• 2002: APKWS development test series begins. • April 2005: General Dynamics APKWS program cancelled due to poor test results. • September 2005: Successful flight test of BAE APKWS II. • October 2005: Competition reopened as APKWS II. • February 2007: Funding for program withdrawn in proposed FY2008 budget. • May 2007: Successful flight test of BAE APKWS II in production-ready configuration. • November 2008: Transfer of contract from US Army to US Navy.
Deployment • March 2012: APKWS II achieves
initial operating capability (IOC) and is sent to Afghanistan with the
United States Marine Corps. Plans are to integrate it onto the
MQ-8 Fire Scout. • July 2012: BAE Systems receives full-rate production contract for APKWS from the U.S. Navy. The first FRP deliveries were in October 2012 and the company expected the next FRP option to be awarded by the end of 2012. • September 2012: The Navy awards a contract to officially integrate the APKWS into the Fire Scout. • October 2012: BAE announces its intention to modify the APKWS II to be fired from fixed-wing tactical fighter platforms. • January 2013: Additional conversion kits ordered. No in flight failures during the 100 combat launches in Afghanistan to date. • February 2013: APKWS launched from an
A-10 Thunderbolt II. Three sorties were conducted. The first sortie carried the rocket and launcher, and the second sortie fired an inert, unguided rocket to ensure the weapon would separate from the aircraft. Two armed rockets were fired during the third sortie from 10,000 and 15,000 feet. The second rocket launched into a 70 knot headwind, and both impacted within inches of the target. The Air Force is considering using the APKWS II operationally by 2015 if further testing is successful. • March 2013: APKWS is integrated onto the
Bell 407GT. • April 2013: A UH-1Y Venom fired 10 APKWS rockets at stationary and moving small boat targets, scoring 100 percent accurate hits on single and multiple targets over water. The engagement ranged from 2–4 km using inert Mk152 high explosive and MK149 flechette warheads. The UH-1Y had the boats designated by an MH-60S. • October 2013: APKWS successfully fired from an
AH-64 Apache. Eight rockets were fired with the helicopter flying at up to and up to from the target. Launch altitudes ranged from 300 ft to 1,500 ft. BAE wants airworthiness qualification on the Apache for international sales to AH-64 operators. • March 2014: LAU-61 G/A Digital Rocket Launcher (DRL) deployed with HSC-15. • July 2014: BAE reveals that the APKWS has reached Early Operational Capability (EOC) with one squadron of
MH-60S helicopters. The MH-60R will be outfitted within "12-18 months." • August 2014: APKWS tested on
Australian Army Eurocopter Tiger at
Woomera Test Range. A helicopter was on the ground and fired seven rockets which successfully hit their targets. The rocket could enter Australian service by early 2015 on army Tigers and navy MH-60R helicopters. • October 2015: US Army AH-64 Apache helicopters to field weapon in Iraq and Afghanistan. • March 2016: First rocket variants for launch from fixed-wing aircraft shipped to Marine Corps Harriers. • June 2016: APKWS deployed on USAF F-16 and A-10 as part of an urgent operational requirement. • October 2016: Production rate increased to 5,000 a year. • June 2016-January 2017: 200 APKWS used against
ISIL targets, including 60 during the
Battle of Mosul. • February 2018: First operational deployment of APKWS on Marine Corps legacy F/A-18 Hornets. • December 2019: US Air Force demonstrates air-to-air capability of AGR-20A to cue off
Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod and intercept low-flying cruise missiles. In December 2019, the 85th Test and Evaluation Squadron at Eglin AFB, Florida, conducted a test using APKWS rocket against a drone representing a cruise missile. By adapting the rocket for cruise missile defense, it can serve the same role as the much more expensive
AIM-120 missile, according to an Air Force release. "The test was unprecedented and will shape the future of how the Air Force executes CMD," Col. Ryan Messer, commander of the 53d Wing at Eglin, said in a release. "This is a prime example of how the 53d Wing is using resources readily available to establish innovative ways that enhance combat capabilities for our combat units." In June 2020, BAE announced they had completed test firings of the APKWS from a ground launcher for the first time. Several rockets were fired from an Arnold Defense-built launcher called the Fletcher designed specifically for ground vehicles, demonstrating the weapon's ability to address a demand for standoff ground-to-ground precision munitions for small ground units. In April 2024, the U.S. Navy ordered five Electronic Advanced Ground Launcher Systems (EAGLS) for rapid delivery in response to an urgent need to respond to UAS threats in the Middle East. EAGLS is a self-contained system consisting of a four-round APKWS launcher, a sensor turret with EO/IR cameras, and an RPS-40 radar. ==Foreign users==