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Although the manufacturer claimed higher numbers, the official report on the conduct of the Persian Gulf War stated that 189 SPLLs had fired 9,660 rockets.
Most of the launchers were with US Army forces; the first US combat use came in mid-February as part of the preparation for the ground campaign. Generally, reports on the effectiveness of the weapon were very favorable, with a large percentage of Iraqi targets destroyed.
According to some reports, the rate of fire was described as “steel rain,” allegedly coined by Iraqi soldiers to describe MLRS bombardments.
12 British MLRS launchers fired over 2,500 rockets during Desert Storm. As evidence of the system’s destructive power, the British noted an Iraqi brigade that began with 80 artillery pieces and lost only 20 to air attacks over a period of weeks. After the MLRS barrages, only seven pieces remained operable.

Lockheed Martin is under contract to incorporate two new upgrades to the current MLRS system. The new M270A1 launcher appears identical to existing M270s while incorporating an Improved Fire Control System (IFCS) and an Improved Launcher Mechanical System (ILMS). M270A1 launchers feature improved survivability, reduced operating cost, increased munition options and GPS navigation. The U.S. Army will begin converting the U.S. MLRS fleet to M270A1 in 2002.
Greatly increased responsiveness
Meets Digitized Corps requirements
83 percent reduction in aim time
38 percent reduction in reload time
38 percent reduction in O&S costs
State-of-the-art electronics
Embedded GPS/Inertial Navigation System
First Unit Equipped in FY02
Advanced fault isolation capability
References:
Almond, Denise L., ed., Desert Score: U.S. Gulf War Weapons (Washington, DC: Carroll Publishing, 1991), 378–379;
“America’s Arsenal,” Popular Mechanics, 168:4 (April 1991), 30;
Blake, Bernard, ed., Jane’s Weapon Systems, 1988–89 (Coulsdon, Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group, 1988), 133–134.
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