Bill asks Pentagon to examine more
options for stopping North Korean missiles
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[August 14, 2018]
By Mike Stone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bill signed by
President Donald Trump on Monday asks the Pentagon to pursue more
options for defeating U.S.-bound North Korean missiles by using radar
and more missiles to spot and shoot down inbound threats.
The National Defense Authorization Act gives the Pentagon $716 billion,
with almost $10 billion going to the Missile Defense Agency to fund the
expansion of missile defenses, emphasizing the need to stop any North
Korean or Iranian attacks.
The military is already exploring whether the United States can add
another layer to defenses to those already in place for intercepting
incoming missiles in flight, Keith Englander, the U.S. Missile Defense
Agency's director for engineering, said at the Space and Missile Defense
Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, last week.
The Missile Defense Agency's head, Lieutenant General Samuel Greaves,
has said he wants to integrate the Aegis Combat System into the current
ICBM defenses of the U.S. homeland. The Aegis system, mainly found on
ships, could be fitted with the Standard Missile 3 Block IIA (SM-3 IIA)
interceptors that are being developed in a joint venture between
Raytheon Co and Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd.
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The Lockheed Martin Corp-made Aegis system is currently deployed aboard
36 U.S. Navy ships, as well as at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on
Hawaii.
If given the new mission, the ships could patrol the Pacific Ocean and
augment the network of Ground-Based Midcourse Defense interceptor
missiles in Alaska and California that protect the nation from
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) attacks.
This is one of several avenues the Pentagon is studying to knock down
inbound missiles. These include shooting the missile down soon after
takeoff, stopping it in space as it flies above the Earth's atmosphere,
and killing it soon after it re-enters the atmosphere before hitting its
target.
Concern about U.S. missile defenses has grown with the escalating threat
from North Korea. Last year, North Korea conducted about a dozen missile
tests, including the launch of a suspected ICBM that could hit the U.S.
mainland and the test of a purported hydrogen bomb.
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North Korean soldiers keep watch at the truce village of Panmunjom
inside the demilitarized zone, North Korea, August 13, 2018. Yonhap
via REUTERS
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North Korea and the United States are struggling to agree on how to
bring about the North's denuclearization, after Kim vowed to work
toward that goal at a landmark summit in June in Singapore with
Trump.
The potential new defenses must first be tested to make sure the
intercepting missile can take out what could be an ICBM fired by
Pyongyang.
In a previous spending bill, Congress mandated that the Missile
Defense Agency perform an intercept test with the SM-3 IIA missile
against an ICBM by the end of 2020.
Last year, Reuters reported that the Pentagon was investigating
adding a missile defense layer under the Ground-Based Midcourse
Defense system.
In May 2017, the Missile Defense Agency held its first live-fire
test of the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense against a simulated ICBM,
and hailed the successful intercept as an "incredible
accomplishment."
(Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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