- Reaction score
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GAP said:Where do you guys find these flunkies.....real people don't really believe that shit do they? :
They find us unfortunately...although they tend not to last thank gawd.
GAP said:Where do you guys find these flunkies.....real people don't really believe that shit do they? :
Reccesoldier said:This is a big one and the US is afraid that some of it could end up in the wrong hands. It's not a GPS satelite or anything as pedestrian as that. Secrets, secrets, secrets...
Old Sweat said:Flanker, since this satellitte malfunctioned on launch in that contact was lost with it, it would seem possible that the self-destruct mechanism did not work. This negates part, but not all, of your argument.
So, the only hypothesis left is that U.S. forces want to try its anti-satellite weapon.
You mean more like a year, and then some, right?Flanker said:Then, several weeks later
Exactly.Mike Baker said:You mean more like a year, and then some, right?
Flanker said:Nothing. It is a game.
It is just funny to see how US accused China of space arm escalation etc.
Then, several weeks later, they do just exactly the same thing.
Do you remember the Columbia shuttle?
It had the same kind of fuel aboard while reentering.
Surprisingly, no concern was expressed.
So, the only hypothesis left is that U.S. forces want to try its anti-satellite weapon.
It is possible that the "broken" satellite isn't broken at all. It was just a target from the beginning.
Military shoots down missile in test off Hawaii
By AUDREY McAVOY, Associated Press Writer
Fri Jun 6, 4:19 AM ET
The U.S. military intercepted a ballistic missile Thursday in the first such sea-based test since a Navy cruiser shot down an errant satellite earlier this year.
The military fired the target, a Scud-like missile with a range of a few hundred miles, from a decommissioned amphibious assault ship near Hawaii's island of Kauai.
The USS Lake Erie, based at Pearl Harbor, fired two interceptor missiles that shot down the target in its final seconds of flight about 12 miles above the Pacific Ocean.
The target was shot down about 100 miles northwest of Kauai about five minutes after it was fired.
The $40 million test showed Navy ships are capable of shooting down short-range targets in their last phase of flight using modified missiles the service already has, the military said.
The Navy and the Missile Defense Agency have already demonstrated that ships equipped with Aegis ballistic missile defense technology can intercept mid-range targets in midcourse of flight.
The Lake Erie in February shot down a U.S. spy satellite that had lost power and become uncontrollable. Military commanders worried the satellite would break up and spread debris over several hundred miles if it fell to Earth on its own.
The shootdown was the Aegis ballistic missile defense program's first real-world mission.
Rear Adm. Brad Hicks, the program's director, told reporters in a conference call after Thursday's test that the Lake Erie fired two interceptors to increase the probability of interception.
The Navy does that when a target is close to hitting the surface, he said.
Over the next 20 months, the military plans to install terminal-phase missile interception capability on all 18 Navy ships equipped with Aegis ballistic missile defenses, Hicks said.
He said the technology would give commanders more options to defend against missiles, particularly if the Patriot missile defense system — a land-based technology designed to shoot down missiles in their final phase of flight — was unavailable.
"If I don't have a Patriot nearby on a shore station to do a short-range threat, near the defended area, I have nothing," Hicks said. "The flexibility of having a ship to complement the Patriot, or to be there when it can't be, is very high on a warfighter priority."
In the last Aegis missile defense test, in November, the Lake Erie fired two interceptors to destroy two ballistic missile targets simultaneously in space.
That marked the first time the U.S. missile defense system shot down two ballistic missiles at once in space.
In December, a Japanese naval vessel equipped with the Aegis ballistic missile defense system shot down a missile target off Hawaii. Japan became the first U.S. ally to intercept a missile from a ship at sea in that test.
Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press.