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U.S. Policy on Missile Defense 7 APRIL 2005 Presentation for the National Defense Industrial Forum Phil Jamison Office of Missile Defense Policy.

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Presentation on theme: "U.S. Policy on Missile Defense 7 APRIL 2005 Presentation for the National Defense Industrial Forum Phil Jamison Office of Missile Defense Policy."— Presentation transcript:

1 U.S. Policy on Missile Defense 7 APRIL 2005 Presentation for the National Defense Industrial Forum Phil Jamison Office of Missile Defense Policy

2 2 Security Environment Risks of unexpected crisis and conflicts involving one or a combination of adversaries –Offense alone inadequate for deterrence –Need mix of offense and defense Range of options required to counter threats More diverse, unfamiliar, threats (e.g., regional opponents, proliferation of WMD, terrorism) -Surprise likely -Deterrence unpredictable

3 3 Missile Defense and US Defense Goals Assure allies and friends that US will not be coerced by missile threats Dissuade potential adversaries from investing in ballistic missiles Deter ballistic missile use by denying benefits of any attack Defend against ballistic missiles should deterrence fail

4 4 U.S. Defense Strategy Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) –Shifts defense strategy to a capabilities-based approach –Focus more on how an adversary may fight and the means it might use rather than who adversary might be Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) –Major change in our approach to the role nuclear offensive play in U.S. defense posture –Established a “New Triad” composed of: Offensive strike systems (both nuclear and non-nuclear) Missile defenses Revitalized defense infrastructure to provide new capabilities in a timely fashion –Addition of missile defenses means U.S. no longer as heavily dependent on nuclear forces

5 5 Tools for Combating WMD Counterproliferation Interdiction Deterrence Defense & Mitigation Strike Missile Defense Passive Defense Nonproliferation Diplomacy Multilateral Regimes Threat Reduction Cooperation Nuclear Material Controls Export Controls Sanctions Consequence Management Respond to effects of WMD use against forces and population MD is part of a broad, interlocking WMD Strategy All pillars multilateral, complimentary – including MD

6 6 Initial Missile Defense Capability Against North Korea Late 2004 2004 Enhanced Capability: Add Defense Against Mideast Threat Late 2005 10 Ground-Based Interceptors (Alaska and California) Upgrade Existing Ground-Based Radar in Alaska Integrate Existing Sea-Based Radars Add 10 Ground-based Interceptors (Alaska) Upgrade Existing Radar in UK Add Moveable Sea-Based Radar Initial Airborne Laser Available Continue Deployment of Ground-Based Interceptors Initial 5 Emergency Sea-Based Interceptors Add 10-20 Sea-Based Interceptors Capabilities Against Shorter-Range Missile Threat 2005 Long-range Threat Shorter-range Threat 2006-2008 Additional Defensive Layer Add 20 Ground-Based Interceptors (New Site) Add Sea, Air or Ground Boost- Phase Interceptors (About 2008) Upgrade Existing Radar in Greenland Add New Forward Deployed Radars Add More Sea-Based Interceptors Add More Capable Ground- Based Interceptors Initial Missile Defense Plan

7 7 Responding To Guidance Evolutionary Missile Defense Plan I: Field an initial increment of missile defense capability (2004-2005) –Initial protection of entire U.S. from North Korea –Partial protection of the U.S. from Middle East threat –Protection of deployed forces, allies and friends Evolutionary Missile Defense Plan II: Field next increment of missile defense capability (2006- 2007) –Complete protection of U.S. from Middle East –Expand coverage to allies and friends –Increase countermeasure resistance, and increase capability against shorter-range threats

8 8 Responding To Guidance (cont’d) Field modest missile defense capabilities in 2004-05 –Up to 20 Ground-based midcourse interceptors (current 8; planned through 2005 ~ 18 GBIs) –Up to 20 Sea-based interceptors (current 4; planned through 2005 ~ 8 SM-3s) –AEGIS ships upgraded for missile defense (current 2; planned through 2005 ~ 10 S&T Destroyers; 2 Engagement Cruisers) –Continued deployment of Patriot PAC-3 units (current ~200; planned through 2005 ~ 280 PAC-3s) –Forward-based sensors (current 2 -- Cobra Dane/Beale; by adding Fylingdales in 2005 – 3) Evolutionary; add capability as threat and technology develop Continue Research, Development and Testing Seek cooperation with allies and friends National Security Presidential Directive 23 (December 17, 2002)

9 9 Implementation Of Evolutionary Missile Defense Block 2004 And 2006 – Approved And Funded 2005 2007 16 Ground-Based Interceptors, Alaska 2 Ground-Based Interceptors, California 281 Patriot PAC-3 Up to 26 Ground-Based Interceptors, Alaska 2 Ground-Based Interceptors, California 512 Patriot PAC-3 2 Aegis Engagement Cruisers* 8 Standard Missile-3s** 3 Aegis Engagement Cruisers* 8 Aegis Engagement Destroyers* 28 Standard Missile-3s** Cobra Dane Radar, Alaska Beale Radar, California Fylingdales Radar, United Kingdom 1 Sea-Based X-Band Radar, Alaska 1 Forward-Based X-Band Radar, East Asia 10 Aegis Search & Track Destroyers Cobra Dane Radar, Alaska Beale Radar, California Fylingdales Radar, United Kingdom Thule Radar, Greenland 1 Sea-Based X-Band Radar, Alaska 2 Forward-Based X-Band Radars 6 Aegis Search & Track Destroyers Initial Protection vs North Korea Partial Coverage vs Mid-East Protect Deployed Forces Full Protection Against Mid-East Expand Coverage to Allies & Friends Expand Coverage of Deployed Forces * Engagement ships can perform Search & Track Function ** Planned deliveries Fixed Site Interceptors Fixed Site Sensors Mobile Interceptors Mobile / Transportable Sensors

10 10 Proposed Missile Defense Plan III Blocks 2008 And 2010 20092011 Up to 36 Ground-Based Interceptors, Alaska 2 Ground-Based Interceptors, California 36 Ground-Based Interceptors, Alaska 2 Ground-Based Interceptors, California 2 Ground-Based Interceptors, Europe 3 Aegis Engagement Cruisers 15 Aegis Engagement Destroyers 72 Standard Missile-3s* 24 Terminal High Altitude Area Defense Missiles 712 Patriot PAC-3 3 Aegis Engagement Cruisers 15 Aegis Engagement Destroyers 101 Standard Missile-3s* 48 Terminal High Altitude Area Defense Missiles 900 Patriot PAC-3 Cobra Dane Radar, Alaska Beale Radar, California Fylingdales Radar, United Kingdom Thule Radar, Greenland Otis Radar, Massachusetts Eglin Radar, Florida 1 Sea-Based X-Band Radar, Alaska 3 Forward-Based X-Band Radars, East Asia (1) Europe (1), Caucasus (1) 1 Discrimination X-Band Radar Initial Space Tracking & Surveil Satellites Cobra Dane Radar, Alaska Beale Radar, California Fylingdales Radar, United Kingdom Thule Radar, Greenland Otis Radar, Massachusetts Eglin Radar, Florida Clear Radar, Alaska 1 Sea-Based X-Band Radar, Alaska 3 Forward-Based X-Band Radars, East Asia (1) Europe (1), Caucasus (1) 2 Discrimination X-Band Radar Partial Space Tracking & Surveil Satellites Keep Pace With Threat Begin Addressing Asymmetric and Unconventional Attacks Increase Capability Against All Threats Keep Pace With Threat Continue Addressing Asymmetric and Unconventional Attacks Increase Capability Against All Threats Fixed Site Interceptors Fixed Site Sensors Mobile Interceptors Mobile / Transportable Sensors * Planned deliveries

11 11 Military Preparing to Operate Missile Defense Missile defense mission assigned to STRATCOM –Plan, integrate and coordinate global missile defense operations –Develop a missile defense concept of operations Combatant Commanders (CC) developing plans –NORTHCOM preparing for initial Limited Defensive Operations (LDO) in near future –Other CCs developing CONOPs for their AORs Services have begun to man and train –Army providing staffing for GBI sites –Navy upgrading selected ships for missile defense mission

12 12 Guidance on Cooperation With Allies/Friends Develop and deploy missile defenses capable of protecting allies and friends Structure missile defense program to encourage industrial participation by allies and friends Cooperation through broad alliances, bilaterally, industry-to-industry, military operations National Security Presidential Directive 23, December 17, 2002

13 13 Missile Defense Operations in Iraqi Freedom Supported coalition in pre-deployment planning –High demand assets –Spread throughout the theater to protect US forces & allies Successful during initial phase of combat –Protected sea-ports and staging areas allowing build-up and operational momentum Sustained operations –Moved rapidly forward to protect advancing coalition forces PAC-2 GEM/PAC-3 = 9 for 9

14 14 Missile Defense Activities with Allies/Friends Australia –BMD Framework MOU signed Denmark –Upgrade of Thule EWR; Negotiations on BMD Framework MOU Germany –PAC-2/MEADS Italy –MEADS; Negotiations on BMD Framework MOU India –PAC-2 discussions begun; Exercise planning in progress Japan –Acquiring layered national missile defense; BMD Framework MOU The Netherlands –PAC-2/PAC-3 United Kingdom –Upgrade of Fylingdales EWR; BMD Framework MOU signed Other Friends/Allies –Cooperative efforts underway/being discussed with Canada; Czech Republic; Hungary; Israel; Poland; Russia; Spain; Taiwan; Turkey.

15 15 Building A Foundation for Missile Defense Embedded in US strategic concepts and operations –Supports U.S. Defense Strategy –An important leg of the New Triad Supported by military leadership –Global integrator mission assigned to the U.S. Strategic Command –Combatant Commanders preparing for initial operations –Services have begun to train and equip forces No longer enmeshed in the ABM Treaty process –Withdrawal from ABM Treaty permits effective defenses –No new restrictions in other treaties International Cooperation –Allied support and engagement Commitment to continued deployment –Broad support from Congress for deployment –December 2002 announcement by President


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