U.S. Sends Missile-Tracking Radar Platform to Korea
The U.S. Navy has moved a sea-based radar platform and a state-of-the-art guided missile destroyer to waters off the Korean Peninsula to track possible North Korean provocations.
The U.S. Navy moved the sea-based X-band radar platform from the Pacific closer to the North Korean coast, according to CNN. The SBX radar platform has the advanced capability to track ballistic missiles. It was the U.S. Navy's first response to the North's ever-ominous belligerent rhetoric.
When the North launched a rocket late last year, the U.S. Navy sent the SBX radar platform from Hawaii to waters near the Philippines to monitor the North's military moves, a U.S. Defense Department official said.
The SBX radar platform is a key part of the U.S.' missile defense system. It is a floating, self-propelled mobile radar station mounted on a semi-submersible drilling rig and is 85 m high and 116 m long. It costs W1 trillion (US$1=W1,119). It is capable of tracking an object the size of a baseball about 4,800 km away, monitors missile launches, and send information to a missile interceptor base.
The U.S. also moved the USS McCain guided missile destroyer nearer to the Korean Peninsula. "The USS McCain was last dispatched here ahead of the impending North Korean rocket launch last December," a Defense Ministry official said.
Posted by: Steve White 2013-04-03 |