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Pentagon: Missile Hits Target in Test   

By ROBERT BURNS
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (July 15) - A missile interceptor soared into the skies over a 
tiny Pacific isle Saturday and destroyed its target, a mock nuclear warhead 
traveling through space, the Pentagon said.

It was the Bush administration's first test of the ''hit-to-kill'' technology 
it hopes will become a key element of a missile defense network.

At 11:09 p.m. EDT, exactly the scheduled moment of collision between the 
interceptor and the warhead, an enormous white flash appeared at the planned 
impact point 144 miles above the earth's surface.

Military officials said minutes later that their tracking data showed a 
direct hit.

Reporters monitoring the test from a video-teleconference room in the 
Pentagon could see the white flash. The video then switched to the mission 
control room on Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific, where military and civilians 
officials who were running the test broke into a loud cheer, clapped hands 
and punched fists into the air.

The interceptor missile was launched from Kwajalein 21 minutes after its 
target, a modified Minuteman II intercontinental-range missile equipped with 
a mock warhead, roared toward the heavens from a launch pad 4,800 miles away 
at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.

Navigating by the stars and by information transmitted from a ground station 
on Kwajalein, the interceptor's weapon, known as a ''kill vehicle,'' was to 
ram the mock warhead 144 miles above the earth's surface. The force of impact 
would obliterate the warhead, thus the term ''hit-to-kill,'' as distinct from 
other approaches such as detonating an explosive in the flight path of the 
target.

The test schedule called for the ''kill vehicle,'' a 120-pound device with 
its own propulsion, communications, infrared seeker and guidance and control 
systems, to reach the planned impact point in space about eight minutes after 
the launch from Kwajalein.

The Coast Guard and Air Force arrested two Greenpeace environmental activists 
after they swam to shore from an inflatable raft moored off the central 
California coast, said Air Force Sgt. Rebecca Bonilla. The arrests delayed 
the launch by two minutes, she said.

The swimmers were among a small group of Greenpeace who tried unsuccessfully 
to stop the launch, said Carol Gregory, a spokeswoman for the group.

Less was riding on the outcome of Saturday's test than a year ago, when a 
failed intercept sealed President Clinton's decision to put off initial steps 
toward deploying a national missile defense.

Bush has made clear he would proceed with an accelerated testing program 
regardless of the outcome Saturday.

The successful intercept provides a political boost for a project that some 
congressional Democrats believe risks upsetting relations with Russia and 
China, and has the potential to create a new arms race.

Failure would not have derailed the effort. It was just the first in a series 
of tests the administration hopes will produce at least a rudimentary defense 
against long-range missiles by 2004.

''We expect successes and we expect failures in this high technology that 
we're using,'' Air Force Lt. Gen. Ronald Kadish, director of the Pentagon's 
Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, said Friday.

He said Saturday's test would ''either give us more confidence in our 
approach ... or we're going to learn more from it if we fail because it'll be 
an unexpected reason why we fail and we'll go try to fix it.''

Bush has asked Congress for $8.3 billion to finance missile defense research 
and testing in 2002, a $3 billion increase over this year. Saturday's test 
was to cost about $100 million, Kadish said.

The last such missile intercept test, on July 8, 2000, was a stunning 
failure. The interceptor launched from Kwajalein but the kill vehicle failed 
to separate from its rocket booster. As a result, the kill vehicle never saw 
the target.

An October 1999 effort succeeded while a January 2000 test failed.

Kadish said the Pentagon has mapped out a more frequent schedule of tests, 
including four to six over the next 18 months.

The expanded testing program, described in detail to Congress by Pentagon 
officials for the first time last week, drew strong criticism from missile 
defense skeptics at home and abroad.

Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said Friday that if the administration 
goes ahead with plans to build underground silos next year at Fort Greely, 
Alaska, for missile interceptors, it would violate the 1972 Anti-Ballistic 
Missile Treaty, which bars national missile defenses. That, in turn, could 
spark a new arms race, he said.

''If those plans were realized in practice, they would seriously complicate 
negotiations and would signify the United States' exit from the ABM treaty,'' 
Ivanov said Friday in Moscow.

The administration wants Russia to agree to amend or replace the treaty with 
an arrangement permitting testing and deployment of defenses against 
long-range missiles.

AP-NY-07-15-01 0006EDT

Copyright 2001 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.  All active 
hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.


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