Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “LRHW”
Dark Eagle: The Army's Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon Explained
On April 24, 2025, the U.S. Army formally designated its Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW) program as the Dark Eagle — a name that has since become the public face of one of the most consequential conventional strike capabilities in American military development. With a reported range of 1,725 miles, the system represents a generational leap in ground-launched precision fires.
The LRHW is a ground-launched missile equipped with a hypersonic glide body and an associated suite of transport, support, and fire control equipment. Its stated purpose is to give Army commanders a long-range, conventional precision strike capability against time-sensitive and heavily defended targets in contested environments — the kinds of targets that have historically required either naval fires, air-delivered weapons, or escalatory nuclear options.
Dark Eagle's Price Tag and the Congressional Oversight Problem
At roughly $41 million per missile in 2023 dollars — and reportedly higher for the first eight missiles requested in the FY2025 budget — the Dark Eagle sits at a price point that makes magazine depth a genuine strategic liability. A single battery holds eight rounds. The arithmetic is uncomfortable.
The Congressional Budget Office’s January 2023 study on U.S. hypersonic weapons placed the per-unit cost of intermediate-range boost-glide missiles comparable to the LRHW at that $41 million figure for a 300-missile buy. Army program officials confirmed in discussions with the Congressional Research Service that the actual fly-away cost for the initial FY2025 procurement would exceed that estimate. The standard procurement logic applies — costs should fall as production quantities rise — but the Army has not yet demonstrated that production scale is achievable at the pace operational demand would require.
Dark Eagle's Road to Operational Readiness: A Testing History
The flight test record of the Army’s Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon — now formally the Dark Eagle — spans nearly five years of failures, cancellations, delays, and, eventually, two successful end-to-end demonstrations in a single calendar year. That arc tells a story about the difficulty of developing hypersonic systems at operational scale, and about what it takes to bring one from prototype to fielding.
The Army originally intended three flight tests before fielding the first battery in FY2023. That schedule did not survive contact with the physics involved.
Who Operates the Dark Eagle? LRHW Units, Structure, and the Multi-Domain Task Force
The Army’s Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon does not belong to a conventional fires formation. It lives inside the Multi-Domain Task Force — a relatively new organizational construct built specifically for great-power competition in the most demanding operational environments the Army envisions. Understanding where the Dark Eagle sits in the force structure explains who it is aimed at and how it fits into broader joint campaign design.
The LRHW battalion is built around batteries, each consisting of one Battery Operations Center, four transporter erector launchers, a BOC support vehicle, and up to eight All-Up Rounds plus Canister. A single battery therefore holds up to eight missiles — a modest stockpile that immediately raises questions about magazine depth in sustained operations, a concern Army leadership has acknowledged publicly.