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ID122131
Title ProperUS missile defense
Other Title Informationclosing the gap
LanguageENG
AuthorWeitz, Richard
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In March 2013, US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, citing the progress of North Korea's nuclear program, announced that the United States would be bolstering its missile defenses. Fourteen new ground-based interceptor missiles, known as GBIs, would be deployed to Alaska, augmenting the thirty already in silos there and in California. The Pentagon would develop a new two-stage GBI, as well as a more advanced version of the "kill vehicle," which interceptors carry to smash into adversary warheads ("hit-to-kill"). The Obama administration would be deploying a second advanced mobile radar system, the Army Navy/Transportable Radar Surveillance 2, in Japan. And Hagel even indicated that the administration would restructure its plans for US missile defenses in Europe, canceling the SM-3 IIB interceptor, the cornerstone of the fourth and final phase of its European Phased Adaptive Approach (EPAA), which had been announced in 2009 as a means of deploying more-advanced interceptors in Eastern and Central Europe specifically designed to defend the US homeland from intercontinental ballistic missiles launched from Europe, Eurasia, or the Middle East.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol. 176, No.2; Jul-Aug 2013: p.80-87
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol. 176, No.2; Jul-Aug 2013: p.80-87
Key WordsNorth Korea ;  North Korea's Nuclear Program ;  United States ;  Missile Defenses ;  Alaska ;  Europe ;  US Missile Defenses in Europe ;  Middle East