In the trenchesU.S. kill vehicle missile defense weapon fails test

Published 22 December 2010

The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has suffered another failure in a live test conducted last week over the Pacific; the first part of the test — detecting and tracking the “enemy” missile by the Sea Based X-band Radar — went well; the second part — getting an Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV) to place itself in the path of the oncoming missile warhead and destroying it — did not work; the Ground Based Interceptor (GBI) triple-stage rocket is the most capable tool in the U.S. Missile Defense Agency’s armory, but its test record is spotty at best

Exo-atmospheric kill vehicle, up close and personal // Source: defense-update.com

The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has suffered another failure in a live test conducted last week over the Pacific. The trial saw a medium-range ballistic missile target lift off from Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall islands, simulating an attack on the United States. The missile was detected and tracked by the Sea Based X-band Radar, a large scanner mounted on a mobile oil-rig. This part of the exercise went without problems.

A Ground Based Interceptor (GBI) triple-stage rocket was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the U.S. military’s main space base.

Lewis Page writes that apparently the triple-stage GBI itself worked properly, depositing an Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV) in the path of the oncoming missile warhead.

What was supposed to have happened then is that the EKV should have used its small maneuvering thrusters to get itself directly in the warhead’s path. The combined many-thousands-of-mph velocities imparted by the rocket stacks of the missile and the GBI would then do the rest.

A Missile Defense Agency statement says that the MDA “was unable to achieve a planned intercept of a ballistic missile target,” despite the deployment of the EKV being carried out “successfully.”

Program officials will conduct an extensive investigation to determine the cause of the failure to intercept the target,” adds the MDA.

Page notes that the expensive GBIs are supposed to be the most capable tool in the MDA’s armory, and are the only ones rated to knock out enemy warheads during the highest middle section of their ballistic flight. Under President Bush, the United States planned to site some of them, plus an X-band tracking radar, in Eastern Europe.

The GBIs have a spotty test record, though — the naval Standard SM-3, which is launched from a destroyer or cruiser at sea and can also deploy an EKV into space, is considered more reliable. The SM-3 successfully destroyed a crippled U.S. spy satellite in low orbit above the Pacific in 2008, and since the Obama administration decided against the European GBI deployment there have been suggestions that a land-based version of the SM-3 could perform similar tasks.