WASHINGTON — After the Pentagon's national missile defense system failed a key test this week, the Bush administration has dropped its plans to activate the system by the end of the year.
A spokesman for the military's U.S. Northern Command said Friday that the missile system would not become operational until early 2005 at the earliest, meaning the Pentagon would miss a goal advanced by President Bush.
The delay in the system followed the failure of an $85-million test Wednesday — the second major test in two years to fail — but officials at the Northern Command said the timing of the announcement was unrelated to the failure. Instead, they said a "shakedown" of the system had not been completed.
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Top military officials also have predicted that the system would be operational this year. "By the end of this year we expect to have a limited operational capability against incoming ballistic missiles," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said in an August address in Huntsville, Ala.
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"I never understood how they could declare operational capability" by year-end, said Philip Coyle, former
chief of testing for the Pentagon, who has criticized the administration's missile defense strategy. "Even if this latest test had been a success — which it wasn't — the Missile Defense Agency itself knows that the system has no capability to shoot down enemy missiles under realistic conditions."
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-missile18dec18,0,4840766.story?coll=la-home-nationThey are actually calling it a "shakedown"?