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Trump vows to boost America’s missile defense

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President Donald Trump vowed Thursday to boost America's missile defense systems, including by investing in technology to protect against the growing threat of hypersonic weapons and cruise missiles.

Speaking at the Pentagon, Trump unveiled the Missile Defense Review, a long-awaited analysis of the defensive network of US interceptors that are designed to shoot down an incoming ballistic missile.

Top among the concerns highlighted in the review is the speed at which rivals, particularly China and Russia, are pushing ahead with hypersonic missiles, which can thwart traditional defense systems.

"The US will now adjust its posture to defend against any missile strikes including cruise and hypersonic missiles," Trump told the military audience.

"We will terminate any missile launches from hostile powers or even from powers that make a mistake. It won't happen, regardless of the missile type or geographic origins of the attack."

Flying at low altitude and at many times the speed of sound, hypersonics are able to change direction and don't follow a ballistic arc, so are much harder to track and cannot currently be intercepted.

As a result, the Pentagon is urgently looking at ways to enhance its ability to track hypersonic missiles, primarily by using existing sensors that are deployed in space.

"These new technologies produce new threats, and these threats are harder to see, harder to track and harder to defeat," Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said.

"To our competitors: we see what you are doing and we are taking action."

Russian President Vladimir Putin last month boasted of a new hypersonic missile that could fly at about 20,500 miles (33,000 kilometers) per hour and is unstoppable.

Acting US Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan  pictured on his first day on January 2  2019  warne...
Acting US Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, pictured on his first day on January 2, 2019, warned that new missile threats are "harder to see, harder to track and harder to defeat"
SAUL LOEB, AFP/File

While Trump blasted Iran for developing missile technology, he did not mention Russia or North Korea.

Pyongyang has developed a ballistic missile arsenal now capable of hitting the United States.

Trump ordered the missile defense review in 2017, amid heightened tensions with Pyongyang over its nuclear program -- the first such review of America's ballistic defenses since 2010.

But Trump has since met North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un in a bid to end the crisis, and he was expected to welcome a top North Korean official in Washington on Friday.

Still, the review itself stresses that North Korea is "an extraordinary threat and the United States must remain vigilant."

- Missiles in space -

Currently  ground-based anti-missile technologies  like this one pictured during a 2017 test in Cali...
Currently, ground-based anti-missile technologies, like this one pictured during a 2017 test in California, focus on intercepting warheads while they are in the "midcourse" phase, flying through space
Gene Blevins, AFP/File

The Missile Defense Agency (MDA), which conducted the review, said it would study the feasibility of creating a space-based interceptor system, in which an orbiting craft of some sort would be equipped with missiles that could destroy an incoming warhead while it was in space.

Another focus for the MDA will be developing ways to knock out a ballistic missile immediately after it has launched.

Currently, ground-based anti-missile technologies focus on intercepting warheads while they are in the "midcourse" phase, flying through space.

By attacking the missiles while they are still in their slow-moving "boost phase" at launch, the MDA could add a new layer of defense for America and its allies.

One way of doing this could be by adding a new type of missile to F-35 stealth fighters patrolling near a suspected launch site, such as in a hypothetical conflict with North Korea, the MDA said.

North Korean reach
North Korean reach
John SAEKI, AFP

"Intercepting offensive missiles in their boost phase would increase the likelihood of successfully countering missile threats, complicate an aggressor's attack calculus... and reduce the number of midcourse or terminal active defense interceptors needed to destroy the adversary's remaining offensive missiles," the MDA said.

The MDA is also looking at ways of boosting its "directed energy" -- or laser -- capabilities to take out ballistic missiles.

The review was due to be released last year, but its publication saw repeated delays.

President Donald Trump vowed Thursday to boost America’s missile defense systems, including by investing in technology to protect against the growing threat of hypersonic weapons and cruise missiles.

Speaking at the Pentagon, Trump unveiled the Missile Defense Review, a long-awaited analysis of the defensive network of US interceptors that are designed to shoot down an incoming ballistic missile.

Top among the concerns highlighted in the review is the speed at which rivals, particularly China and Russia, are pushing ahead with hypersonic missiles, which can thwart traditional defense systems.

“The US will now adjust its posture to defend against any missile strikes including cruise and hypersonic missiles,” Trump told the military audience.

“We will terminate any missile launches from hostile powers or even from powers that make a mistake. It won’t happen, regardless of the missile type or geographic origins of the attack.”

Flying at low altitude and at many times the speed of sound, hypersonics are able to change direction and don’t follow a ballistic arc, so are much harder to track and cannot currently be intercepted.

As a result, the Pentagon is urgently looking at ways to enhance its ability to track hypersonic missiles, primarily by using existing sensors that are deployed in space.

“These new technologies produce new threats, and these threats are harder to see, harder to track and harder to defeat,” Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said.

“To our competitors: we see what you are doing and we are taking action.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin last month boasted of a new hypersonic missile that could fly at about 20,500 miles (33,000 kilometers) per hour and is unstoppable.

Acting US Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan  pictured on his first day on January 2  2019  warne...

Acting US Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, pictured on his first day on January 2, 2019, warned that new missile threats are “harder to see, harder to track and harder to defeat”
SAUL LOEB, AFP/File

While Trump blasted Iran for developing missile technology, he did not mention Russia or North Korea.

Pyongyang has developed a ballistic missile arsenal now capable of hitting the United States.

Trump ordered the missile defense review in 2017, amid heightened tensions with Pyongyang over its nuclear program — the first such review of America’s ballistic defenses since 2010.

But Trump has since met North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un in a bid to end the crisis, and he was expected to welcome a top North Korean official in Washington on Friday.

Still, the review itself stresses that North Korea is “an extraordinary threat and the United States must remain vigilant.”

– Missiles in space –

Currently  ground-based anti-missile technologies  like this one pictured during a 2017 test in Cali...

Currently, ground-based anti-missile technologies, like this one pictured during a 2017 test in California, focus on intercepting warheads while they are in the “midcourse” phase, flying through space
Gene Blevins, AFP/File

The Missile Defense Agency (MDA), which conducted the review, said it would study the feasibility of creating a space-based interceptor system, in which an orbiting craft of some sort would be equipped with missiles that could destroy an incoming warhead while it was in space.

Another focus for the MDA will be developing ways to knock out a ballistic missile immediately after it has launched.

Currently, ground-based anti-missile technologies focus on intercepting warheads while they are in the “midcourse” phase, flying through space.

By attacking the missiles while they are still in their slow-moving “boost phase” at launch, the MDA could add a new layer of defense for America and its allies.

One way of doing this could be by adding a new type of missile to F-35 stealth fighters patrolling near a suspected launch site, such as in a hypothetical conflict with North Korea, the MDA said.

North Korean reach

North Korean reach
John SAEKI, AFP

“Intercepting offensive missiles in their boost phase would increase the likelihood of successfully countering missile threats, complicate an aggressor’s attack calculus… and reduce the number of midcourse or terminal active defense interceptors needed to destroy the adversary’s remaining offensive missiles,” the MDA said.

The MDA is also looking at ways of boosting its “directed energy” — or laser — capabilities to take out ballistic missiles.

The review was due to be released last year, but its publication saw repeated delays.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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