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US Missile Defense Test Ends In Fiasco, Second In A Row
Washington (AFP) Feb 15, 2005 For the second time in less than two months, a test of the Pentagon's missile defense system ended in fiasco Monday when an interceptor missile failed to lift off, defense officials said. The Missile Defense Agency said the failure became apparent when an interceptor that was supposed to shoot down an incoming target missile carrying a mock warhead did not take off from the Ronald Reagan Test Site located on the Marshall Islands in the central Pacific. "The reason for not launching is under investigation, and program officials are reviewing data to determine the cause," the agency said in a statement. The setback was most likely caused by a malfunction of the ground support equipment rather than defects of the missile itself, the officials pointed out. However, the failed test was the second for the beleaguered national missile defense system since mid-December. The December 15 test was aborted after a built-in internal check detected an anomaly in the interceptor missile, shutting it down moments before launch from an atoll in the Pacific. Lieutenant General Henry Obering, who heads the Missile Defense Agency said an assessment had determined that the anomaly was a rare gap in the flow of electronic messages between the flight computer and the interceptor's thrust vector controller, which guides the missile. Related Links SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express Missile Defense Takes Big Hit In 2006 Budget Plan Washington (AFP) Feb 07, 2005 The Pentagon plans to cut spending on missile defense by five billion dollars over the next six years, slashing a program to develop a "boost phase" interceptor missile, senior defense officials said. |
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