Romania eyes deep-strike upgrade for its old rocket launchers

Key Points
  • Aerostar Bacău and Elbit Systems unveiled a modernized LAROM prototype at BSDA 2026 in Bucharest, extending range from 45 to 150 kilometers via EXTRA rockets.
  • The upgrade integrates a Mobile Fire Control System enabling AccuLAR-122 and EXTRA 306mm guided munitions with under 10-meter accuracy on Romania's existing LAROM fleet.

Romania’s aging LAROM multiple rocket launcher system is getting a second life, according to DefenseRomania.

At the BSDA 2026 international defense exhibition in Bucharest, running May 13-15, Aerostar Bacău and Elbit Systems jointly unveiled a functional prototype of a modernized LAROM mounted on the indigenous ROMAN 26.410 truck platform, presenting what the companies describe as a cost-effective path to dramatically extending the system’s firepower without replacing it outright.

The LAROM has been in Romanian Army service since 2001, derived from the Soviet-era APRA-40 architecture. The systems currently equip the 52nd Artillery Regiment and the 69th Mixed Artillery Regiment. The 8th Operational-Tactical Rocket Brigade “Alexandru Ioan Cuza,” which previously operated LAROM systems, has since been equipped with HIMARS multiple rocket launchers supplied by the United States.

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The modernization package presented at BSDA resolves those limitations through integration of a Mobile Fire Control System, or MFCS, an advanced fire control interface that enables the LAROM to accept the same munitions families used by Israeli Lynx launchers and their export variants, the PULS and EuroPULS systems. According to the companies, the installation requires only minor mechanical modifications to the existing chassis, meaning Romania’s 54 operational LAROM platforms could theoretically be brought to a current precision standard in a short timeframe and at a fraction of the cost of procuring new artillery systems from scratch.

The first munition integrated into the upgraded configuration is the AccuLAR-122, a guided 122mm rocket equipped with a combined GPS and inertial navigation guidance package. A modernized LAROM can fire 18 AccuLAR-122 rounds simultaneously, each carrying a 25-kilogram fragmentation warhead. The GPS/INS guidance package reduces the circular error probable to under 10 meters, while extending maximum range to 40 kilometers, doubling the effective reach compared to classic unguided Grad-type munitions at equivalent caliber. For a brigade currently dependent on weapons whose accuracy degrades significantly at distance, that precision improvement changes the tactical calculus of nearly every fire mission.

The Extended Range Artillery projectile, caliber 306mm, is a significantly larger weapon: 4.7 meters long, 570 kilograms at launch, and powered by a solid-fuel motor that drives it to a maximum range of 150 kilometers. A modernized LAROM carries and fires four EXTRA rounds simultaneously from two launch modules, delivering a 120-kilogram fragmentation warhead to target with a maximum error of 10 meters. The warhead is designed specifically for the destruction of command centers and armored logistics infrastructure, the kinds of targets that sit well behind the forward edge of battle and have historically required aircraft or ballistic missiles to reach.

Elbit Systems also noted that launcher accuracy can be further improved through real-time data feeds from reconnaissance drones, citing the Watchkeeper UAV as an example of an integrated capability, a platform also produced by Elbit. The combination of precision-guided rockets and drone-fed targeting data represents a networked fires architecture that Romania currently lacks at scale, and the LAROM modernization package is positioned as a way to acquire that architecture without the procurement timelines and budget exposure of a clean-sheet artillery program.

Extending the LAROM’s engagement range from 45 kilometers to 150 kilometers transforms the 8th Brigade from a tactical fire support element into a precision deep-strike asset capable of reaching targets across a full operational theater. That distinction matters enormously in the context of NATO’s current posture on the eastern flank, where member states have been under sustained pressure to build genuine warfighting depth rather than trip-wire deterrence. Romania, sharing a border with Ukraine and sitting at the intersection of the Black Sea region’s competing power dynamics, has particular incentive to convert its existing artillery inventory into something capable of shaping conditions well beyond its immediate front lines.

Editor’s Note: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that the 8th Operational-Tactical Rocket Brigade “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” operates 54 LAROM systems. The brigade has since transitioned to U.S.-supplied HIMARS systems. LAROM platforms currently equip the 52nd Artillery Regiment and the 69th Mixed Artillery Regiment of the Romanian Armed Forces.

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