Pentagon weighing options for missile
defense: Undersecretary Kendall
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[July 14, 2014]
LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. Defense
Department hopes to fund a much more reliable kill vehicle, or warhead,
for the homeland missile defense system run by Boeing Co , but final
decisions will depend largely on cost, the Pentagon's top arms buyer
said on Sunday.
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"It's going at the end of the day to be a question of
affordability," Defense Undersecretary Frank Kendall told reporters
on the eve of the Farnborough airshow.
Kendall said decisions had not been finalized on whether to upgrade
the existing kill vehicles, built by Raytheon Co, or start from
scratch with a new design.
Raytheon, Lockheed Martin Corp and Boeing have all expressed
interest in bidding for a new kill vehicle.
The U.S. military on June 22 carried out its first successful test
since 2008 of the new kill vehicle that is used on 10 of 30
ground-based interceptors that have already been deployed. Twenty
other interceptors carry an earlier version, which failed in an
intercept test one year ago.
Kendall said the successful test marked "a very positive step that
will us to move forward." He also praised the technical expertise of
Vice Admiral James Syring, who heads the Pentagon's Missile Defense
Agency.
Kendall said he supported testing the initial common kill vehicle
that is in place on 20 of 30 kill vehicles, as well as more regular
testing of such systems in general to shore up confidence in the
system.
"Right now we’re moving in the direction of a much more reliable
kill vehicle, but how far we’re going to go in that direction, ...
and the exact form that’s going to take, isn’t final yet," he said.
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Kendall said a successful June 22 missile defense test was
encouraging and would help shore up the program.
Boeing, prime contractor for the program, said there was a lot of
activity going on about how to move forward with a new kill vehicle,
and the prime contract for managing the Ground-based Midcourse
Defense (GMD) system, but it was not clear when a new deal could be
signed.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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