May 13, 2006 at 2:57 am
from defence-aerospace
U.S. Seeks To Expand Umbrella of Missile Defense Coverage
(Source: US State Department; issued May 11, 2006)
WASHINGTON —The director of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency says robust defenses are needed against a broad range of current and evolving strategic and tactical ballistic missile threats.
Air Force Lieutenant General Henry “Trey” Obering told members of Congress May 10 that the United States and key partners are working to expand the existing umbrella of defensive coverage to prevent the United States and its allies from being coerced or threatened by ballistic missiles — possibly carrying a weapon of mass destruction.
Since he began his tenure at the MDA in 2003, Obering said he has seen a willingness among U.S. allies to develop and collaborate in the field of missile defense. He told the Senate Appropriations Defense Subcommittee that he has seen the number of countries participating in the agency’s annual international missile defense conference increase every year. In September 2005, he said, 1,000 delegates traveled to Rome from 20 nations to confer.
Japan, Israel and the United Kingdom have been in the forefront of missile defense collaboration, he said. Obering pointed to Japan’s $1 billion-plus investment in missile defense that embraces co-development with the United States, as well as procurement. Japan will host the first transportable, forward-based X-band radar, which, by operating at short wave-length frequencies, provides high resolution imaging for long-range identification, tracking and discrimination among incoming missiles.
He also said the United States has learned much from working collaboratively with the Israelis. Some of this occurs during annual military exercises, he said, while additional learning transpired during “Operation Iraqi Freedom” when the Israeli Arrow and the American Patriot missile defense systems were deployed together to provided integrated coverage.
Additionally, Obering said, the United States has benefited technologically from its work with Israel through incorporation of some Arrow innovations into agency interceptor programs. Senator Conrad Burns told him that subcommittee members, who have voted to help fund the Arrow program, are pleased with its successes — including a recent intercept test — “especially in light of recent developments in Iran.”
The United Kingdom also is working with the United States to upgrade an early-warning ballistic missile defense radar system at the British military base at Fylingdales. Obering said the project should be finished later this year.
Obering said international interest is understandable given the threat that exists: in 2005 there were 80 foreign ballistic missile launches (60 were short-range; 10 medium- to intermediate-range; and 10 long-range).
COOPERATION WITH EUROPE, IN NATO
Lieutenant General Larry Dodgen, who leads the Army’s Space and Missile Command and testified at the hearing alongside Obering, also pointed to increased interest in missile defense within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NATO has been studying missile defense requirements, he said, and is expected to “come forward next year with some recommendations as to what they want to field.”
A number of NATO countries have acquired the U.S. Patriot missile system, Dodgen said, and Spain is planning to do so soon. He also pointed to the U.S.-German-Italian partnership to produce the follow-on to the Patriot system, known as MEADS.
Dodgen also said European cooperation exists through the deployment of a Joint Tactical Ground Station in Stuttgart, Germany. He said its transportable information processing system that downloads data from sensors provides early warning for the United States and allies in Europe regarding potential hostile launches of tactical ballistic missiles.
Obering said there are plans to integrate a missile defense battle management command-and-control system in Europe and the Middle East. The Pacific area already has integrated sensors and interceptors for what he calls “the brain of the system.”
Senator Thad Cochran told the witnesses that it is important to maintain a spirit of cooperation with other countries so that the United States can “deploy radars and other capabilities around the world that make the whole system work.”
Once a long-range missile interceptor field and associated sensors are located in Europe, Obering said, they will provide “improved coverage of the United States and greatly improved protection of our allies and friends in Europe against the Middle East threat” which he identified in his prepared testimony as Iran.
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Missile Defense Interceptor Completes Successful Developmental Flight Test
(Source: US Missile Defense Agency; issued May 11, 2006)
Air Force Lieutenant General Henry “Trey” Obering III, Missile Defense Agency director, announced that a test today of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) Ballistic Missile Defense System element was successful in meeting all test objectives.
The test took place at the White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, and involved the successful launch of the THAAD interceptor missile from its mobile launcher. THAAD is designed to intercept and destroy short to intermediate range ballistic missiles high within earth’s atmosphere (endoatmospheric) or just above earth’s atmosphere (exoatmospheric) in the “terminal” phase of a ballistic missile’s flight—the final minute or so before it strikes its target.
THAAD is an autonomous, highly-mobile, integrated weapon system consisting of a radar, fire control unit, launchers, and interceptor missiles. When fielded, it will be operated by the U.S. Army worldwide to protect our forces overseas and our allies and friends.
All planned test objectives were achieved today This was a fully integrated flight test of all THAAD components, including the mobile launcher, radar, fire control and communications element and the interceptor missile. The test did not involve a target missile but utilized “virtual target” software in order to evaluate performance. The test also demonstrated interceptor performance, including the booster rocket system and the divert and attitude control system, which uses small rockets to maneuver THAAD into the path of its target to achieve a “hit-to-kill” intercept, using only the force of a direct collision to destroy the target missile. The THAAD radar participated by injecting the virtual target information into the system, acquiring and tracking the interceptor and providing in-flight target updates.
Soldiers from the 6th Air Defense Artillery Brigade at Fort Bliss, Texas participated in the test, working with system contactors in the operation of the radar, launcher and fire control and communications. This interaction with the complete THAAD system proved a valuable test experience for the soldiers and provided insight into overall system performance and operations.
While the previous successful THAAD flight test conducted November 22, 2005 was focused on interceptor fly-out and controllability, the remainder of the near-term flight test program will provide verification of the integrated THAAD system at increasingly difficult levels, including a target intercept later this year.
THAAD uses technologies developed in earlier MDA programs and during the THAAD Program Development and Risk Reduction Phase. It is the first missile defense technology with both endoatmospheric and exoatmospheric capability. The THAAD element will provide upper-tier (high-altitude) defense in the terminal segment of MDA’s integrated Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMDS) designed to provide a layered defense for the U.S. homeland, our deployed forces, allies and friends against ballistic missiles of all ranges, in all phases of flight—boost, midcourse and terminal. The higher altitude and theater-wide protection offered by THAAD provides more protection of larger areas than lower-tier systems alone.
The THAAD Program is managed by the Missile Defense Agency in Washington, DC, and executed by the THAAD Project Office in Huntsville, AL. Lockheed Martin Corporation is the prime contractor.
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By: urmomma158 - 21st May 2006 at 22:47
THAAD is alos showing great potential for intercepting ICBM’S!!!!!
THAAD, whose prime contractor is Lockheed Martin, is mainly designed to intercept short- and medium-range ballistic missiles as they transition from the midcourse phase of flight to the terminal phase, but Driessnack indicated a year ago that the system also would be capable against longer-range targets, including intercontinental ballistic missiles (DAILY, Aug. 20, 2004).
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. – U.S. missile defense developers have discovered that the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, designed to destroy short- and medium-range ballistic missiles in their final stages of flight, will also be capable of shooting down longer-range targets.
At the seventh annual space and missile defense conference here, Army Col. Charles Driessnack, THAAD’s program manager, said in a speech late Aug. 18 and at a press briefing Aug. 19 that recent tests of the system’s Raytheon-built radar have shown that THAAD will have a “residual” capability against intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).
“We weren’t planning to have the ICBM capability,” but the radar is “outperforming what we thought it was supposed to do,” Driessnack said.
I love aviation week they give you info even the leading competitors don’t(Jane’s,Globalsecurity,etc etc etc) offer. 😀
By: danrh - 17th May 2006 at 22:15
from JNI May 06
Lockheed Martin completes Block 04 BMD assessment
Nick Brown
Lockheed Martin has completed the land-based engineering assessment phase of development for the latest ballistic missile defence (BMD) Aegis upgrade, Block 04, which will see the return of several core warfighting capabilities to the US Navy’s (USN’s) emergency deployment BMD ships.
The system actually passed its qualifications in February, but the company only cleared the announcement for release in time for the Navy League’s Sea Air Space symposium in Washington DC.
When the USN decided to push a BMD long-range search-and-track capability as an emergency deployment on its Aegis destroyers and cruisers, it was agreed that several traditionally core Aegis combat-management capabilities would be pulled down from the system to minimise potential software conflicts.
Block 04 includes workarounds to ensure the smooth integration of the BMD aspects with the surface and anti-air capabilities, and the land-based engineering assessment effectively proved this out for fleet upgrade on the service’s 15 dedicated BMD destroyers and three cruisers.
Installations are already under way and all three Ticonderoga-class engagement cruisers and 12 Arleigh Burke-class destroyers have undergone the upgrade. The remaining ships will receive the fit as part of their standard maintenance cycles.