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The 747-based YAL-1 was designed to knock out missiles shortly after launch, when their speeds are sub-sonic, they are large targets full of fuel, and they fall on the bad-guy's turf. The aircraft also need to be close (maybe 100km or so as a good educated guess, although the USAF guesses are more optimistic) to the launch site. Close enough that the aircraft would have to be in orbit INSIDE North Korean airspace 24 hours a day to provide coverage.
On the other side of apogee, ICBMs and IRBMs are coming down closer to Mach 10 (give or take about 5 mach numbers). And they're much smaller (anything that can hit Canada from overseas will have to discard some stages on the way), and much harder to kill. There's no possible way an airborne laser (of this generation) can kill an incoming missile. It's not something airborne lasers were designed to de.
The USA's missile defence system is likewise completely useless, for a large number of reasons. First and foremost is the fact that all you have to do to defeat it is fire another missile. The system is planned to defend against 2 or possibly 3 missiles at a time (provided all of the intercepts are successfull... this has not been the case so far). All NK has to do to defeat this ridiculously expensive system is to wait until they've got that fourth missile. Not much of a challenge.
Not to mention the (no apologies here) IDIOCY of using a kinetic kill 'warhead'. The interceptor vehicle (moving high supersonic) has to actually physically contact the missile (which is moving hypersonically), in order to kill it. No warhead, no explosion, nothing. Just relying on the ability of a missile to directly 'plink', head-on, into another missile, at high hypersonic speeds.
And a major consideration from a Canadian perspective:
Let's say (hypothetical scenario) North Korea fires ten ICBMs at North America. One of them seems to be off-course, and will likely land in Canada. Anyone want to take odds on the chances of this missile being given a higher priority than the one aimed at the Los Angeles basin? Heck, if *I* was in charge at Cheyenne during the same scenario,, I'd say screw Canada too. At that point it boils down to a numbers game of saving lives, and Canada is going to lose that game. So the chances of us getting ANY use out of the system is essentially nil.
Unless someone expects North Korea to actually fire ONE missile, and ONLY ONE missile. And that it will land in Canada. They are both extremely unlikely events. Even more unlikely is the chance that NK can actually develop a functioning nuclear weapon that can fit in their ghetto ICBMs in the next 20 years anyways, which kind of moots most of this discussion anyways.
I think we should co-operate with the Americans on their BMD system,, maybe let them put radars on our turf, be good friends and good neighbors about it, but they can cover the tab themselves.
I don't think Canada really has any need for a missile defence system (*YET*. This will change as technology changes). But Canadian forces overseas will/do have this need. A ship-based system will be able to provide this a lot of the time, and might be able to provide some protection to coastal cities. Modified SM-3s or something along those lines on future destroyer/frigate platforms can offer at least some protection for coastal areas, and can provide the much more likely to be needed task of protecting friendly forces deployed overseas from IRBM/SRBM attack as well.
There are other options, though (Japan is responding to the NK threat with Patriot PAC-3s, which is the best western system for the job), but I don't realistically see ANY of them happening. I think having an existing system (such as AAW destroyers) provide some sort of protection is the ONLY type of BMD system that the Canadian government or public will buy. And realistically, thats probably all we need.
On the other side of apogee, ICBMs and IRBMs are coming down closer to Mach 10 (give or take about 5 mach numbers). And they're much smaller (anything that can hit Canada from overseas will have to discard some stages on the way), and much harder to kill. There's no possible way an airborne laser (of this generation) can kill an incoming missile. It's not something airborne lasers were designed to de.
The USA's missile defence system is likewise completely useless, for a large number of reasons. First and foremost is the fact that all you have to do to defeat it is fire another missile. The system is planned to defend against 2 or possibly 3 missiles at a time (provided all of the intercepts are successfull... this has not been the case so far). All NK has to do to defeat this ridiculously expensive system is to wait until they've got that fourth missile. Not much of a challenge.
Not to mention the (no apologies here) IDIOCY of using a kinetic kill 'warhead'. The interceptor vehicle (moving high supersonic) has to actually physically contact the missile (which is moving hypersonically), in order to kill it. No warhead, no explosion, nothing. Just relying on the ability of a missile to directly 'plink', head-on, into another missile, at high hypersonic speeds.
And a major consideration from a Canadian perspective:
Let's say (hypothetical scenario) North Korea fires ten ICBMs at North America. One of them seems to be off-course, and will likely land in Canada. Anyone want to take odds on the chances of this missile being given a higher priority than the one aimed at the Los Angeles basin? Heck, if *I* was in charge at Cheyenne during the same scenario,, I'd say screw Canada too. At that point it boils down to a numbers game of saving lives, and Canada is going to lose that game. So the chances of us getting ANY use out of the system is essentially nil.
Unless someone expects North Korea to actually fire ONE missile, and ONLY ONE missile. And that it will land in Canada. They are both extremely unlikely events. Even more unlikely is the chance that NK can actually develop a functioning nuclear weapon that can fit in their ghetto ICBMs in the next 20 years anyways, which kind of moots most of this discussion anyways.
I think we should co-operate with the Americans on their BMD system,, maybe let them put radars on our turf, be good friends and good neighbors about it, but they can cover the tab themselves.
I don't think Canada really has any need for a missile defence system (*YET*. This will change as technology changes). But Canadian forces overseas will/do have this need. A ship-based system will be able to provide this a lot of the time, and might be able to provide some protection to coastal cities. Modified SM-3s or something along those lines on future destroyer/frigate platforms can offer at least some protection for coastal areas, and can provide the much more likely to be needed task of protecting friendly forces deployed overseas from IRBM/SRBM attack as well.
There are other options, though (Japan is responding to the NK threat with Patriot PAC-3s, which is the best western system for the job), but I don't realistically see ANY of them happening. I think having an existing system (such as AAW destroyers) provide some sort of protection is the ONLY type of BMD system that the Canadian government or public will buy. And realistically, thats probably all we need.