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VANDENBERG AFB, Calif., Feb. 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Riki Ellison, Chairman and Founder of the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance (MDAA), www.missiledefenseadvocacy.org. witnessed the ground based interceptor launch test yesterday at 3:40 p.m. PST at Vandenberg AFB
at the Ronald Reagan missile defense memorial site. Ellison is one of
the top lay experts in missile defense in the world. His comments and
observations are below:
Ellison opens with : "On a perfect sunny winter afternoon in California
standing on the flat rocks of the Ronald Reagan Memorial overlooking
the missile silos on the Pacific shoreline at Vandenberg Air Force
Base, the Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) engines light up with
brilliance and the rocket disappears for a few seconds in the clouds of
exhaust. The rocket reappears, accelerating and ripping through the
clear sky with a single white vapor trail arching overhead as the low
thunder sound doesn't catch up to what you are watching. "
"The
GBI interceptor had been perfectly cued by the Space-Based Infrared
System (SBRIS) and the Sea-Based X-Band Radar (SBX) thousands of miles
away that an incoming Polaris type two-stage target missile was
launched 4,200 miles away at 3:40 PM Pacific Standard Time from Kwajalein Atoll, heading east."
"Five Colorado Army National Guard Soldiers of the 100th Missile Defense Brigade at Shriver Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado
that reports to North American Combat Command recognized the ballistic
missile threat and executed procedures flawlessly to release the GBI at
Vandenberg Air Force Base at the incoming target missile."
"The
target missile was tracked by the SBX located in the middle of the
Pacific Ocean; which debuted a new concept of both launching and
engaging an interceptor from the information of a remote based sensor
thousands of miles away. Two new space-based sensors, part of the STSS
(Space Tracking and Surveillance System) launched in fall of last year,
also observed part of the test and will look to prove out space sensor
integration to the Missile Defense Systems in advancing this new remote
sensor concept."
"The
concept of "Launch on Remote" and "Engage on Remote" is an integral
part of President Obama's Missile Defense plan that protects Europe and the United States and must be proven out to provide the protection promised."
"This
was the first integrated test of the SBX as the primary sensor for the
GBI as the previous tests were reliant on the Beale Radar in California
within the range of the Interceptors at Vandenberg. Critical updates
are given from the SBX to the EKV (Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle) on top
of the GBI for the exact location of the target missile. Both the
target missile and the GBI performed exceptionally well, there was a
problem with the SBX and the root cause has not been determined as of
yet. As a result the GBI missed the target missile; failing to
intercept."
"Though
there is great disappointment in the failure of the GBI to intercept, a
new concept of launching and engaging on remote sensors requires
numerous tests and applied adaptive engineering. With both come
failures and successes as steady progression leads to a reliable and
effective system. Our nation needs to have steadfast determination to
continually test robustly as to ensure with reliability our homeland's
protection and defense from long range missiles. The last GBI test was
in December 2008. It is inherent for success of this system to have at least two robust GBI tests a year."
Ellison closed his comments with: "The Ground-Based Interceptors in Vandenberg, California and Fort Greely, Alaska
are our only defense against the long-range ballistic missile threat
fast coming upon us. As President Obama said to our nation last week,
'the greatest danger to the American people... is the threat of nuclear
weapons.'"
Riki Ellison is available for on the record interviews. Contact Barbara Maxwell at 703-299-0060 to schedule.
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