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Anti-Ballistic Missile
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An '''anti-ballistic missile''' (ABM) is a
missile designed to counter
ballistic missiles. A ballistic missile is used to deliver
nuclear weapon nuclear,
Chemical warfare chemical,
Biological warfare biological or conventional
warheads in a
External ballistics ballistic flight
trajectory. The term "anti-ballistic missile" describes any antimissile system designed to counter ballistic missiles. However the term is more commonly used for ABM systems designed to counter long range, nuclear-armed
Intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).
Only two ABM systems have previously been operational against ICBMs, the U.S.
Safeguard (nuke) Safeguard system, which utilized the
Spartan and
Sprint (missile) Sprint missles, and the Russian A-35 system which used the Galosh interceptor. Safeguard was only briefly operational; the Russian system has been improved and is still active, now called A-135 and using two missile types, Gorgon and Gazelle. However the U.S.
Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD, previously called
National Missile Defense NMD) system has recently reached initial operational capability.
Three shorter range tactical ABM systems are currently operational: the U.S.
MIM-104 Patriot Patriot, Navy
Aegis combat system/
Standard missile Standard SM-3, and the Israeli
Arrow missile Arrow. The longer-range U.S.
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system is scheduled for deployment in 2011. In general short-range tactical ABMs cannot intercept ICBMs, even if within range. The tactical ABM radar and performance characteristics do not allow it, as an incoming ICBM warhead moves much faster than a tactical missile warhead. However it's possible the higher performance THAAD missile could be upgraded to intercept ICBMs.
Latest versions of the U.S.
MIM-23 Hawk Hawk missile have a limited capability against tactical ballistic missiles, but is usually not described as an ABM.
For current US developments, see
Missile Defense Agency. For other short-range missiles, see
Sea Wolf missile Sea Wolf,
MBDA Aster Aster 15 and
Crotale missile.
Early history of ABMs
From World War II through the 1950s
The idea of shooting down rockets before they can hit their target dates from the first use of modern missiles in warfare, the German
V-1 and
V-2 program of
World War II. British and American fighters attempted to destroy V-1 "buzz bombs" in flight prior to impact, with some success. The V-2, the first true ballistic missile, proved impossible to intercept using
Supermarine Spitfire Spitfires and similar craft. Instead, the Allies launched
Operation Crossbow to find and destroy V-2s before launch. The operation was largely ineffective, as was a similar operation during the first
Persian gulf Persian Gulf War nearly fifty years later against the V-2's direct descendant, the Iraqi
Scud missile.
The American armed forces began experimenting with anti-missile missiles shortly after World War II, as the extent of German research into rocketry became clear. But defenses against Soviet long-range bombers took priority until the later 1950s, when the Soviets began to test their missiles (most notably via the
Sputnik program Sputnik launch in October 1957). The first experimental ABM system was
Project Nike Nike Zeus, a modification of existing air defense systems. Nike Zeus proved unworkable, and so work proceeded with
Project Nike Nike X.
Image:NIKE Zeus.jpg thumb|right|Launch of a Nike Zeus missile
Another avenue of research by the U.S. was the test explosions of several
hydrogen bombs at very high altitudes over the southern Atlantic ocean, launched from ships. When such an explosion takes place a burst of
X-rays are released that strike the Earth's atmosphere, causing secondary showers of charged particles over an area hundreds of miles across. The movement of these charged particles in the Earth's magnetic field causes a powerful
electromagnetic pulse EMP which induces very large currents in any conductive material. The idea was to destroy any electronics on the warheads. The project was found to be unworkable, although the exact reasons are not given.
Other countries were also involved in early ABM research. A more advanced project was at
DRE Valcartier CARDE in
Canada, which rearched the main problems of ABM systems. This included developing several advanced
infrared detectors for terminal guidance, a number of missile airframe designs, a new and much more powerful solid rocket fuel, and numerous systems for testing it all. After a series of drastic budget cuts in the late 1950s the research wound down. One offshoot of the project was
Gerald Bull's system for inexpensive high-speed testing, consisting of missile airframes fired from a
sabot round, which would later form the basis of
Project HARP.
Developments in the 1960s and 1970s
Nike-X, Sentinel and Safeguard
Image:meck6.jpg Meck thumb|185px|Dual launch of Sprint missiles during a salvo test at [[Meck|Meck island.html" title="Meaning of Meck island.html" title="Meaning of thumb|185px|Dual launch of Sprint missiles during a salvo test at [[Meck|Meck island">thumb|185px|Dual launch of Sprint missiles during a salvo test at [[Meck|Meck island">Meck island.html" title="Meaning of thumb|185px|Dual launch of Sprint missiles during a salvo test at [[Meck|Meck island">thumb|185px|Dual launch of Sprint missiles during a salvo test at [[Meck|Meck island
Nike X was a US system of two missiles, radars and their associated control systems. The original Nike Zeus (later called Spartan) was upgraded for longer range and a much larger 5 megatonne warhead intended to destroy warheads with a burst of x-rays outside the atmosphere. A second shorter-range missile called
Sprint (missile) Sprint with very high acceleration was added to handle warheads that evaded longer-ranged Spartan. Sprint was a very fast missile (some sources claimed it accelerated to 8,000 mph within 4 seconds of flight--an average acceleration of ''100
g''!) and had a smaller W66
Neutron bomb enhanced radiation warhead in the 1-3 kiloton range for in-atmosphere interceptions.
The new Spartan changed the deployment plans as well. Previously the Nike systems were to have been clustered near cities as a last-ditch defense, but the Spartan allowed for interceptions at hundreds of miles range. Therefore the basing changed to provide almost complete coverage of the United States in a system known as
Safeguard (nuke) Sentinel. Later Sentinel was restructured to a more limited defense of ICBM sites against incoming warheads. That system used the same Spartan/Sprint missiles and radar, and was called
Safeguard (nuke) Safeguard.
Moscow ABM system
The only other ICBM ABM system to reach production was the
Soviet Union Soviet A-35 system. It was initially a single-layer exoatmospheric (outside the atmosphere) design, using the Galosh (SH-01/ABM-1) interceptor. It was deployed at four sites around
Moscow in the early 1970s.
Originally intended to be a larger deployment, the system was downsized to the two sites allowed under the 1972 ABM treaty. It was upgraded in the 1980s to a two-layer system. The Gorgon (SH-11/ABM-4) long-range missile was designed to handle intercepts outside the atmosphere, and the Gazelle (SH-08/ABM-3) short-range missile endoatmospheric intercepts that eluded Gorgon. In general the system is thought to have capabilities similar to that of the former U.S. Safeguard system.
The problem of defense against MIRVs
Image:Peacekeeper-missile-testing.jpg LGM-118A Peacekeeper.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|right|Testing of the [[LGM-118A Peacekeeper re-entry vehicles, all eight fired from only one missile. Each line represents the path of a warhead which, were it live, would detonate with the explosive power of twenty-five
Little Boy Hiroshima-style weapons..html" title="Meaning of right|Testing of the [[LGM-118A Peacekeeper">thumb|right|Testing of the [[LGM-118A Peacekeeper re-entry vehicles, all eight fired from only one missile. Each line represents the path of a warhead which, were it live, would detonate with the explosive power of twenty-five
Little Boy Hiroshima-style weapons.">right|Testing of the [[LGM-118A Peacekeeper">thumb|right|Testing of the [[LGM-118A Peacekeeper re-entry vehicles, all eight fired from only one missile. Each line represents the path of a warhead which, were it live, would detonate with the explosive power of twenty-five
Little Boy Hiroshima-style weapons.
ABM systems were initially developed to counter single warheads from large
Intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). The economics seemed simple enough: since rocket costs increase rapidly with size, interceptor cost should be less than the attacking ICBMs (which had much longer range and heavier payloads). In an arms race the defense would always win.
Things changed dramatically with the introduction of
Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) warheads. Suddenly each launcher was throwing not one warhead, but several. The defense would still require a rocket for every warhead, as they would be re-entering over a wide space and could not be attacked by several warheads from a single antimissile rocket. Suddenly the defense was more expensive than offense: it was much less expensive to add more warheads, or even decoys, than it was to build the interceptor needed to shoot them down.
The experimental success of Nike X persuaded the
Lyndon B. Johnson administration to propose a thin ABM defense. In a September 1967 speech, Defense Secretary
Robert McNamara described it as
Safeguard (nuke) Sentinel. McNamara, a private ABM opponent because of cost and feasibility (see
cost-exchange ratio), claimed that Sentinel would be directed not against the Soviet Union's missiles (since the
Soviet Union USSR had more than enough missiles to overwhelm any American defense), but rather against the potential nuclear threat of the
People's Republic of China.
In the meantime a public debate over the merit of ABMs broke out. Even before the MIRV problem made ABM effectiveness non-workable in the late
1960s, some technical difficulties had already made an ABM system questionable for a large sophisticated attack. One problem was the
Fractional Orbital Bombardment System (FOBS) that would give little warning to the defense. Another problem was high altitude EMP (whether from offensive or defensive nuclear warheads) which could degrade defensive radar systems.
Technical difficulties aside, the debate turned to an odd position: that no defense at all was better than any defense. Namely, a false sense of security might encourage ABM-defended nations to escalate against minor threats, believing they would be protected against any response. By this reasoning simply starting to deploy such a system could prompt a full-scale attack before it could become operational and thereby render such an attack useless. This curious set of arguments thus put the system in a terrible position: it couldn't possibly work, but if it did that would be even worse.
The ABM Treaty of 1972
Various technical, economic and political problems led to the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty ABM treaty of 1972, which restricted the deployment of strategic (not tactical) antiballistic missiles.
Under the ABM treaty and a 1974 revision, each country was allowed to deploy a single ABM system with only 100 interceptors to protect a single target. The Soviets deployed a system named A-35 (using Galosh interceptors), designed to protect Moscow. The U.S. deployed
Safeguard (nuke) Safeguard (using Spartan/Sprint interceptors) to defend ballistic missile sites at Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota, in 1975. The U.S. Safeguard system was only briefly operational. The Russian system (now called A-135) has been improved and is still active around Moscow. On June 13, 2002, the US withdrew from the treaty.
Why did the Soviets and Americans accept the treaty?
* Deployment of even a limited defensive system might well invite a pre-emptive nuclear attack before it could be implemented
* Soviet leaders suspected that the United States, with its mammoth resources and technological superiority, might well be able to create a leakproof defense.
* Deploying ABM systems would likely invite another expensive arms race for defensive systems, in addition to maintaining existing offensive expenditures
* Then-current technology did not permit a thorough defense against a sophisticated attack
* Concerns that use of nuclear warheads on antimissile interceptors would degrade capability of defensive radar, thus possibly rendering defense ineffective after the first few intercepts
* In the U.S, political and public concern of detonating defensive nuclear warheads over friendly territory
* An ICBM defense could jeopardize the
Mutual assured destruction Mutually Assured Destruction concept, thus being a destabilizing influence
In an ironic twist, this limitation of defensive arms eventually led to treaties limiting the construction of offensive arms, known as the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT I treaties.
Although designed and ratified under Republican President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, conservatives in the United States generally remained opposed to the ABM Treaty.
ABM developments in the 1980s and Persian Gulf War
The
Ronald Reagan Reagan-era
Strategic Defense Initiative (better known as "Star Wars"), along with research into various energy-beam weaponry, brought new interest in the area of ABM technologies.
SDI was an extremely ambitious program to provide a total shield against a massive Soviet ICBM attack. The initial concept envisioned large sophisticated orbiting laser battle stations, space-based relay mirrors, and nuclear-pumped X-ray laser satellites. Later research indicated that some planned technologies such as X-ray
Lasers were not feasible with then-current technology. As research continued, SDI evolved through various concepts as designers struggled with the difficulty of such a large complex defense system. SDI remained a research program and was never deployed. However several SDI technologies were used in follow on ABM systems.
The
MIM-104 Patriot Patriot antiaircraft missiles was the first deployed tactical ABM system, although it was not designed from the outset for that task and consequently had limitations. It was used in the 1991 Gulf War to attempt to intercept Iraqi
Scud missiles. Post-war analyses show that the Patriot much less effective than initially thought because of its radar and control system's inability to discriminate warheads from other objects when the Scud missiles broke up during reentry. On the other hand, the Scud itself was highly inaccurate and not very reliable. It was more a psychological than real threat to military targets.
Post Gulf War ABM developments in the 1990s
Tactical ABMs deployed
Image:Navy Theater Ballistic Missile Defense.JPG Standard missile thumb|right|230px|Developed in th late 1990s, the Lightweight Exo-Atmospheric Projectile (LEAP) attaches to a modified [[Standard missile|SM-2 Block IV missile used by the
United States Navy U.S. Navy.html" title="Meaning of SM-2 Block IV missile.html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|230px|Developed in th late 1990s, the Lightweight Exo-Atmospheric Projectile (LEAP) attaches to a modified [[Standard missile|SM-2 Block IV missile">thumb|right|230px|Developed in th late 1990s, the Lightweight Exo-Atmospheric Projectile (LEAP) attaches to a modified [[Standard missile|SM-2 Block IV missile used by the
United States Navy U.S. Navy">SM-2 Block IV missile.html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|230px|Developed in th late 1990s, the Lightweight Exo-Atmospheric Projectile (LEAP) attaches to a modified [[Standard missile|SM-2 Block IV missile">thumb|right|230px|Developed in th late 1990s, the Lightweight Exo-Atmospheric Projectile (LEAP) attaches to a modified [[Standard missile|SM-2 Block IV missile used by the
United States Navy U.S. Navy
Testing of ABMs and ABM technology continued through the 1990s with mixed success. However, following the Gulf War, improvements were made to several U.S. air defense systems.
MIM-104 Patriot Patriot PAC-3 was developed and tested following the Gulf War. The PAC-3 is a complete redesign of the system deployed during the war, including a totally new missile. The improved guidance, radar and missile performance improves the probablility of kill over the earlier PAC-2. In operation Iraqi Freedom, the Patriot PAC-3 had a near 100% success rate at intercepting short range
tactical ballistic missiles (TBMs). However since no longer range Iraqi
Scud missiles were fired, PAC-3 effectiveness againt those was untested. Also the PAC-3 was involved in two
fratricide incidents: two incidents of Patriot firings at coalition aircraft and one of U.S. aircraft firing on a Patriot battery [http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2005-01-Patriot_Report_Summary.pdf].
From 1992 to 2000 a demonstration system for the US Army
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense was deployed at
White Sands Missile Range. Tests were conducted on a regular basis and resulted in early failures, but successful intercepts occurred in 1999. A new version of the Hawk missile was tested in the early to mid 90's and by the end of 1998 the majority of US Marine Corps
MIM-23 Hawk Hawk systems were modified to support basic theater anti-ballistic missile capabilities[http://www.fas.org/spp/starwars/program/hawk.htm]. Following the Gulf war, the
Aegis combat system was expanded to include ABM capabilities. The
Standard missile system was also enhanced and tested for ballistic missile interception. In the late 90's SM-2 block IVA missiles were tested in a theater ballistic missile defense role.[http://www.fas.org/spp/starwars/program/sm2.htm] Standard Missile 3 (SM3) systems have also been tested for an ABM role. In 1998, Defense secretary William Cohen proposed spending an additional $6.6 billion on ballistic missile defense programs to build a system to protect against attacks from North Korea or accidental launches from Russia or China[http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/jan-june99/nmd_1-28a.html]. The
Israeli
Arrow missile Arrow system was initially tested in 1990, before the first Gulf War. The Arrow was supported by the United States throughout the nineties.
Brilliant Pebbles
Approved for acquisition by the Pentagon in 1991 but never realized, Brilliant Pebbles was a proposed space-based anti-ballistic system that tried to avoid some of the problems of the earlier SDI concepts. Rather than use sophisticated large laser battle stations and nuclear-pumped X-ray laser satellites, Brilliant Pebbles consisted of a thousand very small, highly intelligent orbiting satellites with kinetic warheads. The system relied on advances in computer technology, avoided problems with overly centralized command and control and risky, expensive development of large, complicated space defense satellites. It promised to be much less expensive to develop and have less technical development risk.
The name Brilliant Pebbles comes from the small size of the satellite interceptors and great computational power enabling more autonomous targeting. Rather than rely exclusively on ground-based control, the many small interceptors would cooperatively communicate among themselves and target a large swarm of ICBM warheads in space or in the late boost phase. Development was later discontinued in favor of a limited ground-based defense.
SDI changed to NMD
In the early 1990s, President G. H. W. Bush called for a more limited version using rocket-launched interceptors based on the ground at a single site. In 1993, SDI was reorganized as the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization. Deployment of the more limited system, called the National Missile Defense (NMD) was planned to protect all 50 states from a rogue missile attack. Research and development of the NMD system continued under the Clinton administration from 1992 to 2000.
Current ABM developments
A renewed interest in missile defense cooincided with the election of President
George W. Bush in 2000. In several tests, the U.S. military has demonstrated the feasibility of shooting down long and short range ballistic missiles. Combat effectivness of newer systems against tactical ballistic missiles seems very high, as the
MIM-104 Patriot Patriot PAC-3 had a 100% success rate in Operation Iraqi Freedom. However NMD real-world effectiveness against longer range ICBMs is less clear.
While the Reagan era Strategic Defense Initiative was intended to shield against a massive Soviet attack, the current
National Missile Defense has the more limited goal of shielding against a limited attack by a
rogue state.
The Bush administration has accelerated development and deployment of a system proposed in 1998 by the Clinton administration. The system is a dual purpose test and interception facility in Alaska, and as of 2006 is operational with a few interceptor missiles. The Alaska site provides more protection against North Korean missiles or accidental launches from Russia or China, but is likely less effective against missiles launched from Iran. The Alaska interceptors may be later augmented by the naval
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System, by ground-based missiles in other locations, or by the
Boeing YAL-1 Boeing Airborne Laser. President Bush has referenced the
September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks and the proliferation of ballistic missiles as reasons for missile defense.
International ABM efforts
Image:Arrow missle.jpg thumb|right|An Arrow anti-ballistic missile interceptor
In 1993, a symposium was held by western European nations to explore potential future ballistic missile defense programs. In the end, the council recommended deployment of early warning and surveillance systems as well as regionally controlled defense systems. [http://www.fas.org/spp/starwars/program/europe/weu_93/weu1363tasc.htm] In 1998 the
Israeli military conducted a successful test of their
Arrow missile Arrow ABM, developed in Israel with American assistance. Designed to intercept incoming missiles traveling at up to 2 mile/s (3 km/s), the Arrow is expected to perform much better than the Patriot did in the Gulf War.
Taiwan is also engaged in the development of an anti-ballistic missile system, based on its indigenously developed Tien Kung-II (Sky Bow) SAM system. Although reports suggest a promising system, the ROC government continues to show strong interest towards the American
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) program.
See also
*
National Missile Defense
*
nuclear disarmament
*
nuclear proliferation
*
nuclear warfare
*
atmospheric reentry
*
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense
*
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System
*
Sprint (missile)
*
Spartan (missile)
*
Safeguard (nuke) Safeguard/Sentinel ABM system
External links
* The [http://www.cdi.org Center for Defense Information] has many resources on ABMs and NMD.
* The [http://www.fas.org/ssp/bmd/index.html Federation of American Scientists], as usual, is a wonderful resource for technical data, full-text of key documents, and analysis.
-
MissileThreat.com, a listing and descriptions of ABM systems around the world.
-
The unofficial website of the Stanley R. Mickelson Safeguard complex contains relevant images and history of the Safeguard program.
-
History of U.S. Air Defense Systems
{{Missile types}}
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Category:Anti-ballistic missiles *
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he:טיל × ×’×“ טילי×?
ja:弾�弾迎撃ミサイル
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Anti-ballistic missile
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