403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Why A Single Missile Test Shows Brazil Now Demands More Respect In The Skies
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The short video is striking: a Brazilian F-39 Gripen fighter flies over the coast near Natal and releases a single Meteor missile.
Seconds later, a target drone that had been imitating a fast, high-altitude fighter is gone. With that test, Brazil proved that its new jets can fire one of the most advanced air-to-air weapons on the planet.
Meteor is built for“beyond visual range” combat. It can hit targets more than 100 kilometres away, with a large zone in which the target has almost no chance to escape.
A special ramjet engine lets the missile save fuel, then speed up again near the end of the flight. A two-way data link allows the Gripen, or another friendly aircraft, to refresh the target's position or even change the target while the missile is flying.
Each Meteor costs around two million euros, and Brazil is expected to buy roughly one hundred of them. No other South American air force has anything comparable.
Together with the short-range IRIS-T missile and the Gripen's modern radar, Brazil is moving from basic air policing to a credible long-range shield over its coast and borders.
A Silent Race for Sovereignty and Security
At the same time, the air force is pushing a more experimental project: the 14-X hypersonic programme. In a key test, a rocket carried a 14-X demonstrator to the edge of space, where its scramjet engine accelerated it to close to six times the speed of sound.
The goal is to reach around Mach 10 and, later on, use this technology both for cheaper satellite launches and for future long-range strike systems developed in Brazil, not imported.
Add in the nuclear-powered submarine Álvaro Alberto and new cruise missiles, and a pattern appears. Brazil is not preparing to attack anyone.
It is quietly building a minimum level of deterrence so that no great power, friendly or not, can again treat its territory, offshore oil fields or airspace as a playground.
For foreign readers used to hearing mostly about scandals and ideological fights, these projects reveal another side of the country: a slow, technical effort to guarantee sovereignty and stability in a region with a long memory of outside interference.
Seconds later, a target drone that had been imitating a fast, high-altitude fighter is gone. With that test, Brazil proved that its new jets can fire one of the most advanced air-to-air weapons on the planet.
Meteor is built for“beyond visual range” combat. It can hit targets more than 100 kilometres away, with a large zone in which the target has almost no chance to escape.
A special ramjet engine lets the missile save fuel, then speed up again near the end of the flight. A two-way data link allows the Gripen, or another friendly aircraft, to refresh the target's position or even change the target while the missile is flying.
Each Meteor costs around two million euros, and Brazil is expected to buy roughly one hundred of them. No other South American air force has anything comparable.
Together with the short-range IRIS-T missile and the Gripen's modern radar, Brazil is moving from basic air policing to a credible long-range shield over its coast and borders.
A Silent Race for Sovereignty and Security
At the same time, the air force is pushing a more experimental project: the 14-X hypersonic programme. In a key test, a rocket carried a 14-X demonstrator to the edge of space, where its scramjet engine accelerated it to close to six times the speed of sound.
The goal is to reach around Mach 10 and, later on, use this technology both for cheaper satellite launches and for future long-range strike systems developed in Brazil, not imported.
Add in the nuclear-powered submarine Álvaro Alberto and new cruise missiles, and a pattern appears. Brazil is not preparing to attack anyone.
It is quietly building a minimum level of deterrence so that no great power, friendly or not, can again treat its territory, offshore oil fields or airspace as a playground.
For foreign readers used to hearing mostly about scandals and ideological fights, these projects reveal another side of the country: a slow, technical effort to guarantee sovereignty and stability in a region with a long memory of outside interference.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment