Orlando Sentinel

The U.S. plans

White House moves amid expert warning and N. Korea threats

- By David Willman David.willman@latimes.com

to boost its missile defense amid North Korea threat.

WASHINGTON — Citing North Korea’s growing nuclear and ballistic missile threat, the Trump administra­tion is moving to vastly expand the problempla­gued homeland missile defense system despite warnings that the planned upgrades may not succeed.

Immediate plans call for building two $1 billion radar installati­ons and adding 20 rocket intercepto­rs to the 44 already deployed in undergroun­d silos at Fort Greely in Alaska and at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

The Pentagon also is taking steps to launch new satellites to help each intercepto­r’s “kill vehicle” find, crash into and destroy incoming ballistic missiles high above the atmosphere.

The expected cost is about $10.2 billion over five years, on top of more than $40 billion already spent for the system. On Thursday, Congress passed a shortterm government funding bill that includes $200 million to start preparing constructi­on of additional missile silos in Alaska.

But government reports and interviews with technical experts suggest the planned upgrades, including a redesigned kill vehicle, are unlikely to protect the U.S. from a limited-scale ballistic missile attack, the system’s stated mission.

One concern is the administra­tion’s rush to expand the system. The first new radar is scheduled to be operationa­l in 2020 before any flight testing is conducted. And the first set of redesigned kill vehicles are to be installed in late 2021 — following just one flight test of a prototype. All the new intercepto­rs and kill vehicles are to be in place by the end of 2023.

“There’s no way to prove out the design — let alone its reliabilit­y — without more flight tests,” said L. David Montague, a former aerospace executive who cochaired a National Academy of Sciences panel of 16 experts that recommende­d ways to improve U.S. missile defenses in 2012.

On Oct. 11, President Donald Trump told Fox News that the intercepto­rs “can knock out a missile in the air 97 percent of the time.” The intercepto­rs have only a 50 percent success rate in controlled flight tests, according to Pentagon reports.

The stakes are high because North Korea has developed an arsenal of nuclear weapons and last month tested an interconti­nental ballistic missile that American officials said appeared capable of reaching the entire United States.

Some experts fear that U.S. overconfid­ence in the missile defense system could lead to miscalcula­tions in the standoff with Pyongyang.

“The response to North Korea is, ‘Let’s spend billions of dollars more on missile defense,’ ” said Laura Grego, a physicist who led a 2016 study of the anti-missile system for the nonpartisa­n Union of Concerned Scientists. “But we ought to be very careful that we’re not fooling ourselves.”

The Missile Defense Agency, the Pentagon division responsibl­e for protecting the nation from a limited ballistic missile attack, did not respond to questions for this article.

Pentagon officials have assured Congress that they have confidence in the system — but that it needs improvemen­ts. In April 2016, Vice Adm. James D. Syring, then head of the missile agency, told a Senate subcommitt­ee that he wanted to “replace the less reliable kill vehicles.”

More details about the system’s upgrades, and their expected costs, are expected early next year when the administra­tion completes its Ballistic Missile Defense Review, a document aimed at setting policy and priorities.

Even more ambitious missile defense projects may be on the way.

On Dec. 12, Trump signed a defense authorizat­ion bill that requires the missile agency to develop plans to ultimately deploy 104 intercepto­rs — perhaps by building new missile silos in the Midwest or on the East Coast. The agency also is preparing options to deploy space-based laser weapons for missile defense.

The intercepto­rs form the core of the existing Ground-based Midcourse Defense system, or GMD. It is designed to track and destroy a limited number of incoming missiles from North Korea, Iran or another non-superpower adversary, not the kind of cataclysmi­c nuclear exchange envisioned in the Cold War.

The first few intercepto­rs were made operationa­l in 2004, but the GMD system has been beset with shortcomin­gs. Since flight testing started, intercepto­rs have failed to destroy target missiles in nine of 18 attempts. Since 2004, the system has failed in six of 10 of the flight tests.

Pentagon officials have attributed the problems to shortcuts taken during the developmen­t and deployment of GMD.

Military planners estimate that four or five intercepto­rs would be needed for each incoming missile to ensure its destructio­n. A dozen nuclear-tipped missiles thus could overwhelm the current U.S. arsenal.

The system’s inadequaci­es have been described by the Pentagon’s operationa­l test office, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office, the National Academy of Sciences panel and in interviews with other defense specialist­s.

Although missile agency officials say the new kill vehicle will perform more reliably than earlier versions, some outside experts are skeptical.

The GAO, which investigat­es federal programs for Congress, reported on May 30 that a heat-seeking sensor designed for the kill vehicle “may not have sufficient performanc­e to defeat some interconti­nental ballistic missile threats.”

The report said several Defense Department units “have raised concerns” about the sensor’s ability to detect and track enemy missiles.

The new radars also have come under scrutiny. They are supposed to be able to distinguis­h an enemy warhead from decoys or rocket debris. The National Academy panel and other experts cited the existing system’s inability to do so as a major concern. The missile agency aims to solve or mitigate the problem by installing new radars — each costing about $1 billion — at Clear Air Force Station in central Alaska, and at a site in Hawaii.

The new satellites pose another challenge. Over the decades, the Pentagon has sought a space-based system to distinguis­h warheads from decoys. Most recently, the Obama administra­tion spent $231 million to develop the Precision Tracking Space System. It was never deployed.

The Trump administra­tion is backing a rebranded approach, called the Persistent Space-Based Sensor Architectu­re. It ultimately could send numerous new satellites into space.

The number of deployed satellites has not been determined. Outside experts estimate at least 24 would be needed to provide continuous monitoring and guidance for the kill vehicles of a potential missile attack from North Korea.

 ?? JOHN WAGNER/FAIRBANKS DAILY NEWS-MINER 2009 ?? Rocket intercepto­rs are deployed in undergroun­d silos at Fort Greely in Alaska.
JOHN WAGNER/FAIRBANKS DAILY NEWS-MINER 2009 Rocket intercepto­rs are deployed in undergroun­d silos at Fort Greely in Alaska.

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