http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/world/Viewdet.asp?ID=8970&cat=a

31st Jan 2007 : Web Edition No: 12779#

Sea, land-based interceptors test successful; US missile defense maturing
WASHINGTON (RTRS): Within a year, the US missile defense system should 
be able to guard against enemy attacks, while testing new technologies, 
the deputy director of the US Missile Defense Agency said on Monday. The 
United States activated the ground-based system last summer when North 
Korea launched one long-range and six short-range missiles. North 
Korea’s intercontinental Taepodong 2 missile fell into the Sea of Japan 
shortly after launch but the short-range tests appeared successful, said 
Brig Gen Patrick O’Reilly, deputy director of the Pentagon’s Missile 
Defense Agency.

O’Reilly said there would be no formal announcement that the system was 
operational. He predicted the capability to defend against enemy 
missiles and to continue testing and development work would be achieved 
within a year. “It’s just a matter of maturation,” he told reporters 
after a speech hosted by the George C. Marshall Institute, a public 
policy group. O’Reilly said work by North Korea and Iran on long-range 
ballistic missiles underscored the need for a viable US missile defense 
system.

The war between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants last summer 
also highlighted the dangers of ballistic missiles and their use by 
non-state actors, he said. “We know we must be prepared for all 
contingencies.” O’Reilly said the missile defense system, which includes 
sea-based and ground-based interceptors, and powerful X-Band radar 
systems, achieved success in 14 of 15 flight tests. Through the end of 
2007, the program will focus on protecting the United States from 
threats from the Middle East and North Korea, expanding coverage to US 
allies and boosting protection against shorter-range threats.

Focus
In 2008 and beyond, there would be increased focus on countering 
unconventional attacks and increasing the US inventory of interceptors 
and sensors, O’Reilly said. On Saturday, the Terminal High Altitude Area 
Defense (THAAD), built by Lockheed Martin Corp, intercepted a target 
shot from a barge. It was the first test of THAAD since its move to the 
Pacific Missile Range Facility in Hawaii. Two more THAAD intercept tests 
are planned for 2007, along with three tests of the Aegis Standard 
Missile-3 interceptors against short- and medium-range targets, O’Reilly 
said. The agency also plans two tests of long-range ground-based 
interceptors in late spring and early fall. The United States has 14 
interceptors in Alaska and two in California, primarily to counter North 
Korea. O’Reilly said the number in Alaska would grow to 21 within eight 
months.

By 2011, plans call for some 40 interceptors in Alaska and four at 
Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, he said.
He said negotiations were just beginning with Poland to host up to 10 
ground-based interceptors and with the Czech Republic about fielding an 
advanced radar station. Asked about the concerns of Russian officials, 
O’Reilly said the United States was talking with Moscow and hoped to 
convince it that placing US missile defenses in eastern Europe could 
also enhance Russia’s security as well. He gave no timeline for 
completing negotiations with Poland and the Czechs, but said the United 
States was “always looking at all our options” if either country chose 
not to proceed. “We’ll have to see how it unfolds,” O’Reilly said.

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