Ballistic Missile Defense Overview For NWC JMO FINAL-Ver1!4!31Jan2012-U
Ballistic Missile Defense Overview For NWC JMO FINAL-Ver1!4!31Jan2012-U
Ballistic Missile Defense Overview For NWC JMO FINAL-Ver1!4!31Jan2012-U
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THIS PRESENTATION IS
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All Material is drawn from public/open sources Program Information is Drawn From MDAs Public Website (www.mda.mil)
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OVERVIEW
Ballistic Missile Basics Essential Lexicon Threat BMD Fundamentals History/Background Doctrine & Three Pillars BMD Phases of Intercept BMD Elements BMD Planning and Execution BMDR Homeland Defense and PAA BMD Planning Lexicon BMD Ops in the Joint/Maritime Environment Break Discussion
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Motor
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Solid Propellant
Basically combustion chamber tubes packed with a propellant that contains both fuel and oxidizer blended together uniformly. For example Shuttle SRBs: Oxidizer -- ammonium perchlorate (69.93%)
Liquid Propellant
Combines separately stored liquid chemicals, a fuel and an oxidizer, to produce thrust. May be either cryogenic or hypergolic: Cryogenic Propellant : very cold, liquefied gases as fuel and oxidizer; Typical uses: SLV Hypergolic Propellant: fuel and oxidizer ignite on contact with each other. No spark is needed. SCUD B/Shahab/No Dong: Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid (IRFNA) (oxidizer) + Unsymmetrical Dimethylhydrazine (UDMH)(fuel)
Advantages: highest energy per unit of fuel mass, variable thrust, and a restart capability
Disadvantages: Complex storage/plumbing; Precise injection metering; High capacity pumps; Limited mobility and long term storage; HIGHLY TOXIC (hypergolics)
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Guided has historically implied a relatively gentle means of controlling the state vector at thrust termination (Vbo)
To a static target
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Endo-Atmospheric Maneuvers
Booster Mounted Uses aerodynamic surfaces for lift Takes advantage of atmosphere and missiles velocity to fly further down range Can increase range by 100s of km over basic ballistic missile
Booster
RV Mounted (MaRV) Ballistic missile performance and accuracy decrease as ranges >500 km if payload remains attached to booster Booster needs to be strengthened for re-entry Easier to separate payload after boost To make a MaRV, add moveable fins to separating payload Then maneuver in atmosphere during re-entry to: Avoid defenses; aero range extensions; add terminal guidance maneuvers All at large ranges
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MaRV
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Boost-Phase Maneuvering
Generalized Energy Management Steering (GEMS) Many solid propellant missiles dont shut down to control range, instead their motors burn to depletion Since thrust is constant, boosters pitch/yaw during powered flight to waste energy as required to make planned range. Examples: Trident I C4 SLBM and THAAD May be as simple as corkscrews or more complex maneuvers
This is an example of GEMS (THAAD launch) and this is not (failed BULAVA SLBM launch)
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Exo-Atmospheric Maneuvers
Post-Boost Vehicles (PBVs) Use a small (typically restartable liquid propellant) upper stage motor Deploy MIRVs from a single booster Targets may be 100s of kms apart
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SCUD B/C
300500 km
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Ballistic missile force developed and deployed for range of missions from nuclear deterrence to conventional precision strike
Key part of A2/AD capabilities ICW large ASCM/LACM force
Taiwan Strait SAM & SRBM Coverage. This map depicts notional coverage based on the range of land and sea based missile systems, including advanced SAMs that China would likely employ in a Taiwan conflict.
2010 BMDR notes an imbalance of forces across Taiwan Straits primarily because of numbers of SRBM/MRBM deployed
Est. 1,000 1200
ASBM in development or early deployment specifically to counter US CVBGs Non-signatory to MTCR but verbal pledge to some provisions
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Russia: Treaty limited (INF) to weapons of 500km or less; party to MTCR which limits transfer of technology, materials, systems and knowledge
Broad hints and statements since 2002 over possibly breaking with INF Treaty Extensive use of SRBMs in Georgian conflict (2008)
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BMD Timeline
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BMD Doctrine
UNDER RE-WRITE
Guiding Pub: Countering Air and Missile Threats (JP 3-01, 5 Feb 2007)
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Passive BMD improves survivability by reducing the likelihood of detection and targeting of friendly assets and thereby minimizing the potential effects of adversary reconnaissance, surveillance, and attack. Passive measures include detection, warning, camouflage, concealment, deception, dispersion, and the use of protective construction. Treaties and export control regimes may also be considered a form of passive defense
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Active BMD includes the use of aircraft, air defense weapons, missile defense weapons, electronic warfare sensors, and other available weapons/capabilities.
Missile defense is defined as defensive measures designed to destroy attacking enemy missiles, or to nullify or reduce the effectiveness of such an attack.
Integration of systems enables defense in depth, with the potential for multiple engagements that increase the probability for success. AMD assets normally provide overlapping coverage, however, not all anti-air DCA assets have organic capability against BM; likewise, not all anti-BM DCA have anti-air and CM defense capabilities. Offensive counterair and defensive counterair operations use many of the same sensors, weapons, and command and control systems.
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Vbo
Boost Phase
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Challenges
Detection/tracking: Non-thrusting cold body presents IR detection/tracking challenges; Radar affected by horizon and position relative to flight path Discrimination: warhead(s) obscured by debris cloud and/or deployed PENAIDS PBV maneuvering, MiRV Salvage fusing effects Nuclear weapons effects from an offensive warhead fuzed to detonate when attacked Majority Of Current BMD Effort Focused In This Area
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Most Demanding Environment On BMD Systems And Supporting C2 And C4I Infrastructures
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Ground-Based: Terminal
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD): a globally transportable, rapidly deployable capability to intercept and destroy ballistic missiles inside or outside the atmosphere during their final, or terminal, phase of flight. Land-based, capable of shooting down a ballistic missile inside and just outside the atmosphere w/hit-to-kill technology. Procurement: First two Batteries fielded at Fort Bliss, TX. Total hardware for Battery #1 & #2 include: 6 Launchers, 2 Fire Control & Communications components, 2 AN/TPY-2 Radars, and 48 Interceptors. Delivery of first production interceptors began in March 2011. Batteries 3 and 4 on contract March 2011 with delivery and fielding to start in 2013. Dec 2011: Agreement to sell battery to UAE
PATRIOT Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3): Operational and fielded by the U.S. Army.
Procurement: The Army is responsible for production and further development of the PAC-3 and the Medium Extended Air Defense System; the Missile Defense Agency remains responsible for the Ballistic Missile Defense System and PAC-3 interoperability and integration efforts.
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111
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155
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The caveat: These plans all depend on outcome of major program cuts and revisions DoD-wide
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DIRECTS
DOD/JCS guidance:
MDA CHARTER
Guide/Influence
15 March 2007 Missile Defense Executive Board (MDEB) Established
15 Dec 2008 NAVY BOD Membership Memo
2012
2010
Navy guidance:
October 2007: A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower Sept 2009: CNO Guidance 2010 Issue NOC that links CS21 to operations and force structure with guidance from QDR 10 and BMDR 10
Guide/Influence
Navy Strategic Guidance
PR-11
Fleet TACPRO
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TACMEMOs
Limit Regional Conflict Deter major Power War Win our nations Wars Homeland defense Cooperative Relationships Prevent or Contain Local Disruptions
Deterrence Sea Control Power Projection Forward Presence HA/DR Maritime Security
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3. Before new capabilities are deployed, they must undergo testing that enables assessment under realistic conditions.
4. The commitment to new capabilities must be fiscally sustainable over the long term. 5. US BMD capabilities must be flexible enough to adapt as threats change.
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Ballistic missile defenses help support U.S. security commitments to allies and partners. They provide reassurance that the United States will stand by those commitments despite the growth in the military potential of regional adversaries.
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Per the BMDR, international cooperation is focused on: Development and deployment of joint and/or complementary capabilities Technological and industrial cooperation Current Initiatives: Europe: implement PAA in a NATO context East Asia and Middle East: strengthen cooperative relationships in bilateral frameworks Arrow development program w/Israel THAAD sale to UAE Renew cooperation with Russia Conduct a substantive and sustained dialogue with China
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DEFENDED AREA
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JFMCC
JFACC AADC
DAADC
JFLCC
TAAMDCOORD
CTF IAMD
RADC
CRC RADC
RADC
ADAFCO
AAMDC
JFMCC is a supporting commander to JFACC/AADC for IAMD Navy retains OPCON and TACON of multi-mission IAMD ships When the size and scope of the mission dictates, JFMCC will recommend a RADC to support the AADC for optimum employment of multi-mission ships
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CTF IAMD, when designated as RADC plan, coordinate, and execute engagements
94th AAMDC
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BMD Challenges
Countermeasures PENAIDS: Chaff, decoys Terminal maneuvers Multiple warheads/HGV Salvage fuzing Debris Upper stages, separation debris, chuffing, other intercepts Adversary TTP Attack BMD system Trajectory shaping/depressed trajectories Raids Mass launches/Timed arrival Positional Location of sensors/shooters relative to BMOA Geo-political Host-nation concerns/issues
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BREAK
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Discussion
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BMD Discussion
Situation: Intention to launch scientific research satellite
Declares launch window and booster drop zones/keep out areas Does not reveal configuration/details of payload Intel has determined payload is a RORSAT & weighs 3,800 kg, of which 1,250 kg are made up by a nuclear reactor and the disposal stage. These two components are 5.3 m long. The reactor core consists of 37 cylindrical fuel elements with 31.1 kg of highly enriched (90%) uranium-235 embedded in a beryllium casing and cooled by liquid sodium potassium. Projected orbital insertion track passes just north of Hawaii Two previous attempts have failed one 4 seconds after launch and the most recent when the third stage failed to ignite and missile fell in the broad ocean area.
SLV CONOPS Range Fans And Locations Are For Demonstration Only And Do Not Represent Actual Systems, Capabilities or Plans
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Backups
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Position: X-Y-Z Cartesian coordinate system w/origin @ Earth center Velocity: Along X, Y & Z axes. Predicts future BM position.
Vy
Vx
Full covariance provides a more reliable AOU around the current and future positions of the space track, enabling construction of a search pattern that efficiently utilizes sensor resources by limiting the search only to the most probable area of the sky
(Earth center)
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