In Alaska, soldiers relish role in U.S.
missile defense
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[April 27, 2018]
By Justin Mitchell
FORT GREELY, Alaska (Reuters) - Two hours
south of Fairbanks, Alaska, near the starting point of the Alaska
highway, sit row upon row of missile silos embedded in the frozen ground
in the shadow of snow-capped mountains.
Despite their location, far from Washington, D.C., Pyongyang, or Moscow,
the 40 missiles here could one day decide the fate of millions of
Americans.
The missiles and a few dozen National Guard soldiers will form the first
line of defense should North Korea, or any other country, fire an
intercontinental ballistic missile at the United States.
In recent months, North Korea has said it has developed a missile that
can reach the United States mainland.
In a control room at Ft. Greely, just outside the small town of Delta
Junction, five soldiers performed a simulation on Thursday showing
reporters how they would respond to an attack.
"The first threat in the system shows an impact location of Los
Angeles," said Captain Jospeh Radke, the team's battle analyst,
referring to the second largest U.S. city.
"Threat in the system is showing Los Angeles, we’re going to engage at
this time," said Major Terri Homestead, the crew's director.
Homestead then gave orders to the team’s weapons operator, Staff
Sergeant Justin Taylor, to fire one missile from Ft. Greely and another
from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
The five-person team is one of 10 units that operate the Ground-Based
Midcourse Defense system. They spend 60 percent to 70 percent of their
working days running drills, trying to account for any possible
scenario.
GROWING TENSION
Soldiers such as Homestead and Radke have seen the facility take on
increasing significance in global affairs in recent years, as tension
with North Korea has escalated.
Most recently, U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim
Jong-Un spent much of late 2017 and early 2018 trading threats of
annihilation.
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Sergeant Yamil Ramirez (on ground) and Specialist Elliot Besh, of
the 49th Missile Defense Battalion Military Police at the Ft. Greely
missile defense complex in Fort Greely, Alaska, U.S., April 26,
2018. REUTERS/Mark Meyer
The soldiers said the high stakes are part of what makes them love
the job, despite the remote location and the strain of weighing
life-or-death options.
"That responsibility is what drives us," Radke told reporters. "It’s
really what allows us to put in the time that we do up here. Knowing
not just that you’re protecting the 300 million people in the United
States, but also your family members, your friends across the United
States."
The system became operational in 2004 under the direction of
President George W. Bush. Now there are plans to add 20 more
missiles to the 40 waiting silently just underground in Ft. Greely,
with additional interceptors at Vandenberg Air Force Base in
California.
The most recent test, in May, was successful. Colonel Kevin Kick,
the commander of the 100th Missile Defense Brigade, which oversees
the missile defense system, said it was constantly being improved.
"These ground-based interceptors in the system fielded right now at
Ft. Greely and at Vandenberg Air Force Base are the best of what
we’ve got," Kick said. "We’re ready, if called on, to respond to
threats against our nation."
(Reporting by Justin Mitchell; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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