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Introduction

The Tomahawk cruise missile, officially designated BGM-109, represents one of the most significant precision-strike weapons developed during the Cold War era that continues to shape modern warfare. Named after the iconic axe of Native Americans, this long-range, subsonic cruise missile has been a cornerstone of United States and allied military strategy for over four decades. Its ability to strike high-value targets with pinpoint accuracy while minimizing risk to manned aircraft has made it an indispensable tool in conflicts ranging from the 1991 Gulf War to contemporary operations in Yemen and against Iranian nuclear facilities. This article examines the Tomahawk's technical characteristics, operational history, recent upgrades, and its evolving role in twenty-first-century warfare.

I. Historical Development and Origins

The Tomahawk missile was conceived in the early 1970s as a Cold War-era weapon system capable of delivering both nuclear and conventional payloads against heavily defended targets. Developed primarily by General Dynamics and later by Raytheon, the missile entered service with the United States Navy in 1983, initially deployed in Europe as a nuclear-capable platform.

The strategic rationale behind the Tomahawk was straightforward: provide the U.S. military with a stand-off weapon that could penetrate sophisticated enemy air defenses without endangering pilots. During the Cold War, a family of Tomahawk variants existed, including nuclear-tipped, land-based, air-launched, and anti-ship versions. However, following the end of the Cold War, most of these variants were retired, leaving the conventionally armed Tomahawk Land Attack Missile (TLAM) as the primary version in service.

II. Technical Specifications and Design

The Tomahawk is a shipborne and submarine-launched cruise missile measuring approximately 5.6 to 6.1 meters in length, with an 8.5-foot wingspan when its small retractable wings are deployed, and weighing about 1,510 to 1,600 kilograms. It is powered initially by a solid-propellant rocket booster during the launch phase, after which a turbofan engine—specifically the Williams F107 producing approximately 2.8 kN of thrust—takes over to propel the missile to its target.

The missile cruises at subsonic speeds of approximately 880 kilometers per hour (550 miles per hour) and has a range that varies by variant, typically cited between 1,600 and 2,500 kilometers (1,000 to 1,500 miles). One of its most distinctive features is its low-altitude flight profile, flying as low as 30 to 50 meters above ground level to evade radar detection. This terrain-hugging capability allows the Tomahawk to navigate through valleys and even pass under bridges, making it exceptionally difficult to intercept.

The warhead options include unitary high-explosive payloads weighing approximately 450 kilograms (1,000 pounds) and, in some variants, cluster munitions. Early versions also carried nuclear warheads, specifically the W80 fission-fusion warhead with adjustable yield between 5 and 150 kilotons, though these nuclear variants have since been retired.

III. Guidance Systems and Navigation Technology

The Tomahawk's legendary accuracy derives from its sophisticated multi-mode guidance systems. The missile employs an Inertial Navigation System (INS) coupled with Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers to maintain course. However, its most distinctive navigation technology is the Terrain Contour Matching (TERCOM) system.

TERCOM works by comparing real-time radar altimeter readings of the terrain below with pre-loaded digital elevation maps stored in the missile's computer. This allows the Tomahawk to continuously verify its position and make course corrections as it flies. For terminal guidance, many variants also incorporate the Digital Scene Matching Area Correlation (DSMAC) system, which uses optical sensors to compare the actual view of the target area with reference images stored in memory, ensuring the missile strikes the correct aim point.

Modern Block IV and Block V Tomahawks feature an additional crucial capability: a two-way satellite data link that allows the missile to be re-targeted in flight. This means a Tomahawk can loiter over an area for hours, change course instantly on command, switch to alternative targets, or even be aborted mid-mission if circumstances change. The integration with tactical data networks further enhances this flexibility, allowing the missile to receive real-time targeting information from aircraft, drones, satellites, and ground assets.

IV. Launch Platforms and Operational Flexibility

Originally designed as a naval weapon, the Tomahawk can be launched from both surface ships and submarines. Surface ships typically use vertical launch systems (VLS), while submarines can launch missiles horizontally from torpedo tubes or from external vertical launchers attached to the hull.

The Ohio-class Guided Missile Submarines (SSGNs) represent the most formidable Tomahawk platforms, with each submarine capable of carrying up to 154 Tomahawk land-attack cruise missiles in 22 missile tubes, each tube containing seven-shot multiple-all-up-round canisters. The four SSGNs combined represent more than half of the U.S. Submarine Force's vertical launch payload capacity.

Following the U.S. withdrawal from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty in 2019, ground-based Tomahawk launchers have also been developed. The U.S. Army has deployed Typhon batteries—each with four launchers based on the Mark 41 naval system—while the Marine Corps has received its own ground-based launchers. Private defense firms have also developed mobile ground launchers capable of carrying four Tomahawks.

V. Combat History and Operational Use

The Tomahawk first saw combat in 1991 during Operation Desert Storm, where over 280 missiles were launched from U.S. Navy ships and submarines against Iraqi targets. These strikes destroyed hardened targets including surface-to-air missile sites, command-and-control centers, the Iraqi presidential palace in Baghdad, and electrical power plants. The Gulf War also witnessed the first coordinated Tomahawk and manned-aircraft strike in military history.

Subsequently, Tomahawks have been used extensively in numerous conflicts:

Enforcement of "no-fly zones" over Iraq throughout the 1990s

1998 strikes against terrorist camps in Sudan and Afghanistan

The 2003 Iraq War, where hundreds were launched during the "shock and awe" campaign

2011 intervention in Libya to dismantle air defense systems

2017 strike on Syria's Shayrat Airbase in response to chemical weapons attacks, where 59 Tomahawks were launched

2018 strikes on Syrian chemical weapon facilities, with 66 missiles launched

Operations against Houthi rebel sites in Yemen in 2024

2025 precision strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan

According to manufacturer data, U.S. and allied militaries have flight-tested Tomahawks over 550 times and used them in operational environments more than 2,350 times.

VI. Modernization: The Block V Series

In 2020, the U.S. Navy began a comprehensive recertification and modernization program for the Tomahawk fleet, extending the service life of existing Block IV missiles by 15 years and resulting in the new Tomahawk Block V series. All Block IV missiles are scheduled for conversion to Block V standard, while remaining Block III missiles will be retired.

The Block V series includes three variants:

Block V: A modernized Tactical Tomahawk (TACTOM) with upgraded navigation and communication systems, maintaining in-flight target update and improved navigation capabilities.

Block Va (Maritime Strike Tomahawk - MST): A Block V variant equipped with an advanced multi-mode seeker specifically designed to engage moving targets at sea, effectively giving the Tomahawk an anti-ship capability that had been retired after the Cold War.

Block Vb (Joint Multiple Effects Warhead System - JMEWS): A Block V variant featuring an enhanced warhead system capable of penetrating and destroying a wider variety of hardened land targets.

The Block Va Maritime Strike Tomahawk entered low-rate production in 2021, with contracts to integrate and produce seeker suites capable of prosecuting maritime targets from both surface and subsurface platforms.

VII. Cost and Production

Tomahawk missiles are manufactured by Raytheon, a division of RTX Corporation. According to Pentagon budget data, the average cost per missile is approximately $1.3 to $1.5 million. The U.S. plans to purchase 57 missiles in fiscal year 2026. Beyond new production, significant funding is allocated to modifying and upgrading existing missiles, including guidance system enhancements and the integration of new seeker technologies.

VIII. Strategic Implications and the Ukraine Question

In 2025, discussions emerged regarding the potential transfer of Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine, which would dramatically expand Kyiv's strike capabilities. Ukrainian long-range strike systems, including domestically developed missiles with ranges over 1,600 kilometers and Neptune missiles over 600 kilometers, as well as Western-supplied systems like ATACMS (up to 190 kilometers) and Storm Shadow (155 miles), currently lack the combination of range, payload, and precision offered by Tomahawks.

However, significant operational hurdles exist. Ukraine lacks the naval surface ships and submarines that serve as the Tomahawk's primary launch platforms. While ground-based launchers exist, the U.S. has limited numbers, and restoring Cold War-era ground-launched variants would be technically challenging. Additionally, the Tomahawk's sophisticated guidance systems require detailed terrain data and mission planning support, raising questions about how much sensitive intelligence would be shared.

Nevertheless, the very discussion of Tomahawk transfers reflects the missile's status as a strategic weapon capable of influencing great-power dynamics. As one analysis noted, obtaining the missiles is one thing—using them effectively is another matter entirely.

Conclusion

For over four decades, the Tomahawk cruise missile has remained at the forefront of precision-strike warfare, evolving from a Cold War nuclear delivery system into a sophisticated conventional weapon capable of engaging both land and maritime targets with remarkable accuracy. Its combination of long range, low-altitude penetration, advanced guidance technology, and in-flight re-targeting capability makes it one of the most versatile weapons in the modern arsenal.

The Tomahawk's combat legacy, from the deserts of Iraq to the mountains of Afghanistan and the contested airspace over Yemen, demonstrates its enduring relevance. With the Block V modernization program extending its service life well into the 2030s and adding new capabilities against moving maritime targets, the Tomahawk will continue to serve as a cornerstone of U.S. and allied power projection. Whether deployed from submarines lurking beneath the waves, surface ships operating in international waters, or emerging ground-based launchers, the Tomahawk represents the culmination of precision-guided munitions technology—a weapon that has fundamentally transformed how modern militaries conduct long-range strikes.


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The Tomahawk Missile // Kampala: Uganda (LIBRARY.UG). Updated: 01.03.2026. URL: https://library.ug/m/articles/view/The-Tomahawk-Missile (date of access: 09.03.2026).

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