PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (NNS) -- The Missile Defense Agency
(MDA) successfully conducted the largest, most complex missile defense flight
test ever attempted, Oct. 24.
MDA, Soldiers from the 94th and 32nd Army Air and Missile
Defense Command (AAMDC); Sailors aboard USS Fitzgerald (DDG 62); and Airmen
from the 613th Air and Space Operations Center conducted test, resulting in the
simultaneous engagement of five ballistic missile and cruise missile targets.
An integrated air and ballistic missile defense
architecture used multiple sensors and missile
defense systems to engage multiple targets at the same
time. All targets were successfully launched and initial indications are that
the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system successfully intercepted
its first medium-range ballistic target in history, and Patriot Advanced
Capability-3 (PAC-3) near simultaneously destroyed a short-range ballistic
missile and a low flying cruise missile target over water.
The live-fire demonstration, conducted at U.S. Army
Kwajalein Atoll/Reagan Test Site, Hickam Air Force Base, and surrounding areas
in the western Pacific, stressed the performance of the Aegis Ballistic Missile
Defense (BMD), THAAD, and Patriot weapon systems.
An Extended Long Range Air Launch Target (E-LRALT) missile
was air-dropped over the broad ocean area north of Wake Island from a U.S. Air
Force C-17
aircraft, staged from Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam,
Hawaii. The AN/TPY-2 X-band radar, located with the THAAD system on Meck
Island, tracked the E-LRALT and a THAAD interceptor successfully intercepted
the medium-range ballistic missile. THAAD was operated by Soldiers from the
32nd AAMDC.
Another short-range ballistic missile was launched from a
mobile launch platform located in the broad ocean area northeast of Kwajalein
Atoll. The Patriot system, manned by Soldiers of the 94th AAMDC, detected,
tracked and successfully intercepted the target with a PAC-3 interceptor.
USS Fitzgerald successfully engaged a low flying cruise
missile over water. The Aegis system also tracked and launched an SM-3 Block 1A
interceptor against a short-range ballistic missile. However, despite
indication of a nominal flight of the SM-3 Block 1A interceptor, there was no
indication of an intercept of the SRBM.
FTI-01 was a combined developmental and operational test.
Soldiers, Sailors, and Airmen from multiple Combatant Commands operated the
systems and were provided a unique opportunity to refine operational doctrine
and tactics. Program officials continue to assess and evaluate system
performance based upon telemetry and other data obtained during the test.
Ballistic Missile Defense System programs have completed
56 successful hit-to-kill intercepts in 71 flight test attempts since 2001.
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