Point-defence

Point defence (or point defense; see spelling differences) is the defence of a single object or a limited area, e.g. a ship, building or an airfield, now usually against air attacks and guided missiles.[1] Point defence weapons have a smaller range in contrast to area-defence systems and are placed near or on the object to be protected.

Point defence may include:

Coastal artillery to protect harbours is similar conceptually, but is generally not classified as point defence. Similarly, passive systems—electronic countermeasures, decoys, chaff, flares, barrage balloons—are not considered point defence.

Examples

Aircraft

Close-in weapons systems

Directed-energy weapons

Surface-to-air missile systems

Active Protection Systems

  • Arena APS – a Russian point defence system for individual armoured vehicles.
  • Trophy APS - an Israeli APS in service with the IDF.

See also

References

  1. ^ Aldridge, Robert C. (1983). First Strike!: The Pentagon's Strategy for Nuclear War. South End Press. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-89608-154-3.
  2. ^ North American A/RA-5 Vigilante - MINI in action No. 3 by Terry Love, 1 Mar. 1995, ISBN 0897473345
  3. ^ Wings Of Fame Volume 19: Retaliator, Aerospace Products Company Publishing LTD ISBN 9781861840493
  4. ^ NAVY PEO (SHIPS) WASHINGTON NAVY YARD DC (2013-12-01). "LPD 17 San Antonio Class Amphibious Transport Dock (LPD 17)". Fort Belvoir, VA. doi:10.21236/ada614841. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "IAI Rafael Barak 1 SAM Missile short-range air defense". www.seaforces.org. Retrieved 2025-03-27.
  6. ^ "Israel Aerospace Barak-1 Interceptors Demolish Four Target Missiles". Defense Daily. 2008-11-03. Retrieved 2025-03-27.
  7. ^ Rout, Hemant Kumar (2025-03-27). "Surface-to-air missile VL-SRSAM successfully flight-tested by DRDO". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 2025-03-27.