The
Ground Launched Cruise Missile, or
GLCM, (officially designated BGM-109G Gryphon) was
a ground-launched
cruise missile
developed by the
United States
Air Force in the last decade of the
Cold
War.
It was
developed as a counter to the mobile medium- and intermediate-
range ballistic nuclear missiles
deployed by the Soviet
Union
in Eastern Bloc European
countries. The GLCM and the
U.S. Army's
Pershing II were the incentives that fostered
Soviet willingness to sign the
Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF treaty), and thus eventually reduced
both the number and the threat of
nuclear warheads in Europe. GLCM is also a
generic term for any ground-launched cruise missile. Since the US
deployed only one modern cruise missile in the tactical role, the
GLCM name stuck. The GLCM was built by
General Dynamics.
Design & employment
A conventionally-configured cruise missile, the BGM-109 was
essentially a small, pilotless flying machine, powered by a
turbofan engine. Unlike
ballistic missiles, whose aimpoint is
usually determined by gravitic trajectories, a cruise missile is
capable of complicated aerial manoeuvres, and can fly a range of
predetermined flight plans. Also, it flies at much lower altitudes
than a ballistic missile, typically with a terrain-hugging flight
plan. The trade-off for this low-observability flight is strike
time; cruise missiles travel far more slowly than a ballistic
weapon, and the GLCM was typical in this regard.
GLCM was developed as a ground-launched variant of the
Tomahawk missile in use by the
U.S. Navy (along with an
undeveloped air-launched version, the Medium Range Air to Surface
Missile [MRASM].) Unlike other variants of the Tomahawk, the GLCM
carried only a nuclear warhead; no conventional capability was
provided. The
W84 warhead was a
variable-yield kiloton-range weapon. Some
estimates put the yield at between 10 and 50 kT.
This tactical warhead
contrasts with the W80 warhead
found on other versions of the Tomahawk, and on the ALCM, which had
a yield of 200 kT.2
The
Pentagon
credited the
GLCM with a range of 2000-2500 kilometers. Like other US
cruise missiles of this period,
accuracy after more than 2000 km of flight was within half the
width of a
football field or 100 ft
(approximately 30 meters). The missile was entirely
subsonic, powered by a
turbofan engine with a
rocket
booster assisting at launch.
3
Militarily, the GLCM was targeted against fixed targets—at the
outer edge of its range, the missile's flight time with its
subsonic
turbofan was more than 2 1/2
hours. This contrasted sharply with
Pershing
II, which had a flight time of 10–15 minutes.
However, the range of
the GLCM gave it the ability to strike deep within then-Soviet
territory,
and the weapon's low-altitude flight profile, TERCOM guidance, and low RCS would
have made it far more difficult to intercept a GLCM even if the
launch were detected in time.
Deployment & protest
Designed to be road-mobile, BGM-109 was carried in a four-pack on a
wheeled
MAN AG transporter erector launcher
(TEL), and could travel in convoy. Normal basing was in shelters at
military installations, with deployment to other sites, on- or
off-road, to be carried out in an alert situation.
GLCMs were deployed in
the United
Kingdom
(at RAF Greenham Common
and RAF Molesworth
), Belgium
, Netherlands
, Germany
, and
Italy
. Initial operating capability (or IOC)
occurred in 1983. The launchers (sans warheads) were sent out on a
number of simulated scrambles. Four TELs and their missiles
(including reloads) made up each flight of GLCMs.
4
Although
deployed in the face of a range of Soviet
IRBMs, including the brand-new and extremely capable
SS-20 Saber, the GLCM (sometimes referred to
by its phonetic nickname, Glick-em) faced widespread public protest
in Europe. Many
anti-nuclear Europeans felt
that the United States was deploying weapons meant to win a
tactical nuclear war, without adequate consideration of the effects
that even a 'victory' would bring. Critics also argued that the
Reagan Administration was
unduly escalating tensions in Central Europe. Between them, GLCM
and
Pershing II made a lethal
combination. GLCM missiles could be launched, undetected, followed
2 hours later by a Pershing strike, which would fly so quickly that
it was possible no response could be made before the Pershings
struck.
Aside from presenting an attractive course of
action to NATO
commanders
in the event of Soviet aggression, it put the Kremlin leaders (in range of the GLCM and possibly
the Pershing, even in Moscow
) in a
position of fearing a decapitating NATO first strike, which could
have moved them toward a launch on
warning policy as the only way to maintain deterrence.5
GLCM & the INF
Ironically, and despite the protesters' fears to the contrary, the
deployment of GLCM actually brought greater stability to Central
Europe, and lessened the incentive/need for a tactical nuclear
exchange, through the mechanism of the
INF treaty. The
recognition by Soviet leaders of the threat posed by the GLCM and
Pershing II missiles made them far more
inclined to agree to negotiate their own intermediate-range
weapons, especially the SS-20, out of service, in exchange for the
elimination of the threat posed by the GLCM and the Pershing
II.
6
Unlike
SALT II or
START
I, which set limits to maximum nuclear arsenals, the
INF Treaty banned
whole categories of intermediate-range tactical nuclear weapons
outright. All ground-launched
cruise
missiles and
ballistic
missiles with ranges greater than 500 but less than 5500
kilometers were barred to the U.S. and USSR under this treaty. This
meant the withdrawal of GLCM and Pershing II on the American side;
the Soviets withdrew the
SS-4 Sandal,
SS-5 Skean,
SS-12 Scaleboard,
SS-20 Saber,
SS-22
Scaleboard B, and
SS-23 Spider
MRBM/
IRBM/
LRBM
ballistic missiles, in addition to the GLCM's most direct
counterpart: the
SSC-4 (dubbed the Tomahawksi
in the Western press) and its supersonic follow-on, the SSC-X-5
cruise missiles.
7
GLCM was removed from Europe beginning in 1988, and all units were
removed from service by 1991, being either destroyed or converted
into displays. Eight missiles survive for static display only. No
follow-on design has been authorized.
8
USAF GLCM Units
See also
Sources
External links