This resemblance, and that Selenia was provided with the technology know-how of the AIM-7 (around 1,000 of which it had produced under licence), has generally led non-Italian press to refer to the Aspide as a Sparrow variant. However, the Aspide had original electronics and warhead, and a new and more powerful engine. Closed-loop hydraulics were also substituted for Sparrow's open-loop type, which gave Aspide better downrange maneuverability. Even the control surfaces are different, replacing the original triangular wings, fixed in the air-to-air and instead foldable in the surface-to-air version, to a newly designed common
cropped delta fixed version.
A similar design is the UK's
Skyflash, which entered service about the same time. The US's own Sparrow fleet also added a monopulse seeker in the AIM-7M versions of 1982.
Design
Aspide, in its various versions, was used both in the air-to-air role, carried by
Aeritalia F-104s in the apposite versions F-104S and F-104ASA, and in the surface-to-air naval role. In the latter role it has been replaced by the
MBDA Aster. Naval Aspide launchers can be adapted to fire the
Sparrow by merely switching a single circuit board.
In the mid 1980s, China imported a small batch of the Aspide Mk.1 from Italy, then signed an agreement with Alenia to produce the missile locally under license. In 1989, China produced its first batch of Aspide Mk.1 missiles using imported parts from Italy. However, due to the
EEC arms embargo imposed after the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, China was unable to purchase additional Aspide kits.[1] China subsequently developed its own missile family based on the Aspide Mk.1, with surface to air versions designated as the
LY-60, and an air-to-air version designated as
PL-11.
The rocket engine of the Aspide is produced by Turkish missile manufacturer
Roketsan.[2] It weighs about 75 kg and produces 50 kN of thrust for 3.5 s.
Variants
Aspide Mk.1 – Similar to
AIM-7E, with Selenia monopulse semi-active seeker and
SNIA-Viscosa solid-propellant rocket motor. This version was popular with export customers, and sold to 17 countries.[3] The surface-to-air systems are
Skyguard and
Spada.
Aspide Mk.2 – Improved version with active radar-homing seeker. Development was shelved in favor of better missiles, such as the
AIM-120 AMRAAM.
Aspide 2000 – Improved surface-to-air version of the Aspide Mk.1, used on export
Skyguard and
Spada 2000 air-defense systems.
Aspide Citedef – Surface-to-air version of the Aspide Mk.1 upgraded by
Citedef.[4]
Systems
Skyguard I – VSHORAD/SHORAD from
Oerlikon Contraves with radar tracking, upgradeable to support Aspide 2000.
Skyguard II – Improved VSHORAD/SHORAD from Oerlikon Contraves with added electro-optical tracking.
Toledo – Skyguard with
Skydor fire control system from
Navantia and Aspide launchers.
Spada –
SHORAD from
Selenia with Selenia
PLUTO 2D radar, upgradeable to support Aspide 2000.
- 320 ordered in 1988 and delivered in 1988–1997 for Skyguard Amoun SAM System; 175 Aspide 2000 ordered in 2007 and delivered in 2008–2010 part of $565m deal, for modernization Aspide; 250 Aspide 2000 ordered in 2007 and delivered in 2008–2013 part of $65 m deal for Skyguard AD systems [5]
- 200 ordered in 1985 and delivered in 1987–89 part of $230 m deal for 13 Skyguard systems, later upgraded to Skydor, with the missiles retired in 2020; 51 Aspide 2000 ordered in 1996 and delivered in 1997–99 for 2 Spada 2000 SAM systems
– 24 ordered in 1984 and delivered in 1986–1987 for use on
Ratanakosin Class corvettes; 75 ordered in 1986 and delivered in 1988 for use by Royal Thai army on 1 Spada SAM system
- 144 ordered in 1986 and delivered in 1987–1989 for MEKO 200T (Yavuz class) frigate; 72 ordered in 1990 and delivered in 1995–1996 for
MEKO 200T-2 (Barbaros class) frigate
- Spain will train and gift Ukraine with the Aspide 2000 missile system, with Ukrainian soldiers having finished training on 14 October. On 7 November Ukrainian Defence Minister
Oleksiy Reznikov announced that Ukraine had received the first
NASAMS system from the US, along with the Italian made Aspide.[7][8] On 22 July 2023, two
ZALA Lancet drones destroyed a Aspide air defense system's fire control station and a launcher[9]
References
^"PL-11". Sinodefence. Archived from
the original on 2006-05-27. Retrieved 2006-11-15.