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Japan: Pentagon Forming Team to Help Joint Missile DefensesThe U.S. Defense Department is establishing a support team to help Japan cooperate with the United States on missile defense, Defense Daily reported today (see GSN, Aug. 5). The joint service team will not negotiate an agreement on international cooperation, but will work to establish the official links needed to develop Japan’s missile defense systems. A similar support team has been working with British officials for a year, Defense Daily reported. The team will likely have a large percentage of Navy personnel because Japan is interested in a sea-based missile defense system, according to an industry official. The unit “will gradually come online,” the official added (Kerry Gildea, Defense Daily, Aug. 11).
From August 11, 2003 issue.U.S. Plans: Army Missile Defense Division Will Work With STRATCOMThe U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command will expand its role within the U.S. Strategic Command in October, Aerospace Daily reported today (see GSN, Aug. 7). SMDC is set to address global missile defense as part of its integration into STRATCOM, according to Lt. Gen. Joseph Cosumano, SMDC commander. Army officials plan to begin operating with STRATCOM in October and will be fully operational by January, Aerospace Daily reported. Cosumano said one of his highest priorities is the establishment of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense System at Fort Greely, Alaska. “We have to be operational at the end of September ’04,” he said. Cosumano said Army space and missile defense personnel are “providing the ground floor of all that, standup and operations.” “Colorado National Guard will have the brigade unit that’s stationed here for command and control; the Alaska National Guard will have the unit that’s on the ground at Fort Greely, the actual operators. All that’s moving very quickly,” he added (Rich Tuttle, Aerospace Daily, Aug. 11).
From August 8, 2003 issue.India: Washington, New Delhi Agree to Hold Missile Defense WorkshopThe United States and India have agreed to hold a missile defense workshop in India within the next six months, Agence France-Presse reported today (see GSN, Jan. 21). The two countries agreed to hold the workshop during a two-day meeting of the Defense Policy Group this week in Washington, according to AFP. The Indian delegation to the meeting was headed by Defense Secretary Ajay Prasad while the U.S. delegation was led by Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith. “The two sides reaffirmed the shared view that missile defense enhances cooperative security and stability,” said a statement released after the meeting (Agence France-Presse, Aug. 8).
From August 7, 2003 issue.U.S. Plans: Defense Officials to Brief Bush on Missile Defense ProgressU.S. Defense Department officials are scheduled to visit vacationing President George W. Bush at his Texas ranch this month and brief him on the developing national missile defense system, Defense Daily reported today (see GSN, Aug. 6). Bush is not faced with any imminent missile defense decisions, but the Pentagon delegation will most likely bring the president up to speed on construction at Fort Greely in Alaska and flight test plans. Construction on the first Ground-based Midcourse Defense System interceptor silo is set to be finished this month, and the sixth is due to be completed by February. The Missile Defense Agency intends to station four interceptors at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The system is scheduled to be deployed by the end of next year. Defense officials have not yet fixed a firm date to visit the ranch (Kerry Gildea, Defense Daily, Aug. 7).
From August 6, 2003 issue.U.S. Plans: Pentagon Delays GMD Booster Rocket TestsThe U.S. Missile Defense Agency has decided to delay tests of competing booster rockets being developed by defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Orbital Sciences for use in the Ground-based Missile Defense system, Inside Missile Defense reported today (see GSN, April 18). In February, the agency sent Congress a proposed testing schedule that called for two booster verification tests to be held in the second and third quarter of fiscal 2003, according to Inside Missile Defense. Under that schedule, Lockheed Martin’s booster would be tested first followed by Orbital’s booster. The agency said last week that it has decided to test Orbital’s booster this month, and Lockheed’s booster will probably be tested in September. Once those tests have been conducted, the agency plans to test the boosters carrying payloads in two integrated flight tests, which were originally scheduled to be held in the third and fourth quarters of fiscal 2003, Inside Missile Defense reported. Those tests are now set to be held in the fall at the test site on Kwajalein Island, the agency said. If the integrated flight tests are successful, the agency plans to conduct an intercept test using one of the two booster designs, according to Inside Missile Defense. That test had originally been scheduled for first quarter of fiscal 2004, but is now scheduled for the second quarter of fiscal 2004 (Thomas Duffy, Inside Missile Defense, Aug. 6).
From August 6, 2003 issue.United States: Officials Providing Mixed Signals on Patriot’s Record in IraqBy David Ruppe For several months since Patriots were fired against nine Iraqi missiles during the conflict, some officials, Patriot commanders in particular, have characterized its performance as nearly or fully effective. Two senior missile defense officials, however, have publicly said such judgments should wait for the conclusion and release of results from a formal performance review. Statements by those officials, one as recently as July 8, suggested reported conclusions about Patriot’s high effectiveness were based largely on tallied successful “engagements,” which are the number of Iraqi missiles, fired at by Patriot interceptors, and that did not cause any damage. The aim of the Army review, however, has been to determine whether those nine reported successful engagements were caused by Patriot “intercepts,” where Patriot missiles or Patriot warhead fragments hit the Iraqi missile, possibly “killing” the Iraqi warhead, as opposed to bad Iraqi technology or aim. The review, officials have said, includes surveying the desert for signs of warhead explosions and reviewing recorded “black box” and radar data. Senior Army officials appear reluctant to rely primarily on engagement statistics to publicly characterize the Patriot’s record, as they did to claim a high success rate during the 1991 Gulf War. Later analyses suggested that while Patriots successfully “engaged” many Iraqi missiles at the time, very few Patriots actually intercepted their targets or killed the warheads. Reports of Effectiveness Some U.S. military officials mostly without being identified have been telling reporters that the Patriots were successful against eight or nine of the nine Iraqi missiles engaged during the recent war (see GSN, April 16). One official told Global Security Newswire Friday that the “battle damage assessment” from the “air-defense community” is “eight-of-nine enemy warheads killed” in the air by the Patriots. In a rare on-the-record comment, Lt. Col. Joe DeAntona, who commanded a Patriot battalion that actually launched interceptors during the war, said Patriots “destroyed” nine Iraqi missiles, according to a July 15 Associated Press report. Two of the military’s most senior missile defense officials, however, have cautioned against drawing such conclusions before the study of the Patriot’s record is complete. “Here’s what we don’t know. We don’t know the overall effectiveness of the Patriot system. The Army’s assessing that and will be presenting that shortly,” Army Maj. Gen. Peter Franklin, then the deputy director of the Missile Defense Agency, said July 8. “We’re sorting through all of that data now to give the scientific answer as to how effective Patriot was,” Army Space and Missile Defense Command Director Lt. Gen. Joseph Cosumano said in April. Cosumano is overseeing the review. A major aspect of the Army’s unfinished review is to determine exactly what the Patriot’s record was in terms of intercepts and kills, said Army spokesman Maj. Gary Tallman last week. “That’s working right now. That’s going to be part of the official performance review,” he said. Counting Engagements Despite the controversial claims of 1991 Patriot success and the pending review, some officials have continued to equate the lack of damage from Iraqi missiles with Patriot success in the recent war. In his April 24 remarks, Cosumano indicated that this was how the Patriot’s battlefield commander viewed the success of the U.S. missile defense system. “The commander in the field says it was apparently very effective because there was nothing damaged,” he said. Maj. Gen. Stanley Green, then commander of the Army’s Air Defense Artillery Center at Fort Bliss, Texas, appeared to use such a formulation to characterize Patriot’s success for a May 8, Boston Globe story. “We think that we engaged missiles that saved hundreds of lives at the least and allowed us to execute and prosecute the war on our terms from the start,” he said. Some unidentified officials have gone further, asserting to the press that actual intercepts and kills have been confirmed. In the first such story, on April 16, the Boston Globe reported that eight Iraqi missiles were “destroyed in the air,” while another was “significantly damaged and landed without causing harm,” attributing the information to an unidentified U.S. Central Command official. Counting Intercepts, Kills A week after that story, in an apparent corrective, Cosumano told reporters that while Patriots “engaged” nine Iraqi missiles, various radar and other data was being collected to determine how many Patriots actually connected with Iraqi missiles (see GSN, April 24). “There’ve been some quotes out of CENTCOM, and I’ll just re-emphasize what those were. Of the nine potential TBMs [theater ballistic missiles] that could be engaged by Patriot, they were engaged and appeared to be effective,” he said. Cosumano said, though, that the formal review would determine the “scientific answer of how effective Patriot was.” “So now, the next step of that is the science and engineering questions that always have to be answered, of ‘OK, what does effectiveness mean?’ To the combatant commander there was no damage on the ground, so you did what you were supposed to do. You protected the force,” he said. The Army last week declined a Global Security Newswire request for definitions for the terms it will use to describe the Patriot’s performance until it provides its briefing. Army spokesmen have said they are not authorized to comment officially on the review until it is completed and a public briefing is given. Questions About Evidence Reviewing the Patriot’s record does not appear to be a cut and dry endeavor from either a technical or public relations perspective. Potentially complicating the Army’s data assessment, according to a prominent Patriot critic, is the fact that recording devices on some of the Patriot batteries were not operating during the action, a situation that officials have acknowledged. Data from those “black boxes” is key for determining exactly how the Patriots performed and its absence would make conclusions about the system’s success questionable, said Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Theodore Postol. Without the data, he said, “They don’t have information to justify the performance claims.” Cosumano has suggested otherwise, saying in April that while some Patriot black boxes did not operate, “new sources of data” such as from Aegis ship radars would be assessed in the review. An alternative method for assessing the Patriot’s record, Postol said, is to survey the desert for craters, or a lack of craters, to attempt to judge how many warheads were destroyed in the sky, or rather, exploded when hitting the ground. He questioned that method, however, saying it would require a search by many people over a large area using strong information about where to look. Postol also questioned the Army’s commitment to thoroughly searching for such evidence, citing a 1992 General Accounting Office report that said the Army’s damage assessment following the Gulf War was limited because a single engineer in Saudi Arabia had conducted a search for 24 days in February and March 1991. That investigator had relied heavily on photographs and interviews with military personnel assigned to the Patriot units, and conducted the search days and weeks after the missile engagement, when craters might have been filled or missile debris removed, that report said. Franklin, in his July 8 comments, said the Army’s review was still conducting a search of the ground for debris. “We don’t know the complete battle damage assessment. We don’t have an assessment of the debris impact at this point,” he said. An official said last week the disclosure of the results of the review were delayed after Cosumano asked its preparers to provide additional information for addressing potential questions from the press. The Army is not expected to release the actual study, the official said. In another development said to cause further delay, the Army’s inspector general has begun his own review of the Patriot’s record. According to another official, the Army might not brief the public on its review until the inspector general’s assessment is known, perhaps to “reconcile” differing conclusions.
From August 5, 2003 issue.Japan: Defense Report Calls for Improved Missile DefensesJapan should improve its missile defense systems and speed up research on cutting edge interceptor technologies, according to an annual Japanese defense report released yesterday (see GSN, June 24). Citing a missile threat from North Korea, the Japanese Defense Agency encouraged continued military cooperation with the United States. Tokyo spent $114 million between fiscal 1999 and 2002 on missile defense research and the Japanese military currently operates 27 Patriot missile defense batteries. The 393-page report also calls for the establishment of commando units that specialize in chemical and biological defense (Kenji Hall, Associated Press/Yahoo!News, Aug. 5).
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