U.S.
officials, touring missile defense site, voice concern about North Korea
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[February 27, 2016]
By David Alexander
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.
(Reuters) - Senior U.S. defense officials voiced concern about North
Korea's nuclear ambitions on Friday as they toured American missile
defense sites a day after watching the military test-fire its second
intercontinental ballistic missile in a week.
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Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work and Admiral Cecil Haney,
combat commander of U.S. nuclear forces, said they were confident
American missile defenses could counter the nuclear threat from
Pyongyang despite a mixed record of success in testing.
"I think when you look at what it’s designed for, and that’s a North
Korean type problem, I think (I have) a very high confidence that we
would have the capability," Haney said after visiting a nondescript
metal building where workers assemble the ground-based interceptor
at the heart of the defense system.
Their remarks were a second day of messaging North Korea about its
nuclear ambitions. Work said the test-firing of the unarmed
Minuteman III missile on Thursday night was aimed at demonstrating
the reliability of U.S. nuclear arms to potential nuclear rivals
like Russia and North Korea.
The tour of missile defense facilities was another signal to
Pyongyang, which recently detonated an underground nuclear device
and tested a rocket in defiance of U.N. Security Council
resolutions.
"North Korea as a whole (is) very, very problematic in terms of
their thirst to have a nuclear capability," Haney told reporters,
citing Pyongyang's indifference to Security Council resolutions and
its provocative attacks on South Korea.
The United States currently has 30 ground-based interceptor missiles
to target and destroy nuclear ballistic missiles while they are
still in space. Four of the interceptors are at Vandenberg and the
rest at Fort Greely, Alaska.
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The U.S. military is building another 14 interceptors at a cost of
nearly $1 billion to be installed at Fort Greely by the end of 2017,
fulfilling a pledge by former Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in 2013
after Pyongyang threatened a pre-emptive nuclear strike on the
United States.
The deputy secretary said on Friday the ICBM test-shot late on
Thursday was viewed as a success because of its proximity to the
target near Kwajalein Atoll in the South Pacific. The military does
not generally disclose how close the missile lands to its target.
Work said it was the eighth consecutive successful test of a
Minuteman III and the 27th consecutive successful missile test in
the nuclear force, including air-launched cruise missiles and
submarine-launched missiles.
(Reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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