We spent a day with THAAD, the worlds’s most advanced missile system that has North Korea spooked

September 13, 2016

Business Insider:

The most advanced missile system on the planet can hunt and blast incoming missiles right out of the sky with a 100% success rate — and we spent a day with it.

Meet America’s THAAD system.

THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) is a unique missile-defense system with unmatched precision, capable of countering threats around the world with its mobility and strategic battery-unit placement.

“It is the most technically advanced missile-defense system in the world,” US Army Col. Alan Wiernicki, former commander of the 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, told Business Insider in an interview.

“Combatant commanders and our allies know this, which puts our THAAD Batteries in very high global demand,” Wiernicki added.

And that demand seems poised to rise following North Korea’s fifth and largest nuclear test last week.

Negotiations to equip South Korea with THAAD have been ongoing since South Korean President Park Geun-hye’s October 2015 visit to the White House.

The pressure to deploy THAAD began after North Korea tested its fourth nuclear bomb on January 6 and then launched a long-range rocket on February 7.

Chinese Ambassador Qiu Guohong warned that deploying THAAD would irreparably damage relations between the countries, The Chosunilbo reported.

THAAD deployment, Qiu said, “would break the strategic balance in the region and create a vicious cycle of Cold War-style confrontations and an arms race, which could escalate tensions.”

On the sidelines of the G-20 summit, South Korean Park Geun-hye and Chinese President Xi Jinping met to discuss North Korean threats and the future deployment of THAAD.

During the meeting, Xi, Pyongyang’s closest ally, reaffirmed China’s commitment to denuclearize the Korean peninsula.

Xi added that Beijing still opposes THAAD’s deployment to the region.

China argues that since the bilateral decision between Seoul and Washington to deploy a THAAD battery, North Korean missile tests have expanded.

Thomas Karako, director of the Missile Defense Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, downplayed the potential for a rise in tests due to THAAD, telling Business Insider, “I would not say that, North Korea has conducted more missile tests this year than ever before and their pace of testing has gone up dramatically.”

“The United States and South Korea have been looking at this very closely for a number of years and THAAD is the solution that the head of US Forces Korea forces has been recommending,” Karako added.

“It’s about time that the two allies are moving forward on a more capable and more robust defensive posture in addition to the limited Patriot deployments we have today.”

Karako notes that THAAD’s deployment is tailored to the threats already occurring in the region.

“THAAD has a much larger reach, larger defended area, and it will take shots earlier … but there’s no silver bullet here.”

Currently a THAAD battery is expected to be operational in South Korea by the end of 2017.

During a discussion at the Brookings Institution on identifying emerging security threats, CIA Director John Brennan said that the deployment of THAAD to the region was one of the US’s “obligations” in the region.

“Clearly Kim Jong Un continues to go down a road that is exceptionally irresponsible as far as regional and global security, with his development of nuclear weapons as well as ballistic missiles,” Brennan told Business Insider in a question-and-answer session.

“We have certain obligations to our partners and the region so that the appropriate steps are taken to reassure our friends, partners, and allies of US commitment to the security of that area.”

During a Hudson Institute discussion on US missile-technology preeminence, US Army Gen. Charles Jacoby, former commander of North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), was in agreement and stressed the importance of deploying THAAD, despite it upsetting near peers like Russia and China.

“Certainly the Russians and the Chinese and other stakeholders understand that in South Korea besides being a wonderful ally, significant economic engine for growth throughout the world, that there are tens of thousands of American citizens living there, there is still US forces there, they are playing a defense role and they are at risk everyday to a host of threats that now include the potential for ballistic-missile-carried weapons of mass destruction,” Gen. Jacoby said.

“We cannot not act.”

Meanwhile, the rogue regime continues to conduct defiant ballistic-missile tests.

On September 9, the 68th anniversary of North Korea’s founding, the rogue regime carried out its fifth and largest nuclear test.

According to some estimates, the blast from the nuclear warhead mounted to a ballistic missile was more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

“That’s the largest DPRK test to date, 20-30 kiloton at least. Not a happy day,” Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, told Reuters.

The Hermit Kingdom’s latest test comes just four days after it fired ballistic missiles in violation of UN Security Council resolutions (again).

On September 5, just after noon local time, North Korea launched three medium-range Rodong-class ballistic missiles from a region called Hwangju, according to South Korea’s Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

That launch came two weeks after the rogue regime fired a submarine-based missile off the country’s eastern coast near the city of Sinpo.

Pyongyang first attempted a submarine-based missile launch last year and again at the end of April this year.

So far this year, North Korea has conducted a little more than 13 rounds of ballistic-missile tests and has fired 29 various rockets.

Currently, there are five THAAD batteries — each of approximately 100 soldiers — assigned to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. One of those batteries was temporarily deployed to Guam in April 2013 in order to deter North Korean provocations and further defend the Pacific region.

But the Army has decided to make the temporary, rotational THAAD battery in Guam a permanent mission.

“The permanent stationing of a THAAD battery in Guam is part of the global posture that continues to provide missile-defense capability to the combatant commander in the most efficient way,” US Army Col. Shana Peck, who, as commander of the 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, oversees all five THAAD batteries as well as four Patriot missile-defense battalions, told Business Insider in a previous interview….

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