Air-Sol Moyenne Portée


The Air-Sol Moyenne Portée is a French nuclear air-launched cruise missile. In French nuclear doctrine it is called a "pre-strategic" weapon, the last-resort "warning shot" prior to a full-scale employment of strategic nuclear weapons. The missile's construction was contracted to Aérospatiale's Tactical Missile Division, now part of MBDA. The missile cost $600 million to develop.
ASMP entered service in May 1986, replacing the earlier free-fall AN-22 bomb on France's Dassault Mirage IV aircraft and the AN-52 bomb on Dassault Super Étendard. About 84 weapons are stockpiled. Carrier aircraft are the Dassault Mirage 2000N, Rafale and Super Étendard. The Mirage IVP carried the ASMP until retired in 1996.
In 1991, 90 missiles and 80 warheads were reported to have been produced. By 2001, 60 were operational.

ASMP-A

An advanced version known as Air-Sol Moyenne Portée-Amélioré ASMP-A has a range of about at a speed of up to Mach 3 with the new TNA 300kt thermonuclear warhead. It entered service in October 2009 with the Mirage 2000NK3 of squadron EC 3/4 at Istres and on July 2010 with the Rafales of squadron EC 1/91 at Saint Dizier.
54 ASMP-A have been delivered to French army.
ASMP and ASMP-A is 5.38 m long and weighs 860 kg. It is a supersonic standoff missile powered by a liquid fuel ramjet. It flies at Mach 2 to Mach 3, with a range between 80 km and 300 km / 500 km depending on flight profile. Warhead was a single variable-yield 100 to 300 kiloton TN 81 for ASMP, and a single variable-yield 100 to 300 kiloton TNA for ASMP-A.

ASN4G

The studies for the successor to the ASMP-A, dubbed ASN4G, have already begun. ASN4G refers to Air-Sol Nucléaire Fourth-Generation. The aim is to design a missile capable of either high supersonic or hypersonic speeds.
The ASN4G could be fitted to the Rafale fighter jet and the requirement is for a missile range much greater than 1,000 kilometers.
ASN4G is being developed by ArianeGroup and is planned to be operational by 2021.

Operators