Bangkok Post

Hypersonic missiles raise alarms in US

Arms ‘could change face of future warfare’

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WASHINGTON: Even as the Pentagon hustles to ensure that its defences keep pace with North Korea’s fast-growing rocket programme, US officials increasing­ly are turning attention to a new generation of missile threat.

These weapons under developmen­t by China and Russia — as well as by the US — can fly at many times the speed of sound and are designed to beat regular anti-missile defence systems.

The hypersonic missiles could change the face of future warfare, as they can switch direction in flight and do not follow a predictabl­e arc like convention­al missiles, making them much harder to track and intercept.

“China’s hypersonic weapons developmen­t outpaces ours ... we’re falling behind,” Adm Harry Harris, who heads the military’s Pacific Command, warned lawmakers on Wednesday.

“We need to continue to pursue that and in a most aggressive way in order to ensure that we have the capabiliti­es to both defend against China’s hypersonic weapons and to develop our own offensive hypersonic weapons,” he added.

In its proposed $9.9 billion requested budget for 2019, the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) is asking for $120 million to develop hypersonic missile defences, a big increase from the $75 million in fiscal 2018.

MDA Director of Operations Gary Pennett told Pentagon reporters this week that the potential deployment by the United States’ rivals of hypersonic weapons — which could be launched from planes, ships or submarines and carry either nuclear or convention­al payloads — would create a “significan­t” gap in US sensor and missile intercepto­r capabiliti­es.

“The key challenge to US national security and the security of US friends and allies is the emergence of new threats designed to defeat the existing” ballistic missile defence system, Mr Pennett said.

According to reports in the Japanbased Diplomat magazine, China has developed — and last year tested — a new type of hypersonic missile called the DF-17. The US Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce this week stated China “has tested a hypersonic glide vehicle”.

Russia too is believed to be developing its own hypersonic weapon called the Zircon. According to Russian news agency Tass, it is to go into serial production this year.

Though the Pentagon is warning about hypersonic­s, the United States has been developing the technology for years.

The Air Force says its X-51A Waverider cruise missile, tested in 2012, could travel at speeds faster than Mach 6 (5,800kph).

That’s more than one mile a second, and future iterations are expected to go much faster.

Part of the reason China has been able to advance its hypersonic missile programs is that it is not subject to antimissil­e treaties signed between the US and Russia.

The 1987 Intermedia­te Nuclear Forces Treaty banned short- and intermedia­terange ground-launched missiles.

“Over 90% of China’s ground-based missiles would be excluded by INF if they were now in it,” Adm Harris said.

Still, by far the lion’s share of the MDA’s budget continues to go towards improving existing missile-defense systems.

Various sensors and radars can track an incoming missile hurtling towards a target, then blast intercepto­r rockets toward it to pulverize it with kinetic energy.

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