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United States to deploy long-range missile defense radar in Alaska by 2020 26051503.
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Defence & Security News - United States
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United States to deploy long-range missile defense radar in Alaska by 2020 | |||
The U.S. Defense Department on Friday, May 22, announced plans to deploy a new long-range radar in central Alaska that would help the U.S. missile defense system better discern potential enemy missiles launched by Iran or North Korea and increase the capacity of interceptors in the ground in Alaska and California. Raytheon Co, Northrop Grumman Corp and Lockheed Martin Corp are competing to build the new radar, which is expected to cost just under $1 billion.
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The U.S. Air Force COBRA DANE radar in Shemya, Alaska has been upgraded to include the missile defense mission and has been integrated into the Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMDS).
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The new radar would begin defensive operations in 2020, pending completion of required environmental and safety studies, the department said in a statement. It said the new long-range discrimination radar (LRDR) will help the multi-layered U.S. ballistic missile defense system better address potential countermeasures that could be launched by potential foe to confuse U.S. defensive systems. Missile Defense Agency Director James Syring and other senior Pentagon officials told Congress in March that the new radar was critically important to help defend against the increasing capabilities by North Korea and Iran to launch missiles at the United States. Admiral James Winnefeld, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, this week told the Center for Strategic and International Studies think-tank that Washington took both the Iranian and North Korean threats seriously, even though neither country had a mature capability to launch intercontinental ballistic missiles. The Pentagon said the new radar would likely be placed at Clear Air Force Station, an Air Force Space Command radar station in central Alaska, but the final decision would be made after completion of the environmental studies. Riki Ellison, founder of the nonprofit Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, said placing the new radar in central Alaska rather than in the Alaskan Aleutian islands would allow the system to keep an eye on threats from both North Korea and Iran. He said it would also considerably cost less to build the new radar in Alaska, which could free up funding for an additional radar in Hawaii. The Missile Defense Agency is moving ahead with the design and development of the long-planned new radar. It launched the competition in January and is expected to award a contract by Sept. 30, the end of the current fiscal 2015 year.
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