West Coast deploy new anti-missile defense as North Korea’s missile tests raise concerns.
The U.S. agency tasked with protecting the country from missile attacks
is scouting the West Coast for places to deploy new anti-missile
defenses, two Congressmen said on Saturday, as North Korea’s missile
tests raise concerns about how the United States would defend itself
from an attack.
“It’s just a
matter of the location, and the MDA making a recommendation as to which
site meets their criteria for location, but also the environmental
impact,” the Alabama Congressman and Republican told Reuters during an
interview on the sidelines of the annual Reagan National Defense Forum
in southern California.
The MDA told Congress
in June that it planned to deliver 52 more THAAD interceptors to the
U.S. Army between October 2017 and September 2018, bringing total
deliveries to 210 since May 2011.
North Korea’s latest missile test puts the U.S. capital within range, but Pyongyang still needs to prove it has mastered critical missile technology, such as re-entry, terminal stage guidance and warhead activation, South Korea said on Friday.
West Coast defenses would likely include Terminal
High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-ballistic missiles, similar to
those deployed in South Korea to protect against a potential North
Korean attack.
The accelerated pace of North
Korea’s ballistic missile testing program in 2017 and the likelihood the
North Korean military could hit the U.S. mainland with a nuclear
payload in the next few years has raised the pressure on the United
States government to build-up missile defenses.
On Wednesday, North Korea tested a new type of
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) that can fly over 13,000 km
(8,080 miles), placing Washington within target range, South Korea said
on Friday.
Congressman Mike Rogers, who sits on
the House Armed Services Committee and chairs the Strategic Forces
Subcommittee which oversees missile defense, said the Missile Defense
Agency (MDA), was aiming to install extra defenses at West Coast sites.
The funding for the system does not appear in the 2018 defense budget
plan indicating potential deployment is further off.
When
asked about the plan, MDA Deputy Director Rear Admiral Jon Hill said
in a statement: “The Missile Defense Agency has received no tasking to
site the Terminal High Altitude Air Defense System on the West Coast.”
The MDA is a unit of the U.S. Defense Department.
Congressman
Rogers did not reveal the exact locations the agency is considering but
said several sites are “competing” for the missile defense
installations.
Rogers and Congressman Adam Smith, a Democrat
representing the 9th District of Washington, said the government was
considering installing the THAAD anti-missile system made by aerospace
giant Lockheed Martin Corp, at west coast sites.
The Congressmen said the number of sites that may ultimately be deployed had yet to be determined.
THAAD
is a ground-based regional missile defense system designed to shoot
down short-, medium- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles and takes
only a matter of weeks to install.
In
addition to the two THAAD systems deployed in South Korea and Guam in
the Pacific, the U.S. has seven other THAAD systems. While some of the
existing missiles are based in Fort Bliss, Texas, the system is highly
mobile and current locations are not disclosed.
A
Lockheed Martin representative declined to comment on specific THAAD
deployments, but added that the company “is ready to support the Missile
Defense Agency and the United States government in their ballistic
missile defense efforts.” He added that testing and deployment of assets
is a government decision.
In July, the United
States tested THAAD missile defenses and shot down a simulated, incoming
intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM). The successful test adds
to the credibility of the U.S. military’s missile defense program, which
has come under intense scrutiny in recent years due in part to test
delays and failures.
Currently, the
continental United States is primarily shielded by the Ground-based
Midcourse Defense system (GMD) in Alaska and California as well as the
Aegis system deployed aboard U.S. Navy ships. The THAAD system has a far
higher testing success rate than the GMD.
North Korea’s latest missile test puts the U.S. capital within range, but Pyongyang still needs to prove it has mastered critical missile technology, such as re-entry, terminal stage guidance and warhead activation, South Korea said on Friday.