Iran deal no reason to halt work on Gulf missile shield -U.S. experts

September 11, 2015

Reuters:

The Unites States will keep working on a regional missile defense system in the Gulf despite progress on the Iran nuclear deal, current and former U.S. military officials said on Thursday while warning that Iran has the largest inventory of short- and medium-range cruise and ballistic missiles in the region.

The comments came as a Republican-backed effort to kill the Iran nuclear agreement was narrowly blocked in the U.S. Senate, handing President Barack Obama a huge victory and clearing the way for the deal’s implementation.

Robert Scher, assistant defense secretary for strategy, plans and capabilities, told lawmakers the Pentagon would continue to push for cooperative missile defense programs since the nuclear deal did not cover Iran’s work on ballistic missiles.

“There is no doubt in my mind that Iran’s ballistic missile activities continue to pose a risk to the United States and our allies and partners in Europe, Israel, and the Gulf,” he told the House Armed Services Committee’s strategic forces subcommittee.

U.S. Air Force Brigadier General Kenneth Todorov, who stepped down six weeks ago as deputy director of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, said he saw growing momentum for a Gulf missile shield.

“The worst mistake we could make if the deal happens is to say, ‘We can let our guard down,'” he told an event hosted by the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, a non-profit group that lobbies for missile defense programs.

President Obama and allies from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) underscored their commitment to build the defense system at a May summit, as Washington moved to assuage Gulf allies’ concerns about a more powerful Iran once international trade and financial sanctions are lifted.

Todorov said building a truly integrated system required greater cooperation among GCC countries, and hard work on integrating existing systems already present in the region.

One relatively “doable” target would be to integrate missile early warning systems already in use by individual countries.

Michael Tronolone, former director of the U.S. Central Command Integrated Air and Missile Defense Center of Excellence in Abu Dhabi, said it was imperative for U.S. officials and Gulf allies to share data about potential threats, arguing that advances in cyber security had reduced the risks involved…

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