United States: Pentagon Cancels Billion-Dollar Missile Defense Project to Build Better Weapons Aiming to Destroy Incoming Threats
he Pentagon is pulling the plug on a billion-dollar, technically troubled project to build a better weapon to destroy incoming missiles. The move is aimed in part at considering new approaches to missile defence at a time of rapid technological change.
Washington, August 22: The Pentagon is pulling the plug on a billion-dollar, technically troubled project to build a better weapon to destroy incoming missiles. The move is aimed in part at considering new approaches to missile defence at a time of rapid technological change.
The announced reason for cancelling the Boeing contract, effective Thursday, was that the project's design problems were so significant as to be either insurmountable or too costly to correct. US, Israel Conduct Successful Arrow 3 Missile Tests in Alaska.
Beyond those immediate concerns, the Pentagon is considering whether it needs to start over with designing a defence against intercontinental-range ballistic missiles, such as those North Korea aspires to build, as well as newly emerging types of missiles.
One indication of that broader concern is the Pentagon's statement that it will now invite industry competition to develop a "new, next-generation interceptor" — potentially a weapon that could take on hypersonic missiles being developed by China and Russia.
The Pentagon currently has 44 missile interceptors based mostly in Alaska.
Each is designed to be launched from an underground silo, soar beyond the Earth's atmosphere and release a "kill vehicle" — a device that steers into its target and destroys it by force of collision.
These weapons have been tested but never used in actual combat. It is that "kill vehicle" device that the Pentagon had asked Boeing to redesign so that it could be more reliable against the kind of long-range missiles that North Korea has said it is building to target the US.
The Pentagon had spent nearly USD 1.2 billion on the project when Michael Griffin, the under secretary of defence for research and engineering, decided last week to end it. In May he had ordered Boeing to stop its work, pending a decision on a way forward.
"Ending the programme was the responsible thing to do," Griffin said in a statement Wednesday.
"Development programs sometimes encounter problems. After exercising due diligence, we decided the path we're going down wouldn't be fruitful, so we're not going down that path anymore."
Mark Wright, a spokesman for the Pentagon's Missile Defence Agency, said details about the technical problems that led to the project's termination would not be released "due to the classified nature of the program."
By saying Wednesday that it will now pursue a "next-generation interceptor," the Pentagon revealed that it sees a requirement not only for a better "kill vehicle" but also an improved booster rocket.
In other words, it may be aiming for a weapon that can defend against a wider array of missile threats. The cancellation raises questions about the Pentagon's continued reliance on the existing "kill vehicle" on its interceptor fleet in Alaska.
The Pentagon has been authorised by Congress to increase the current fleet of 44 interceptors to 64. The additional 20 were to be equipped by 2023 with the redesigned "kill vehicle" under the Boeing contract.
Now that the contract is being cancelled, it seems likely that those additional 20 interceptors will not be fielded on time. Officials said the contract is being cancelled "for convenience, not for cause," meaning it was at the Pentagon's discretion and not because Boeing was unable to fulfill the contract. "We will take lessons learned from the terminated program and apply them during the new competition," Griffin said.
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