What Are Tomahawk Missiles and Why Trump Might Send Them to Ukraine
Ukraine could receive a newly developed
land-based launcher to strike Moscow and beyond.
U.S. Consideration to Arm Ukraine with
Tomahawks
·
President Trump has suggested sending Tomahawk
cruise missiles to Ukraine.
·
This would enable Ukraine to strike deep
into Russian territory, including Moscow.
·
Trump stated, “We have a lot of Tomahawks,”
ahead of his meeting with President Zelensky.
What Are Tomahawk Missiles?
·
Type:
Long-range cruise missile powered by a jet engine.
·
Range:
Over 1,000 miles (Moscow is ~500 miles from Kyiv).
·
Speed:
~550 mph (70% the speed of sound).
·
Warhead:
Typically 400 lbs of TNT; variants include cluster munitions
and grid-disabling filaments.
·
Cost:
~$2.5 million per missile.
·
History:
First used in 1991 Gulf War; developed in the 1970s.
Launching Mechanism
·
Traditionally launched from ships or submarines
using a solid-fuel booster.
·
Wings unfold mid-air and the missile cruises
like an aircraft.
New Land-Based Launcher: Typhon
·
Developed post-2019 INF Treaty collapse.
·
Containerized system with four rotating
missile tubes.
·
First tested in 2023; deployed to the Philippines,
Australia, and Japan in 2024.
·
Would be the longest-range U.S. weapon
provided to Ukraine.
Ukrainian
Troop Readiness
·
Minimal training needed due to prior experience
with HIMARS and ATACMS.
·
Typhon uses a fire control computer for
targeting.
·
U.S. may provide flight-planning tools
or pre-packaged targeting data.
Targeting Capabilities
·
Uses terrain maps, GPS, and digital imagery.
·
Can be redirected mid-flight and maneuver around obstacles.
[ABS
News Service/17.10.2025]
President Trump has hinted
that he may send Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine, which would give President
Volodymyr Zelensky the ability to attack Moscow with precise munitions capable of
great destruction.
Mr. Trump, who will meet with Mr. Zelensky
at the White House on Friday, said on Tuesday
that he knew the Ukrainian leader wanted the weapons.
“We have a lot of Tomahawks,” Mr. Trump
added.
Because of their long range, accuracy and
low cost compared to piloted warplanes, Tomahawks have long been seen as a go-to
weapon in the Pentagon’s arsenal.
The United States has launched more than 2,300 Tomahawks
in combat over more than four decades. The most recent versions cost
roughly $2.5 million each.
What is a cruise missile?
A cruise missile is powered by a small
jet engine and has wings to produce lift, allowing it to fly like an airplane that
guides itself to a target.
Is the Tomahawk new?
No.
According to U.S. government histories, development of the Tomahawk began in
the early 1970s.
The U.S. military first used them in
combat during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, and has used them in
dozens of conflicts since.
How far can they fly?
More than 1,000 miles.
How far is Moscow from Kyiv?
About 500 miles.
What are some of the Tomahawk’s advantages?
When in cruise mode, they can fly low to
the ground, making them more difficult to spot by radar.
They also fly relatively fast: 550 miles per hour, or roughly 70 percent the speed of sound.
And perhaps most useful for Ukraine, the
United States has many hundreds of them.
How are the missiles launched?
Like any cruise missile, the Tomahawk needs
some assistance before it can begin flying to a target on its own.
The U.S. Navy’s Tomahawks use a solid-fuel
rocket motor to boost the missile up to about 1,500 feet above the surface. The
rocket motor falls away, the missile’s wings unfold and the air intake for the jet
engine opens, allowing the Tomahawk to begin flying like an airplane.
How could Ukraine launch them?
In 2024, the U.S. Army deployed a new land-based
launcher for Tomahawks and other naval missiles called Typhon,
which is essentially a standard 40-foot shipping container concealing four missile
tubes that rotate upward to fire.
The Army first test-fired a Tomahawk from that launcher in 2023.
They would be the longest-range U.S.
weapons given to Ukraine thus far.
The Pentagon developed Typhon rather quickly
after the Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty between Russia and the United States —
which had banned land-based cruise missiles — collapsed
in 2019.
Army soldiers first deployed Typhon to the Philippines
in 2024 as a show of force to
China. The launchers were later sent to Australia for an exercise in July and to Japan in September.
Would Ukrainian troops need a lot of training
to use them?
Not really.
In the summer of 2022, Ukraine’s army quickly
learned another American-made mobile launch system called HIMARS,
which fires guided rockets
to a range of more than 70 miles and ATACMS missiles
out to 190 miles. While the Typhon system is different in some respects, it also
requires soldiers to input data into a fire control computer before launch.
The Pentagon would probably also send the
equipment needed to compile the flight-planning information that the missile requires,
or would have to supply Ukraine with data packages for targets inside Russia.
What do Tomahawks carry?
Typically, a warhead with the explosive
equivalent of about 400 pounds of TNT.
There are also cluster weapon versions
of the Tomahawk, the most common of which carries 166 small failure-prone
bomblets. That type was most recently used in December 2009 during a secret and botched
U.S. attack on alleged Al Qaeda training camps in Yemen.
The other variant, which remains classified,
is designed to temporarily disable
an adversary’s electrical grid by releasing small canisters of carbon
fiber filaments that blanket electrical transmission lines
and cause transformers and other equipment to short.
The Navy’s newest generation of Tomahawk
missiles will also be able to attack moving ships at sea.
A variant armed with a nuclear warhead
was retired in 2013, according to
the Congressional Research Service.
How do Tomahawks find their targets?
The Tomahawk was originally designed to use data
fed into its guidance computer before launch — terrain contour maps to
verify its location as well as digital photos of the target.
Later versions incorporated GPS guidance
and radio antennae that allowed the missiles to be redirected to a new target after
launch.
They are maneuverable
weapons that can change course to fly around obstacles like enemy air defenses, buildings or mountains before they reach their target.