure to meet
warfighter objectives." Translated into operational terms: commanders
might need to fire multiple $15 million missiles at a single target to
achieve the desired probability of destruction, or risk mission failure
with inadequate targeting data.
Key Technical Characteristics of Dark Eagle (LRHW)
- Range: 1,725 miles (2,775 km) unclassified; potential 3,500+ km classified
- Velocity: Mach 5+ (hypersonic glide body phase)
- Configuration: Two-stage booster + Common Hypersonic Glide Body (C-HGB)
- Prime Contractors: Lockheed Martin (booster, assembly, launcher), Northrop Grumman (missile component), Dynetics/Leidos (glide body)
- Battery Composition: 8 missiles, 4 transporter-erector-launchers, Battery Operations Center, support vehicle
- Per-Missile Cost: ~$15 million
- Battery System Cost: ~$2.7 billion
- Current Available Inventory: Fewer than 8 missiles
- Status: Initial Operational Capability (claimed); not formally declared combat-ready
- First Designated Operational Unit: Bravo Battery, 1st Battalion, 17th Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Multi-Domain Task Force, Joint Base Lewis-McChord
Munitions Stockpile Depletion: The Second Driver of the Request
Beyond the tactical gap created by Iranian launcher relocation, a
second driver of the Dark Eagle request is the rapid depletion of PrSM
stockpiles during Operation Epic Fury. The Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) estimates that in the first seven weeks of
operations, the U.S. expended at least 45 percent of its Precision
Strike Missile inventory. A U.S. Army Fires Center official stated in
mid-April that "our entire inventory" of PrSMs had been shot at the
beginning of the Iran war, though Army leadership later clarified that
some inventory remained but resupply was active.
This ambiguity itself is revealing. Whether depleted entirely or
merely substantially, PrSM stocks are clearly constrained. The missile
is in early production; prior to fiscal year 2024, the Army had procured
only 130 PrSMs, a fraction of eventual force needs. Lockheed Martin has
announced a framework agreement to quadruple production capacity, but
rebuilding depleted inventories is a multi-year enterprise.
In this context, an underdeveloped system representing "scaled
hypersonics" designated as a critical technology area by the Pentagon's
Chief Technology Officer becomes attractive to advocacy within CENTCOM
and industry—not necessarily as the optimal solution, but as the
solution that appears available when existing systems are scarce.
Cost and Production Constraints
Each Dark Eagle missile carries an estimated unit cost of
approximately $15 million—higher in real terms than a Trident II D5
submarine-launched ballistic missile ($31 million historical cost), but
in the same ballistic missile cost category. These figures exclude
integration, launcher, command and control, and sustainment costs; the
full battery system cost totals approximately $2.7 billion.
For a system being deployed in an active theater with fewer than
eight missiles available, the cost-exchange ratio becomes problematic.
If a single Iranian target requires two or three Dark Eagle shots to
achieve destruction (realistic given acknowledged lethality
uncertainties), the system rapidly becomes a one-mission-per-target
proposition. For comparison, the PrSM costs significantly less per round
($3.5 million versus $15 million); even with higher ammunition
consumption rates, maintaining magazine depth across multiple targets
becomes more feasible with conventional systems.
Production constraints reinforce this limitation. The program is
hampered by manufacturing complexity, quality control issues affecting
the launcher system (historically the program's most persistent
problem), and demand for limited test range facilities. A June 2025
Government Accountability Office assessment noted that estimated cost
for the first prototype battery rose $150 million in a single year
(January 2024 to January 2025), driven by increased missile costs and
investigations into earlier failures and the need for re-testing.
Fielding activities for the first operational battery began in
December 2025 and are expected to complete in early 2026. The 3rd
Multi-Domain Task Force at Joint Base Lewis-McChord has been designated
to receive and operate the first operational battery. However, "fielding
completion" does not equate to full operational deployment or
declarative combat readiness—it means the unit has received hardware and
personnel have begun integration and safety validation training.
Strategic Signaling and Great-Power Competition
Beyond the specific operational gap, Dark Eagle deployment carries
strategic signal value that the Pentagon is unlikely to minimize in
internal debates. Russia deployed hypersonic systems (Kinzhal
air-launched, Avangard ICBMs) years ago. China has tested multiple
hypersonic platforms and declared deployment of the DF-ZF boost-glide
weapon. The U.S., despite early technological leadership in hypersonic
aerothermodynamics and propulsion, has lagged in fielding—a gap that has
generated Congressional concern and public statements by senior leaders
about American competitiveness in advanced weapons categories.
Deploying Dark Eagle—even in limited numbers, even under conditions
of incomplete operational testing—would represent the first American
hypersonic system in an active theater. For the Pentagon's narrative
about technological edge and strategic competitors' capabilities, this
has symbolic weight. For Congressional audiences concerned about
hypersonic "lag," it signals American movement. For industry seeking
production rate increases and budgetary justification for scaling, it
provides the case study of first operational use.
These are not trivial considerations in the defense policy ecosystem.
They do not, however, address the central technical question: Is Dark
Eagle ready for combat employment?
Operational Risk Assessment
Several overlapping risks attend a decision to deploy Dark Eagle:
Technical Readiness: The system has achieved three
successful end-to-end tests. This is meaningful but represents a small
data population. Hypersonic flight imposes extreme thermal and
structural stresses; long-term reliability of shielded electronics,
thermal protection, and guidance systems remains incompletely
characterized. The program's 2021-2023 history of launcher failures and
booster issues suggests production and integration quality remains a
concern.
Weaponeering Uncertainty: DOT&E's explicit
acknowledgment that lethality and effectiveness cannot be fully assessed
until 2027 means that employment plans will rest on incomplete data. If
commanded to strike hardened or dispersed targets, Dark Eagle operators
will lack validated probability-of-kill estimates—a gap that may force
either conservative targeting assumptions or unjustified risk of mission
failure.
Limited Inventory and Magazine Depth: Fewer than eight
missiles per battery means one battery represents a single-engagement
capability against multiple target sets. If Iran possesses decoy or
dummy launchers, some proportion of Dark Eagle inventory would be
consumed in attempts to locate and destroy actual launch platforms.
Resupply from production is months to years away.
Escalation and Ceasefire Dynamics: A ceasefire, however
fragile, has been in place between the U.S. and Iran since April 9,
2026. Deployment of a new, more capable strike system—particularly one
characterized as experimental—sends a dual signal: reinforced
deterrence, but also visible preparation for resumed offensive
operations. In the context of failed diplomatic negotiations (April 12
talks in Islamabad collapsed without agreement), deployment could be
perceived as preparation for resumed strikes rather than stabilization.
Whether that perception is accurate or not, it shapes Iranian
decision-making and may reduce incentives for further negotiation.
The Alternative Path Not Taken: Accelerated PrSM Increment 2
An alternative decision path existed and arguably should have been
pursued: aggressive acceleration of PrSM Increment 2 development and
production ahead of Dark Eagle deployment. The Navy's Conventional
Prompt Strike system, sharing the same Common Hypersonic Glide Body as
Dark Eagle, completed a successful test in December 2024. PrSM Increment
2 with extended range (targeting 1,000 km) has been in development
since 2020.
If the Pentagon had prioritized this acceleration beginning in
2018-2019 when Congressional authorization first became available—or at
minimum, by 2019 when the INF Treaty terminated—extended-range
conventional ballistic missiles could be operational by 2024-2025. Such a
system would:
- Provide intermediate-range coverage without the testing uncertainties of hypersonic systems
- Use proven booster technology (Lockheed Martin two-stage design shared with Dark Eagle)
- Integrate seamlessly with existing HIMARS and MLRS launchers
- Build on the operational experience of PrSM Increment 1, now combat-proven in Iran
- Cost significantly less per round than Dark Eagle ($3.5 million vs. $15 million)
- Preserve larger magazine depth for distributed, mobile strike operations
The fact that PrSM Increment 2 acceleration only happened recently
(May 2025, after the Iran war had largely expended Increment 1 stocks)
demonstrates that institutional prioritization was misaligned. The
Pentagon was pursuing hypersonic exotica while allowing the conventional
next-generation system to lag.
The Case for Caution
Defenders of the Dark Eagle deployment request point to a genuine
operational gap: existing systems cannot reach relocated Iranian
targets. This is factually correct. They note that allies (Russia,
China) have fielded hypersonic systems; American technological
leadership is legitimately at stake. They observe that the program has
now achieved three successful tests and has reached initial operational
capability by Pentagon standards.
Yet each of these arguments has a counterargument that merits serious consideration:
The operational gap could have been addressed through alternative
means—longer-range derivatives of existing systems, which should have
been in development since 2018. Extended-range cruise missiles and
conventional ballistic missiles could have provided extended-range
strike capability without the developmental immaturity of Dark Eagle.
These alternatives would employ systems with greater data on operational
effectiveness and higher inventory levels.
The great-power competition argument is sound, but fielding an
incomplete system in combat conditions is a high-stakes way to close a
perception gap. If Dark Eagle operations result in unexpectedly high
failure rates, incomplete target destruction, or collateral damage due
to weapons handling or targeting errors, the strategic credibility
message could reverse. American hypersonic capability would be perceived
as immature rather than innovative.
Three successful end-to-end tests, while important, do not resolve
DOT&E's assessment that effectiveness cannot be validated until
2027. The contrast between claims of "initial operational capability"
and the testing authority's explicit statement that sufficient data is
not yet available creates a credibility tension within the Pentagon
bureaucracy itself.
More fundamentally, the precedent of deploying an underdeveloped
system to combat may establish an unwanted institutional pattern. If
Dark Eagle goes to the Middle East before full operational testing
concludes, and if that deployment is perceived as driven by
organizational momentum (hypersonic priority) and inadequate planning
(failure to develop conventional alternatives), future pressure to field
other incomplete systems under time pressure will be harder to resist.
Conclusion: A Preventable Crisis
As of April 30, 2026, no final decision has been announced. The Trump
administration will ultimately decide whether to approve CENTCOM's
request. The U.S. Strategic Command, which maintains employment
authority over long-range conventional strike systems, will have a
formal voice in the deliberation. The Pentagon's testing and evaluation
staff will likely submit formal reservations.
What seems unlikely, barring sharp reversal in diplomatic status or
Iranian escalation that changes the tactical calculus, is outright
rejection. The operational gap is real, the political appetite for
hypersonic fielding is genuine, and a formal CENTCOM request carries
bureaucratic momentum.
Yet the deeper issue is this: the current operational gap was largely
preventable. The Pentagon had legal opportunity (R&D exemption
under the INF Treaty), Congressional authorization (FY2018 NDAA and
subsequent acts), budgetary authority, and seven years between treaty
withdrawal and the current request to develop operational extended-range
conventional systems. It failed to prioritize this development, instead
allowing institutional momentum to carry hypersonic programs forward
while conventional system development lagged.
Dark Eagle deployment may be the tactical response to an immediate
problem. But it is also a symptom of an institutional failure in
strategic planning—one that cost the Pentagon flexibility, options, and
the opportunity to address the Iranian launcher relocation with mature,
cost-effective conventional systems rather than immature, expensive
hypersonic experimental weapons.
The choice now facing the Pentagon is not whether to close the
operational gap (some response is necessary). The choice is whether to
do so with systems that should have been ready by now, or whether to
accept the institutional consequences of under-resourced planning and
deploy an underdeveloped system to compensate for institutional
misjudgment.
Verified Sources & Formal Citations
[1]
U.S. Central Command Requests Deployment of 'Dark Eagle' Hypersonic Missiles to Middle East
Published: April 30, 2026
Defense News
https://www.thedefensenews.com/news-details/US-Central-Command-Requests-Deployment-of-Dark-Eagle-Hypersonic-Missiles-to-Middle-East/
Summary: Official announcement of CENTCOM's formal
request for Dark Eagle deployment to target Iranian ballistic missile
launchers beyond PrSM range. Includes operational context and system
specifications.
[2]
US Seeks to Deploy Hypersonic Missile For the First Time Against Iran
Published: April 29, 2026
Bloomberg News
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-29/us-seeks-to-deploy-hypersonic-for-the-first-time-against-iran
Summary: Original reporting on CENTCOM's Request for
Forces submission. Notes that Dark Eagle has not been declared fully
operational and is running far behind schedule compared to Russian and
Chinese hypersonic deployments.
[3]
The US wants to use a new missile on Iran. It might not even work.
Published: April 30, 2026
Responsible Statecraft (Center for Strategic and International Studies)
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/us-hypersonic-missile/
Summary: Critical analysis of deployment timing and
readiness status. Emphasizes DOT&E assessment that insufficient data
exists for combat effectiveness evaluation until early 2027. Includes
Kelly Grieco (Stimson Center) expert commentary on budget-driven
acquisition incentives.
[4]
Dark Eagle Takes Flight: Guide to America's Landmark Hypersonic Weapon
Published: August 26, 2025
The Defense Post
https://thedefensepost.com/2025/08/26/dark-eagle-hypersonic-weapon-guide/
Summary: Comprehensive technical and programmatic
history of Dark Eagle development. Details 2021-2023 testing failures,
December 2024 breakthrough test, cost overruns, and DOT&E verdict on
insufficient effectiveness data. Essential source on development
trajectory.
[5]
Dark Eagle's Road to Operational Readiness: A Testing History
Published: April 2026 (updated)
K4i Defense Technology
https://k4i.com/2026/04/08/dark-eagles-road-to-operational-readiness-a-testing-history/
Summary: Detailed chronology of Dark Eagle testing
from October 2021 through March 26, 2026 successful test. Categorizes
test events and explains distinction between full-system tests and
operational configuration tests.
[6]
U.S. Army to deploy first operational Dark Eagle hypersonic missile with 3,500 km range in coming weeks
Published: March 20, 2026
Army Recognition Group
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/army-news/2026/us-army-to-deploy-first-operational-dark-eagle-hypersonic-missile-with-3-500-km-range-in-coming-weeks
Summary: Interviews with Lt. Gen. Frank Lozano on
fielding timelines. Details cost overruns ($150M increase in single
year), production constraints, and fielding activities schedule.
[7]
U.S. Considers Deploying Dark Eagle Hypersonic Missile To Strike Iranian Ballistic Launchers
Published: April 30, 2026
Army Recognition Group / Defense Analyst Erwan Halna du Fretay
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/army-news/2026/u-s-considers-deploying-dark-eagle-hypersonic-missile-to-strike-iranian-ballistic-launchers
Summary: Operational and strategic analysis of Dark
Eagle deployment request. Discusses Anti-Access/Area Denial
implications, dual signal of deterrence vs. resumption preparation, and
impact on ceasefire dynamics.
[8]
Report to Congress on U.S. Army's Dark Eagle Hypersonic Weapon
Published: April 7, 2026
Congressional Research Service / U.S. Navy Institute News
https://news.usni.org/2026/04/09/report-to-congress-on-u-s-armys-dark-eagle-hypersonic-weapon
Summary: Formal CRS In Focus report on Dark Eagle
(LRHW). Authoritative on program structure, contractor roles, system
specifications, employment authority (USSTRATCOM), and Congressional
oversight implications.
[9]
The U.S. Army's Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW): Dark Eagle
Published: April 7, 2026 (updated April 30)
Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service
https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/IF11991
Summary: Authoritative Congressional reference
material on Dark Eagle. Includes battery composition specifications,
designated operator unit (Bravo Battery, 1st Battalion, 17th FAR, 3rd
MDTF), cost estimates, and historical timeline of test events.
[10]
Magazine depth: Rapid depletion of missile stockpiles in Iran raises concerns about US readiness
Published: March 27, 2026
Small Wars Journal / Payne Institute for International Security
https://smallwarsjournal.com/2026/03/27/magazine-depth-iran-missiles-stockpile-readiness/
Summary: CSIS-Payne Institute analysis of weapon
depletion during Operation Epic Fury. Documents PrSM consumption rates,
THAAD/Patriot losses, and timeline for inventory reconstitution.
Includes expert commentary from Mark Cancian on strategic competition
implications.
[11]
U.S. Precision Missile Stockpiles Nearly Halved in Iran War, Creating 'Near-Term Risk'
Published: April 2026
Kyiv Post, citing CSIS analysis and Pentagon sources
https://www.kyivpost.com/post/74474
Summary: Assessment that 45% of PrSM inventory
expended in first seven weeks of Operation Epic Fury. Includes
classified Pentagon data comparisons and timeline for stockpile
rebuilding (4-5 years minimum).
[12]
PRSM Stockpile Remains Despite Iran Usage, U.S. Army Says
Published: April 12, 2026
Aviation Week Network
https://aviationweek.com/defense/missile-defense-weapons/prsm-stockpile-remains-despite-iran-usage-us-army-says
Summary: Army correction of Fires Center official
statement on PrSM depletion. Acknowledges significant consumption while
clarifying some inventory remains. Details procurement history (130
PrSMs pre-FY2024) and production acceleration plans.
[13]
Army expects to complete fielding of Dark Eagle hypersonic missile in 'early 2026'
Published: January 21, 2026
DefenseScoop
https://defensescoop.com/2026/01/21/dark-eagle-hypersonic-missile-army-fielding-plans/
Summary: Army statement on fielding timeline and
activities. Specifies that "fielding activities include the required
integration, safety, and readiness steps." Distinguishes between
fielding initiation and deployment readiness.
[14]
Precision Strike Missile - Wikipedia
Updated: April 30, 2026
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_Strike_Missile
Summary: Technical documentation of PrSM development
under INF Treaty constraints. Documents original 500 km range
specification and post-treaty extended-range variants in development.
[15]
The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty at a Glance
Updated: 2024-2025
Arms Control Association
https://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/intermediate-range-nuclear-forces-inf-treaty-glance
Summary: Authoritative overview of treaty scope
(nuclear AND conventional warheads). Documents Congressional
authorization of "treaty-compliant research and development" in
FY2018-2019 NDAAs on conventional systems.
[16]
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
Accessed: 2026
Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI)
https://www.nti.org/education-center/treaties-and-regimes/treaty-between-the-united-states-of-america-and-the-union-of-soviet-socialist-republics-on-the-elimination-of-their-intermediate-range-and-shorter-range-missiles/
Summary: Full treaty text and technical
clarifications. Documents the 1988 clarification covering missiles
"irrespective of whether they were equipped with nuclear, conventional,
or 'exotic' warheads." Explains R&D exemption and
production/flight-testing bans.
[17]
After the INF Treaty, What Is Next?
Published: January 2019
Arms Control Association
https://www.armscontrol.org/act/2019-01/news/after-inf-treaty-what-next
Summary: Documents Congressional action (FY2018
NDAA) authorizing Pentagon R&D on conventional systems. Notes
Pentagon was to develop "concepts and options" for conventional systems
with 500-5,500 km range.
[18]
U.S. Withdrawal from the INF Treaty: What's Next?
Published: 2019
Congressional Research Service
https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/IF/PDF/IF11051/IF11051.7.pdf
Summary: Detailed legislative history. FY2018 NDAA
(P.L. 115-91, §1243) authorized DOD "program of record" to develop new
ground-launched cruise missile. FY2015 and FY2016 NDAAs called for study
and planning of military options.
Note on Sources: All sources cited represent reporting
published between April 7–30, 2026, plus historical treaty
documentation. The analysis integrates official Pentagon statements,
Congressional Research Service reports, CSIS defense analysis, expert
commentary from established defense policy institutions, and wire
service reporting from Bloomberg, Reuters, and Aviation Week. No
classified information is incorporated; all material is from
unclassified public sources or authorized official statements.