Super-Duper Missile

Super-Duper Missile (sometimes rendered as Super Duper Missile) is a colloquial name for a hypersonic missile of unknown designation and capabilities purportedly being developed by the United States. It has been theorized to be the AGM-183A ARRW (Arrow), an air launched hypersonic boost glide weapon.
Background and development
Early U.S. hypersonic weapons policy
In November 2011, the first advanced hypersonic weapon glide vehicle (AHW) successfully tested by the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command was unveiled. The initial test of the long-range, surface-to-surface missile was followed by a second test flight in 2014. Concurrent with the AHW program, the Hypersonic Technology Vehicle 2 (HTV-2) began development by the DARPA Falcon Project; the HTV-2 is reported capable of operating at 13,000 mph (Mach 17.53, 21,000 km/h).
In February 2020, the Trump Administration proposed a 23 percent increase in funding for hypersonic weapons and, the following month, Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Michael D. Griffin stated that the United States was "close at hand" to having a hypersonic boost-glide weapon ready to field.
Public announcement
The Super-Duper Missile was announced by President of the United States Donald Trump during a press availability in the Oval Office on 15 May 2020. Writing in The Hill in response to the announcement, Ryan P. Burke - an associate professor of military and strategic studies at the U.S. Air Force Academy - opined that "the super duper missile is a super duper necessity to deal with the super duper Russian threat in the Arctic". In a statement to TASS, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov later clarified that the topic of American hypersonic weapons developments would be a subject of a forthcoming conference call with his American counterparts, noting that, while he had no specific knowledge of the Super-Duper Missile, "all those ‘supers’ and ‘dupers’ and everything else that concerns nuclear arms control" would be discussed.
Theorized identity as AGM-183A
Viktor Murakhovsky, editor-in-chief of the Russian periodical Arsenal of the Fatherland, has theorized that the Super-Duper Missile is, in fact, the AGM-183A air launched rapid response weapon which reportedly has a maximum speed of Mach 20. Nick Schifrin has advanced a similar contention, as has the China Times.
In February 2020, the U.S. Air Force announced it had decided to move forward with acquisition of the AGM-183A, developed by Lockheed Martin. The weapon uses a boost-glide system, in which it is propelled to hypersonic speed by a rocket on which it's mounted before gliding towards a target.
Design
According to Trump, the Super-Duper Missile is 17 times faster than existing missiles in the United States arsenal and had, as of May 2020, just received "go ahead". Kingston Reif of the Arms Control Association has indicated his skepticism as to the veracity of such a claim.
 
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