Home Australia Australia Launches First HIMARS Rocket In Joint War Games With US

Australia Launches First HIMARS Rocket In Joint War Games With US

Lockheed Martin delivered the first two of 42 HIMARS launchers to Australia, which plans to invest A$74 billion ($49 billion) in missile systems over the next decade.
HIMARS rockets are fired by Australian, U.S. and Singapore defence forces as part of the Talisman Sabre 2025 joint war fighting exercise, at Shoalwater Bay, Queensland, Australia, July 14, 2025. REUTERS/Kirsty Needham

For the first time, Australia’s army fired a truck-mounted long-range rocket system on Monday during joint war games with U.S. and Singaporean forces — a key move as the system gains strategic importance among U.S. allies in the Indo-Pacific.

Armoured trucks with HIMARS – High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems that can reach 400 km (250 miles) – are in high demand in the Ukraine conflict and are also being acquired by U.S. allies in the Indo-Pacific, including Australia, which is reshaping its forces to respond to China’s military build-up.

‘Talisman Sabre’

On the first day of Australia’s largest war games, “Talisman Sabre”, the U.S., Australia, Japan, France, South Korea and Singapore held a live-fire exercise in northern Queensland involving U.S. F-35B fighter jets and land-based long-range strike rockets and missiles.

Up to 40,000 troops from 19 nations are taking part in Talisman Sabre, across thousands of kilometres from Australia’s Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island to the Coral Sea on Australia’s east coast.

Australian Army Brigadier Nick Wilson, director general of the combined live-fire exercise, said it was the first time Australia, Singapore and the United States had fired HIMARS together, and the first firing by Australia on home soil.

“HIMARS will be utilised in conjunction with a number of other weapon platforms … to ensure we have a strategy of denial for security, peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific,” he told reporters on Monday.


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The joint exercise at Shoalwater Bay in north Queensland was watched by Australian Governor General Sam Mostyn and Chief of Defence Admiral David Johnston.

Missile Deal Milestone

Australia has previously said that army regiments with HIMARS can be transported to neighbouring island states with defence agreements to protect its northern approaches in a conflict.

Lockheed Martin delivered the first two of 42 HIMARS launcher vehicles ordered by Australia in April.

Australia has said it will spend A$74 billion ($49 billion) on missiles over the next decade, including a new domestic manufacturing capability.

U.S. Army Lieutenant General Joel Vowell, deputy commanding general for the Pacific, said on Sunday the U.S. needed to work with partners in the Indo-Pacific, and that Talisman Sabre was “a deterrent mechanism because our ultimate goal is no war”.

(With inputs from Reuters)