Artillery Rockets have been used as an artillery weapon for centuries, and continue to be used in the modern age after being extensively modernized in
World War II. Rockets in the artillery role complement traditional
field guns, being superior in some ways and inferior in others. Rocket artillery tends to be simpler, lighter and more mobile than guns or howitzers, most of which must be
emplaced. Guns tend to have better accuracy, consistency, and range, while rocket artillery is light enough to be employed closer to the front lines and excels at saturation fire, expending its entire ammunition load in a single
barrage on a target. The
saturation fire produced by rocket artillery is only somewhat approximated in effectiveness with gun artillery via the
time on target barrage method. Time-sensitive
soft target interdiction (such as personnel or unarmored vehicles moving in large groups) is where rocket artillery is particularly useful. This allows for the
shoot-and-scoot method, avoiding the enemy
counter-battery fire that is the greatest risk to emplaced artillery pieces, while maximizing damage to the target before it can find better cover. (see
Rocket artillery vs gun artillery)
Portable anti-tank Panzerfaust 3. With the invention of the
tank, the
infantry required a weapon to counter the threat. Tank
armour soon developed beyond the point at which an
anti-tank rifle could practically be carried by an infantryman, and by the
Second World War rocket weapons such as the
US bazooka and
German Panzerschreck were in service. Development continued after the war, with weapons such as the
RPG-7, although a need to increase range led to the development of
guided weapons to fulfill the anti-tank role. Most modern armies now use guided missiles for long-range engagements and rockets for close-range or emergency use; disposable weapons such as the
RPG-26 are popular for this. The use of anti-tank weapons to attack buildings and other targets has led to the development of weapons and
ammunition designed specifically to attack non-tank targets, such as the one-shot
LASM and the larger
SMAW.
Air-launched firing rocket pods Unguided rockets are a widely used weapon-system and have been launched from
military aircraft to attack land, sea and air targets since 1916. French and British pilots used
Le Prieur rockets to attack German
observation balloons during the
First World War. Even after the development of guided missiles, rockets remain useful for short-range attacks – typically for
close air support missions. The standard NATO calibre is 70 mm and is considered the international calibre. The rockets can be fired from a variety of rotary and fixed-wing platforms and from combat aircraft of many nations worldwide by means of a rocket launcher. The 70 mm rocket system offers several warhead configurations that fulfill a wide range of special mission-requirements to defeat soft- to lightly-armored targets. ==See also==