US Missle Interceptor Tests a Success 391
An anonymous reader writes to mention that the U.S. Missile Defense Agency and Lockheed Martin recently reported success in the test flight of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system. "THAAD is designed to defend U.S. troops, allied forces, population centers and critical infrastructure against short- to intermediate range ballistic missiles. THAAD comprises a fire control and communications system, interceptors, launchers and a radar. The THAAD interceptor uses hit-to-kill technology to destroy targets, and is the only weapon system that engages threat ballistic missiles at both endo- and exo-atmospheric altitudes."
Mission Accomplished? (Score:5, Funny)
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That's done too. Iraqi Army, which used to threaten our aircraft patrolling North (Kurds) and South (Shia) of the country, is disbanded. The threat to our allies in the region (Kuwait, Israel, Saudi Arabia) is gone too, thank you very much...
Iran now has 100+K American troops next to it,
Re:Mission Accomplished? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mission Accomplished? (Score:5, Insightful)
Take a coin with a 50/50 chance of turning up heads. Each flip is independent of all the others. Now, what is the chance that for 100 flips EVERY flip will come up tails with 0 flips coming up heads?
(0.5) ^ 100 = 7.8 * 10^-31 (0 for any chance this side of hell of not getting a heads)
If the chance of a hit is only 5% (meaning a miss is 95%):
(0.95) ^ 100 = 0.0059205292203339975 (0.59% chance of a miss, or about a 99.4% chance of a hit)
Killing the missile only requires 1 hit. The parent may be optimistic in some ways, but he is completely right with his figures, and you need to go back to probability 101.
Re:Mission Accomplished? (Score:5, Insightful)
There's nothing wrong with not knowing something, but there is something wrong when you try to spread your incorrect view. I suggest taking a stats class, or sitting down with a book, and learning.
it's an advancement, (Score:5, Funny)
This is far superior to the "miss-to-kill" technology they were employing in previous models.
Translation (Score:5, Informative)
Not to kill a good joke... (Score:2)
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Which in turn beat the crap out of the "hit-to-annoy" technology used before that.
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Not anymore. (Score:5, Informative)
If you look on the top of the page you linked to, it says "The State Department web site below is a permanent electronic archive of information released prior to January 20, 2001. Please see www.state.gov for material released since President George W. Bush took office on that date."
A quick Google search reveals that the U.S. dumped the 1972 ABM treaty in December of 2001 [cnn.com].
There are a lot of things that I take issue with Bush for, but this frankly isn't one of them; I've always been of a mind that it's lunacy to prevent nations from defending themselves. If the world is getting dangerous because of ICBMs, maybe that should be the focus of restrictions, not systems that protect from them. But then again, I've never been down with the whole "MAD" concept in general.
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I think MAD only works when both sides are somewhat rational and realize how much they stand to lose. It is foreseeable that all your opponents will not be so rations or won't have as much to lose as an entire nation/state. Say what you will about the US vs USSR in the cold war but at least both sides had sence enough to keep it a cold war.
Re:Not anymore. (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes. Only the United States is to blame. India, Israel, the UK, and France would gladly give up their nukes because the only thing they are afraid of is an American attack.
Re:Not anymore. (Score:5, Interesting)
Why? They have their uses and are not that inhumane — supposedly, the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear bombings have taken less lives, than the weeks of conventional bombings before them (something like 150K lives per night is allegedly attributable to the latter).
And they ended the war, possibly several months earlier...
Today, for another example, using "tactical" nukes to bust Iran's nuclear-research bunkers would, likely, be quite efficient and kill fewer people than any alternative... It would, of course, be a political barrel of worms with anti-Americans world wide screaming their heads off (I wish they did!), but in cold blooded objectivity, it would be rather beneficial for all concerned, including Iranians (tough love and all).
Arms race is just a part of the general race (technological, cultural, scientific). There is nothing particularly immoral about it. Killing people sucks (and is often immoral), but it sucks even more to be killed — or seeing someone dear being killed...
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Ever seen napalm? White phosphorous? Thermite? They'll all melt the flesh off your bones, too, and more people met their ends that way,
With good reason (Score:2)
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But back to my original point. Missile defense systems encourage the use of Nuclear
Re:Not anymore. (Score:5, Informative)
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> had towards the United States no longer existed
What a slap in the face to Putin, eh, in spite of his best efforts!
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The MAD concept, as insane as it was, worked rather nicely. If either side thought they could survive a nuclear exch
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That's why we've installed Patriot batteries in Japan and Israel. (I would not be surprised if they are also in ROK, but they have more to worry from massed artillery 20KM from Seoul.)
This world is so economically interconnected that an attack on Japan, ROK or Taiwan (and even Israel) would in essence be a attack on America and the EU that would hurt them more than you can probably imagine.
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(Later, Russia became one of the 'good guys' kinda-sorta. But they kept Poland in the end. And they got away with a lot more. Since they were among the 'winners,' camera crews didn't roll into th
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Bull. Palestinians have been on the Knesset (whereas the PLO didn't even have an elected body until after Arafat died.)
Also, the Palis had trade and stores, etc. until the homicidal amongst them got them removed from most of Israeli society.
But Palis could vote and own land. In fact, until Iraq the only place Arabs had ever been democratically elected in the Middle East was in Israel.
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And nuclear weapons (Score:3, Informative)
Joke all you want, but that's what we've actually been doing. Didn't anybody ever tell you that close counts with hand grenades?
And nuclear weapons.
Which, unfortunately, was exactly the "big boom" "kinda close" that had been contemplated in some previous ABM designs.
After all, if it has blossomed, MIRV style, into a cloud of decoys and multiple real nuclear bombs on independent trajectories, spread out by quite a bi
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that too (Score:3, Interesting)
We can use hit-to-kill like THAAD. We can use ground lasers, orbiting lasers, and airborne lasers. We can use sabotage of the enemy equiment, physically or by screwing up the software. We can use diplomacy. We can use the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. We can have a sneaky sniper on enemy territory shoot an ICBM right at launch -- a hole in the boost rocket will do the job. We can use an X-ray laser. We can use economics as both carrot and stick. We can export o
IT'S SPELT MISSILE (Score:2, Informative)
Whoa, Dude! (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, very poor taste in pun choices there.
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In fact, THAAD has no sense of humor whatsoever. THAAD is not amused.
New arms race? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:New arms race? (Score:4, Interesting)
The system works on short and intermediate range missiles - the kind presumably launched from submarines.
The arms race isn't new - it's an ongoing thing if you have an army. The only option is to do away with it to get out of the race. But if you're a large nation with many useful resources - stuff other people might want - you're stuck in the race.
Still the danger here is if you (temporarily) have a way to avoid taking damage from an enemy, that makes it MORE likely that you will strike with less hesitation. Frankly I look forward to the day that this technology can be defeated. A little fear and hesitation is good for foreign policy once in a while. It begets respect.
Re:New arms race? (Score:5, Insightful)
Response to such an event would be difficult. To prevent it from happening again we'd have to inflict massive, disproportionate damage on the enemy, thus incurring truly epic international hatred. We wouldn't even be 100% certain of being able to identify the enemy.
This throws the balances of MAD out of whack. I can actually believe North Korea would try such a thing and believe they could get away with it. It knows that the first thing China would do is insist that the US take no retaliation, and back it up with real MAD. Shooting down that one missile (or at least making North Korea believe we could) dramatically reduces the risk.
(Note: I'm not an expert in international relations. There are plenty of people who would say that the US is busily making the world a more dangerous place, and has been since before our latest Iraq debacle. I'm just trying to explain the actions in terms of our own perceptions. "Truth", if there is such a thing, may well differ.)
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That was cute: Don't worry, looking back at history I'd say there is *no such thing* as an "expert in international relations"
Re:New arms race? (Score:4, Informative)
THAAD is intended for use against tactical weapons, such as those that might be deployed over a theater. Mixing eras, it would be used against weapons with V-1 and V-2 missile ranges. It's also far less expensive (and apparently far more effective within its given role) than the more well-known ABM system, and will be complementary to the eventual deployment of the ABL, which itself sort of straddles the divide, being dependent more on the curvature of the earth than anything else for its range.
Re:New arms race? (Score:4, Interesting)
That's because the system is nearly impossible to scale up or upgrade effectively, and it is very vulnerable to countermeasures.
Therefore, there's simply no reason for the arms race.
Re:New arms race? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.davidsuzuki.org/about_us/Dr_David_Suzu
"If you build a missile defense that is so fragile almost anything an adversary does will cause it to collapse, then you invite a weak adversary to (attack)" - Theodore A. Postol
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Okay, first of all your link doesn't support your argument at all. Suzuki is talking about boost phase interception, which is a whole different kettle of fish. You can't really use missiles for boost phase interception unless they're stationed in orbit. And why do you say this technology is "the worst kind"? Technology isn't good or bad, it just is. Pretty much every first-world country plus China and India is doing ballistic missile defense research - we would be foolish not to.
THAAD isn't designed t
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New Russian rockets can maneuver in three dimensions and deploy decoys. And I'm not even speaking about multiple warheads on each rocket.
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Good point - Israel needs something to stop twenty year old surplus Iranian missiles hitting them becuase their home grown space laser mentioned here just before the recent war doesn't really work.
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Sounds great but... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:Sounds great but... (Score:5, Informative)
They use nothing but the actual hardware that's in the field. No special stuff to track the target. This is actually a working, real-world style system. Typically, they put the operator on alert for a couple of days or a week (at least in Aegis tests), and they fire it sometime during that window without notifying anyone. They also usually fire a couple of other missiles at the cruiser (well, near misses) that the crew also has to destroy while launching their interceptor.
It's a neat, nearly totally mature capability and it is currently a real deterrent.
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Let me guess (Score:2, Insightful)
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Second, yes they have done that before. But who would expect such a complex system to work on the first attempt? Who in his sane mind would even _try_ to get it all right on the first attempt?
If you have ever written a fairly complex program, i.e. one that provides work for several code monkeys, one that has an actually recognizable and useful architecture, one that does what it's supposed to do, then you know this is the way to go. You test
did they change the name? (Score:2)
Re:did they change the name? (Score:5, Funny)
When President Camacho is elected, it will be changed to "Totally Huge Awesome Area Defense".
Brought to you by Carl's Jr.
THAAD? (Score:5, Funny)
Whew... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Whew... (Score:4, Funny)
Tell me about it. I can damn near see Canada from here.
KFG
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Except that shooting smart defensive rockets probably costs anywhere between 1 and 3 orders of magnitude more money than shooting those dumb, yet quite accurate, nearly home-made Hezbollah missiles, not to mention that the defender has to slack off only once to let one slip.
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The problem is, of course, that a terroist organization would never deliver a nuclear weapon via missile. They would slip it ashore via boat, truck, or maybe in a small aircraft. Al Qeada would love to pop off a nuke in the port of Los Angeles, only to have us nuke Pakistan or N. Korea in retaliation.
During the cold war, the Soviets had a number of man-portable nukes designed to be smuggled into the lands of the "Primary Adversary" (USA) and detonated as a first strike. I recall a film in which the Directo
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The initial euphoria over the Patriot missle system wasn't backed up by anything that showed it to be worthwhile, most analyses showed it to not have much benefit, I think many showed it caused more problems than it solved because the fragments of the SCUD + Patriot was worse than the damage th
Re:Whew... (Score:4, Insightful)
The threat to Japan, Hawaii, or maybe even Alaska or Seattle is another matter. Why do you think Kim has been trying to shoot those missiles out into the Pacific? Not much success so far, but he may get it to work eventually.
Re:Whew... (Score:5, Insightful)
On top of that, there's a huge psychological effect that a nuclear bomb carrys that conventional attacks don't. Every schoolchild knows about the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Few know about the fire bombings on Dresden, even though more people were killed that night than in both Atomic bombings combined.
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If NK strikes first, South Korea largest city (the world's second-largest) is effectively helpless.
The threat isn't ICBM (Score:3, Insightful)
Missle ??? (Score:5, Funny)
Next up.... (Score:5, Funny)
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If I win an anti-anti-anti-missile-missile missile in a contest, what are the taxes on it? [slashdot.org]
Testing for more testing, not for use... (Score:4, Informative)
'Lockheed Martin's program manager and vice president for the THAAD program... "On the expansive range at PMRF, the THAAD missile can fly greater distances, increasing our testing options and creating a realistic tactical environment"'
The article seems to indicate that this testing is not to allow for use, but to allow for further testing. This wasn't the "prove it works" test, but rather the "we could possibly get it to work" test.
I'm personally against the political use of such systems - it defeats the progress we've made in terms of MAD over the REAL threats to humanity in terms of nuclear weapons - politicians are already eager enough to justify use of weapons when in "this new terrorist era" or whatnot. But if it DOES work, and it does save lives, then it's development is still a net good - I'd just still be against deployment until we have direct evidence it would be necessary to save humanity. I'd much rather put 10000 times the effort into not needing such a tool, rather than spend all our efforts on a new arms race.
Ryan Fenton
Re:Testing for more testing, not for use... (Score:4, Informative)
White Sands proved that they could shoot down short range missiles, and the PMRF testing is ensuring that they can hit medium range missiles. It's just another step. Now they'll try more complex geometries. But the test was nearly 100% valid as a real-world training exercise. The system works now; they're not saying "we could make it work." They're saying that it just did.
Re:Testing for more testing, not for use... (Score:5, Insightful)
MAD became obsolete the moment an opponent showed up that didn't care whether they lived or died so long as you didn't survive. It was useful against the USSR and China, but not against anyone that we would not qualify as 'sane'.
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Re:Testing for more testing, not for use... (Score:4, Insightful)
MAD became obsolete the moment an opponent showed up that didn't care whether they lived or died so long as you didn't survive. It was useful against the USSR and China, but not against anyone that we would not qualify as 'sane'.
These people who blow up themselves up in markets and crash airplanes are mostly sexually frustrated, indoctrinated young hotheads. The older ones writing the checks and ranting and raving in these madrassas can damn well be threatened. Anyone who has enough loot to develop or buy nukes doesn't want to die either. Those who would sell nukes are also accessible to threats. I think we are being faked out by the militant muslim world to some extent. If they can get us thinking of them as maddog bomb throwing lunatics who could do anything then they've more than half won already. Look how much milage they got out of that stupid cartoon. Incidentally, Old Yeller tells us what the correct answer is when faced with a mad dog.All that said, I'm not some jingoistic idiot. We were incorrect to invade Iraq but we were correct to attack the Taliban. Notice the lengths Osama goes to stay alive or at least indeterminately dead? That hosebag doesn't want to die. I have no doubt that the Ayatollah of Iran has plenty of kamikazes just itching to man the planes but the leadership of that country doesn't want to die either.
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But you make a good point there because a lot of the violence that gets noticed now is very much the kamikaze type.
old news....aired on... (Score:2)
Star Wars... (Score:2)
sri
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The article fails to mention... (Score:5, Interesting)
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And of course the article you linked to fails to mention whether or not the subject missile is real - or yet another Russian paper tiger.
Since the fall of the USSR, Russia has steadily released a lot of power points with various grandiose weapons, space accomplishments, etc... etc... All of the having essentially a snowballs chance of ever seeing the light of day.
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If they haven't more info than "we have a missile that can't be c
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A "random trajectory"
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New Name.. (Score:3, Funny)
What exactly did they test successfully? (Score:2)
You just have to set the right expectations.
Missle? (Score:5, Funny)
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Look at any similar development. The air-to-air missile, for instance. The standard AIM-9 has gone through many, many improvements over the years. None worked perfectly, in all realms, against all countermeasures, the very first shot.
Get it to actually 'hit' the target first, then work on the other parts.
Another quibble (Score:2)
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And cruise missiles are much harder and expensive to deploy and have a shorter range. That this is not perfect against any and all types of threats does not make it useless.
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One target, one missile. Why use more than one when you are still testing 1:1 first?
* Was the approximate time and direction of the threat known?
The humans knew it, the computer didn't until after launch.
* Any decoys deployed by the intruder? Why not?
Does any missile currently use a decoy?
* How large an area can it protect before the angle-off becomes unmanageable?
That's called the "range" of the defense sy
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Correction. Overwhelm and current defense. Ideally (realistically?), once the system is developed the cost of the individual interceptor missiles would be cheap enough such that one could have one (or more) for each incoming missile.
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Clearly there's a reason[maybe 'cause I'm a big dumb Canuck] why no one else seems to worry about it, so why don't one of you supersmart slashdotters explain this to me... :D
How expensive is a civilian-type ship, capable of crossing the pacific ocean? Something big enough that it could carry a medium-sized nuke. I'm not talking something able to take out LA or San Francisc
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Who says they can't?
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Who says they can't?
No one does. It's just that they are hideously expensive to develop and twenty years on we still don't have all that much to show for it. Faced with an effective ABM system, one answer is to simply overwhelm it with massive numbers of real and decoy missiles. The sheer weight of missiles that the Soviets could throw at us made even developing an ABM system a fairly crazy thing to do. Someone like Kim Jong Il isn't going to have huge numbers of missiles for quite a long time. A f
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