The Borneo Post

Pentagon conducts latest successful test of US-Japan intercepto­r

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WASHINGTON: The US military on Tuesday successful­ly conducted a test of a new ballistic- missile intercepto­r system, which is being co- developed with Japan.

The launch marks the second successful test in less than two months for the SM3 Block IIA missile and its associated technologi­es, which had previously experience­d failures.

According to the Missile Defense Agency ( MDA), sailors at the Aegis Ashore Missile Defense Test Complex at the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai, Hawaii tracked and intercepte­d an intermedia­terange missile with an SM- 3.

The target in Tuesday’s test was an air- launched missile, fired from an Air Force C-17 plane over the ocean thousands of miles ( kilometers) southwest of the Aegis Ashore system.

“The engagement leveraged a ground, air and space- based sensor/command and control architectu­re,” the MDA said in a statement.

In October, the US military successful­ly shot down a medium- range ballistic missile with an SM- 3.

That successful operation came after two failed intercept tests, in June 2017 and January 2018.

A test firing in February 2017 had been successful.

The MDA said this year that America had so far spent about 2.2 billion on the system and Japan had contribute­d about 1 billion.

The SM- 3 Block IIA missile – made by arms giant Raytheon – is a key piece of Nato’s missile defense system and is due to be deployed in Poland in 2020.

“This system is designed to defend the United States, its deployed forces, allies, and friends from a real and growing ballistic missile threat,” MDA Director Lieutenant General Sam Greaves said. — AFP

 ??  ?? A South Korean army soldier (bottom, centre) shakes hands with a North Korean army soldier before crossing the Military Demarcatio­n Line inside the Demilitari­zed Zone (DMZ) to inspect the dismantled North Korean guard post in the central section of the inter-Korean border in Cheorwon, South Korea. — AFP photo
A South Korean army soldier (bottom, centre) shakes hands with a North Korean army soldier before crossing the Military Demarcatio­n Line inside the Demilitari­zed Zone (DMZ) to inspect the dismantled North Korean guard post in the central section of the inter-Korean border in Cheorwon, South Korea. — AFP photo

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