USS America tests its RAM on drone ahead of maiden deployment

The U.S. Navy’s newest amphibious assault ship, USS America (LHA 6), destroyed a drone in a live-fire exercise using its ship self-defense Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) system on April 6.

The live-fire exercise was part of an Amphibious Squadron (PHIBRON) Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) Integration (PMINT) training exercise in preparation for America’s upcoming maiden deployment with the America Amphibious Ready Group (ARG).

The unmanned drone was put in place to simulate a missile being fired at the ship in order to test the ship’s defense capabilities.

“The purpose of this exercise was to test the capabilities of the combat systems on board and to ensure they were fully operational,” said Fire Controlman 2nd Class (SW/AW/IW) Thomas Mirsky, assigned to the ship’s combat systems department. “The exercise consisted of targeting our RAM to a drone strategically placed in the Pacific Ocean.”

“By testing the ship’s defense capabilities, we gain confidence in our ability to defend not only the ship, but keep our Sailors and Marines safe and sound onboard,” said Mirsky.

America is the first ship of its class, replacing the Tarawa class of amphibious assault ships and is homeported in San Diego. As an aviation centric amphibious assault ship, this platform supports Marine aviation requirements, from small-scale contingency operations of an expeditionary strike group, to forcible entry missions in major theaters of war.

The ship is currently underway with more than 1,000 sailors and 1,600 embarked marines conducting Amphibious Squadron / Marine Expeditionary Unit Integration operations.