Korean
Missile Found In Alaska
U.S. plans to test THAAD missile defenses as North Korea tensions
mount
8
July, 2017
The
United States plans to carry out a new test of its THAAD missile
defense system against an intermediate-range ballistic missile in the
coming days, two U.S. officials told Reuters on Friday, as tensions
with North Korea climb.
Despite
being planned months ago, the U.S. missile defense test will gain
significance in the wake of North Korea's launch of an
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) on July 4 that has
heightened concerns about the threat from Pyongyang.
The
test will be the first of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense
(THAAD) to defend against a simulated attack by an intermediate-range
ballistic missile (IRBM), one of the officials said. The THAAD
interceptors will be fired from Alaska.
The
United States has THAAD interceptors in Guam that are meant to help
guard against a missile attack from a country such as North Korea.
The
officials who disclosed to Reuters the precise nature and timing of
the upcoming test spoke on condition of anonymity.
Asked
by Reuters, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) confirmed that it
aimed to carry out a THAAD flight test "in early July."
Chris
Johnson, an MDA spokesman, said the THAAD weapon system at the
Pacific Spaceport Complex Alaska in Kodiak, Alaska, would "detect,
track and engage a target with a THAAD interceptor."
"The
test is designated as Flight Test THAAD (FTT)-18," Johnson said.
He did not elaborate.
Still,
in recent testimony to Congress, Vice Admiral James Syring, then the
director of the Missile Defense Agency, said FTT-18 would aim to
demonstrate THAAD's ability to intercept a separating IRBM target.
MDA
said THAAD had a 100 percent successful track record in its 13 flight
tests since 2006. After previous tests, the U.S. military has
publicly disclosed the results.
SOUTH
KOREAN DEPLOYMENT
THAAD
is a ground-based missile defense system designed to shoot down
short-, medium- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles.
Lockheed
Martin Corp, the prime contractor for the THAAD system, said it has
the ability to intercept incoming missiles both inside and outside
the Earth's atmosphere.
This
year's U.S. deployment of THAAD in South Korea to guard against North
Korea's shorter-range missiles has also drawn fierce criticism from
China, which says the system's powerful radar can probe deep into its
territory.
Earlier
this month Moscow and Beijing, in a joint statement, called on
Washington to immediately halt deployment of THAAD in South Korea.
The
statement said Washington was using North Korea as a pretext to
expand its military infrastructure in Asia and risked upsetting the
strategic balance of power in the region.
THAAD's
success rate in testing is far higher than the one for America's
Ground-based Midcourse Defense system (GMD), the system specifically
designed to shoot down an ICBM headed for the U.S. mainland.
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That
GMD system has only a 55 percent success rate over the life of the
program. But advocates note that the technology has improved
dramatically in recent years.
In
a key development, the GMD system successfully shot down an incoming,
simulated North Korean ICBM in a test in May.
That
led the Pentagon to upgrade its assessment of America's ability to
defend against a small number of ICBMs, according to an internal memo
seen by Reuters.
MDA
told Congress in June that it plans to deliver 52 more THAAD
interceptors to the U.S. Army between October 2017 and September
2018, for a total of 210 since May 2011.
In
a sign of U.S. congressional concern about missile defense, several
lawmakers filed amendments to a sweeping defense policy bill on
Friday that addressed North Korea. Republican Representative Don
Young, whose home state Alaska is seen as especially vulnerable to
the North Korea threat, asked for more ground-based interceptors for
his state, and a study of potential additional sites on the East
Coast or Midwest.
Democratic
Representatives John Conyers and Sheila Jackson Lee, along with
Republican Walter Jones, filed an amendment to the annual National
Defense Authorization Act saying that nothing in the bill should be
construed as authorizing the use of force against North Korea.
The
full House of Representatives is due to consider the bill, and its
amendments, next week.
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