Opinion: A US Army's Patriot Surface-to Air missile system US Defenseless Against Ballistic Missiles as Trump Threatens to Destroy N Korea
20
September, 2017
On
Tuesday, US President Donald Trump threatened to "totally
destroy" North Korea if Pyongyang does not stop its nuclear and
missile tests. In fact, the US missile defense system is incapable of
shooting down North Korean missiles, according to American expert on
nuclear weapons Joe Cirincione.
Neither
the US nor Japan could have intercepted the missile launched by North
Korea last week because "none of the theater ballistic
missile defense weapons in existence" could hit a target
at such an altitude, Cirincione wrote in a piece
for Defense
One.
On
September 15, South Korea and Japan said that North Korea fired the
Hwasong-12 ballistic missile. It reached an altitude of 770
kilometers and traveled 3,700 kilometers before falling into the
Pacific Ocean, according to the South Korean Defense Ministry.
"It
is hundreds of kilometers too high for the Aegis
interceptors deployed on Navy ships off Japan. Even higher
for the THAAD
systems in South
Korea and Guam. Way too high for the Patriot systems in Japan,
which engage largely within the atmosphere," Cirincione
pointed out.
All
of the three missile
defense systems are
designed to intercept a missile in the post-midcourse or
terminal phase. In theory, an attempt could be made to intercept
a missile just after the launch. However, according to the
expert, it would be quite unrealistic.
"There
is almost no chance of hitting a North Korean missile on its
way up unless an Aegis ship was deployed very close to the
launch point, perhaps in North Korean waters. Even then, it
would have to chase the missile, a race it is unlikely to win.
In the only one or two minutes of warning time any system would
have, the probability of a successful engagement drops close
to zero," the article read.
As
for the continental part of the US, there are
the Ground-Based
Midcourse Defense(GMD)
interceptors deployed in Alaska and California. This system is
designed to hit targets in midflight, including in space.
But the GMD is not fully operational yet and has destroyed only 50
percent of targets during tests. It is hard to predict
how the system would operate under realistic conditions,
including against a missile using countermeasures.
"We
will have no choice than to totally destroy North Korea,"
Trump said
in his first speech at the
UN General Assembly.
Trump
said that Pyongyang’s "reckless pursuit of nuclear
weapons and ballistic missiles threatens the entire world with the
unthinkable loss of human life." The US president stressed
that "denuclearization is its only acceptable future"
for North Korea.
The
American leader went on by calling on United Nations member
states to join forces to isolate the Kim regime until it
ceases its "hostile" behavior
North
Korea responds to Trump’s UN speech
The
ruling North Korean Workers' Party is not likely to abandon its
ballistic missile tests, on the contrary, the party pledges to
strengthen country's protective capabilities in case the US builds up
pressure on Pyongyang.
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