Top US Official: Washington Seeking THAAD Dialogue With Beijing

May 6, 2016

Voice of America:

A top U.S. official says Washington still hopes to hold a dialogue with Beijing on the possible deployment of an advanced missile defense system, known as THAAD, in South Korea.

At an Air Force Association policy seminar Thursday in Washington’s Capitol Hill neighborhood, Assistant Secretary of State Frank Rose reiterated the assertion that THAAD would be deployed solely to defend against growing nuclear and missile threats from North Korea.

“As long as North Korea continues to develop, test and deploy ballistic missiles, we will work with allies and friends in the region to defend against that threat, including through the deployment of an effective missile defense,” he said.

U.S. officials say the anti-missile system manufactured by Lockheed Martin is equipped with a radar that can track targets some 2,000 kilometers away. The system’s ability to intercept enemy missiles fills a gap in the current missile defense system deployed on the Korean Peninsula.

Chinese opposition

The deployment, however, has encountered strong opposition from China, which is concerned that THAAD will undermine the strategic deterrence of China’s long- and mid-range missiles, as well as the regional military balance.

Rose also said the United States understands China’s concerns, and has always hoped to explain that the deployment will not affect China’s strategic deterrent.

“THAAD’s single-stage interceptors deployed in [South Korea] would not have the range or capability to intercept Chinese ICBMs headed to the United States,” he said. “It is pure physics.”

According to some Chinese security experts, Beijing is more concerned about THAAD’s X-band radar system, which they believe will cover a large area of China and hurt China’s strategic ability to fight back.

Ross said the new missile defense system will not affect the U.S. ability to detect Chinese strategic nuclear missiles, since “the United States already has two similar radars in Japan, and we have a number of other sensor capabilities in the region, including the sea-based X-Band Radar, and the Cobra Dane radar in the Aleutian Islands.”

Rose also says the U.S. has been seeking dialogue on the issues with China, but China has continued to decline the offer.

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Curtis Stiles - Chief of Staff