by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Gen. Vincent Brooks, head of U.S. Army Pacific Command, cites urgent need to deploy Terminal High Altitude Area Defense batteries in Middle East and South Korea • U.S. military has four active THAAD batteries, with a fifth to start training this year.
                                            The launch of a THAAD 
missile interceptor                                                
                                                 
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            Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons                                        ![]()  | 
                        
The U.S. military is considering sending its 
THAAD missile defense system to the Middle East, a senior U.S. Army 
general said on Wednesday, citing what he called an urgent need to 
respond to foes with missile systems and the will to use them.
Gen. Vincent Brooks, head of U.S. Army Pacific
 Command, said no decisions had been made about deploying a U.S.-owned 
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense battery in the Middle East or South 
Korea, another region where he saw an urgent need given the threat posed
 by North Korea.
"The need is there in ... those two places, 
urgently, because we have adversaries who have capability and they have 
demonstrated that they are willing to use it," Brooks told Reuters in an
 interview.
Brooks did not name Iran, but U.S. military 
officials have raised concerns in the past about Iran's development of 
longer-range missiles that could reach Israel and potentially Europe.
The U.S. military must weigh its options, 
given the high cost involved in deploying the THAAD weapon system, built
 by Lockheed Martin Corp., Brooks said. He said the U.S. military also 
continued to explore options for lower-cost systems to defend against 
lesser threats, but gave no details.
The U.S. Army is preparing to swap out a THAAD
 battery that has been operating in Guam for about a year. It has four 
active THAAD batteries, with a fifth to start training this year.
"They have to decide where the need is 
greatest," said one congressional aide. "The question is, what does the 
Central Command commander need to protect U.S. forces?"
The commander of U.S. troops stationed in 
South Korea last June said he had proposed deploying THAAD missiles to 
South Korea to counter the growing threat of nuclear-armed North Korea's
 weapons capabilities.
Critics say such a deployment could inflame 
tensions with China and Russia, as they see the move as a threat to 
their security interests.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken 
said in Seoul last month that a THAAD deployment in South Korea was not 
under active discussion.
Lockheed will make initial deliveries of a 
THAAD system bought by the United Arab Emirates under a $1.96 billion 
sale first announced in December 2011, but it will take a year or more 
until the system is fully operational.
Lockheed hopes to finalize a similar deal with
 Qatar over the next two years, and Saudi Arabia is also considering a 
possible purchase.
Brooks said the U.S. military remained in 
dialogue with various Asian countries about how they could take 
responsibility for self-defense, and how any capabilities could be 
networked together to help defend allies elsewhere in the region.
Sources familiar with the THAAD system said they did not believe a deployment to the Middle East was imminent.
Riki Ellison, founder of the nonprofit Missile
 Defense Advocacy Alliance, said putting a THAAD system in the Middle 
East would help cover potential gaps in the existing coverage of the 
area such as provided by the Aegis system on U.S. destroyers and Patriot
 missile batteries.
Ultimately, he said, a decision to station a THAAD 
system in the Middle East would be a "political chess move" in the 
current U.S. talks with Iran on its nuclear weapons program.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=23937
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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