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The ”’AGM-136A ”Tacit Rainbow””’ was a [[United States military]] [[anti-radiation missile]] program from 1982 to 1991. |
The ”’AGM-136A ”Tacit Rainbow””’ was a [[United States military]] [[anti-radiation missile]] program from 1982 to 1991. |
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The requirement was for a low-cost air-launchable system to aid in the [[SEAD|destruction of enemy air defense networks]]. The proposed unit would combine elements of [[cruise missile]]s and [[unmanned aerial vehicle|UAVs]], it would be launched in large numbers by heavy bombers, fighters, or possibly mass ground launch systems. |
The requirement was for a low-cost air-launchable system to aid in the [[SEAD|destruction of enemy air defense networks]]. The proposed unit would combine elements of [[cruise missile]]s and [[unmanned aerial vehicle|UAVs]], it would be launched in large numbers by heavy bombers, fighters, or possibly mass ground launch systems. |
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Latest revision as of 21:27, 8 November 2025
Anti-radiation missile
The AGM-136A Tacit Rainbow was a United States military anti-radiation missile program run from 1982 to 1991.
The requirement was for a low-cost air-launchable system to aid in the destruction of enemy air defense networks. The proposed unit would combine elements of cruise missiles and UAVs, it would be launched in large numbers by heavy bombers, fighters, or possibly mass ground launch systems.
The missiles would fly in advance of crewed aircraft up to 450Â km (280Â mi) to pre-programmed target zones and patrol there until enemy radar sources were detected which would then be destroyed, acting as a loitering munition. This extended patrol time on target (“loiter time”) was the key feature of the new system, a persistent anti-radiation missile (PARM) as opposed to a HARM. This would allow for the threatening suppressive effects that HARMs have for significantly longer times, allowing friendly aircraft to operate in the area with a higher degree of safety for a longer time.[1]
The project was started by the DoD in 1982, but moved to the control of the USAF Aeronautical Systems Division in 1984 as a joint Navy/Air Force project. The majority of the system was designed and developed by Northrop with Texas Instruments providing the seek head and Boeing providing a system that allowed it to be launched from B-52 bombers. The first test air-launch was on July 30, 1984.
The unit was 8Â ft 4Â in (2.54Â m) long and 5Â ft 2Â in (1.57Â m) in span with a body diameter of 27 inches (690Â mm), flight and control surfaces deployed after launch. It weighed around 431 pounds (195Â kg) including the 40-pound (18Â kg) warhead. Power was provided by a Williams F121 turbofan, producing 310Â N (70Â lbf) of thrust from the 0.9Â m (35Â in), 22Â kg (49Â lb) unit.[2]
Some sources state that production units would have used a 1,200Â N (270Â lbf) variant of the Williams International WR-24. While achieved speed and range are uncertain, low subsonic speed flight was probable and all sources indicate a range much lower than the hoped-for 450Â km (280Â mi). Each unit was to cost around $200,000, up to thirty would have been loaded in a single B-52.[citation needed]
The Naval Research Advisory Committee reported in 1989 that the project was not progressing well. In 1991 a DoD audit found numerous management problems. The program was canceled in 1991 (FY 1992), without any production units and at a total cost of around $4 billion. It was only the second post-Vietnam military project to be canceled after completing testing but before production.

Below is a list of museums which have a Tacit Rainbow in their collection:



