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This aspect (the most expensive and expansive) of the entire SDI proposal, involves having a superfast satellite system capable of spotting, identifying and classifying ballistic missile launches from the USSR. Believing that the launches would take the fastest, shortest route over the arctic, the only place to put up a space based defense would be in northern Alaska. that way, we could get the anti-missile missile launched and hopefully, ready to hit the warheads when they are overhead, in outer space. Given that you only have something on the order of 8 minutes from a USSR- based launch to spotting, identifying, recognizing a threat, starting up your defense computers, warming up the missiles, programming them, then launching them at a window of time that is exceedingly narrow, and hit a target moving at 15,000 mph.
Did I mention that the target would be larger than a breadbox, but much smaller than a typical office desk?
The entire defense system is predicated on a) ballistic missiles in high arc trajectories (sent into outer space, then falling back) b) the enemy being the USSR, perhaps China c) being able to spot, ID and predict the path of the missiles right after launch
Timewarp to 2004.
the USSR no longer exists. China is an ally. (So shrub tells us) there are no Ballistic missiles aimed at the US.
Today's weapons directed at the US will not be ballistic. China and Russia have supersonic cruise missiles which have longer ranges, much higher speeds and greater payloads than US cruise missiles.
(An aside- the US could have researched supersonic cruise missiles, but decided that it was too expensive, and instead, wanted to rely on the new expensive Joint force manned, attack fighter)
The anti-missile system we are building - for $100,000,000,000 - is incapable of even spotting a supersonic cruise. The satellites cannot ID, nor track them; plus they can be launched from air, sea or submarines. This system can only hit ballistic warheads (and even that is questionable) A supercruise flies at about 100 feet; the ballistic warhead can only be spotted, targetted, and hopefully hit at altitudes of over 100,000 feet.
Perhaps North Korea's missiles could be a threat to our west coast, but even they use a reduced arc profile, flying way too low for our SDI system to spot; observe trajectory; react in time by launching counter missile; and have time for our defense to actually hit the warhead. This system won't even help defend against the only country building nukes to be used against our allies and ourselves. Even worse, the SDI missiles cannot head down to defend against a reduced arc launch. They don't have enough fuel, and they would probably burn up in the much thicker, lower atmosphere before hitting the target.
Thank you, Mr. Cheney, Mr. Bush, Ms. Rice and Mr. Rumsfeld.
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