Start GRASP/Korea Why Didn’ t the US Shoot Down That North Korean Missile?

Why Didn’ t the US Shoot Down That North Korean Missile?

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The military’s record of hitting intermediate-range missiles is less than perfect. That makes the decision to attempt an intercept much harder.
August 29,2017
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August 29,2017
This story has been updated to reflect recent developments overnight.
North Korea launched another medium-range missile on Monday, this one right over Japan. Despite Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’ threats to shoot down missiles aimed at Guam and President Donald Trump’s Pyongyang-aimed bluster, the United States and Japan let it fly. Why?
After the test, Trump on Tuesday said that “all options are on the table, ” as every president has said for decades. But the Pentagon is still reluctant to use some of the most obvious options, such as shooting down a missile above the earth’s atmosphere with another missile fired from a ship.
The United States  has 33 Aegis warships (three more are slated to arrive next year) that can launch an interceptor to hit a mid- or intermediate-range missile like the Hwasong-12 that North Korea sent over Hokkaido. Sixteen of those warships are currently in the Pacific.
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Pacific Command, in Honolulu did not respond to questions about why they didn’ t attempt to down Monday’s missile. The command did issue a statement: “North American Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD, determined the missile launch from North Korea did not pose a threat to North America, ”
Mattis said earlier this month that any North Korean missile headed toward U. S. land, including Guam and other territories, would be shot down and considered war against the United States. But, he added, if the missile were tracking to land in the sea, it would be the president’s call what to do about it.
See also: As Missile Defense Technology Improves, So Do Odds of an Arms Race in the Pacific
And: The Technology Race to Build — or Stop — North Korea’s Nuclear Missiles
Tom Karako, senior fellow and missile defense expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said that if the missile launched Monday were really a threat to the United States or even Japan “then presumably we may well have attempted to engage it.

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