Arabian Legend
SENIOR MEMBER
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"The THAAD project, originally known as the Theater High Altitude Area Defense system, began in 1992 when the Missile Defense Agency awarded a $689 million development contract to Lockheed Martin and subcontractors Raytheon, Datatape, and EBCO. Initial successes were encouraging. In the late 1990s, however, THAAD missed six out of eight of its attempted intercepts, and many dismissed the project as an expensive failure. MDA decided to backtrack. Between 2000 and 2003, THAAD engineers reworked the entire system and fixed many of its inherent problems and redundancies."
A 75 percent miss ratio, that's pathetic! And god knows what "reworked" really means. The entire thing is an expensive joke, but they somehow convinced you arabs.
A 75 percent miss ratio under perfect conditions. In a battle scenario, even if it hits one it would be lucky. At best this system might be able to save one power plant if it's lucky.
btw, the miserable 2/8 rate was achieved in a controlled environment against singular ballistic missile tagets. At time of war, Iran will fire a platora of different missiles (Qiam, fateh, Zelzal etc...) and even a 2/8 cannot be achieved.
The Terminal High Altitude
Area Defense (THAAD)
System is an upper-tier
element of the terminal
portion of the Missile Defense
Agencys Ballistic Missile
Defense System. The higher
altitude and regionwide
protection furnished by the
THAAD System in conjunction
with the lower tier
defenses, such as Patriot and
sea-based missile defense
systems, provide missile
defense of critical and high
value assets.
The THAAD program office
is developing a complete, integrated
weapon system consisting
of launchers, missiles, fire
control and communications,
and radars. The THAAD missile
employs kinetic energy,
hit-to-kill, rather than an
explosive warhead technology
to destroy the target. The
THAAD Radar is an X-band,
phased array, solid-state radar.
The radar design delivers high
power output and exceptional
beam/waveform agility in
order to support the long
range functional requirements
of the THAAD mission. The
THAAD components work
in concert to detect, assign
and destroy incoming short
to medium and intermediate
range ballistic missiles.
Lockheed Martin is the prime
contractor and systems integrator
for the THAAD System.
Raytheon provides the Radar
and jointly develops the
THAAD fire control and
communications software with
the prime contractor. It also
delivers the FCC shelters and
supports Weapon Systems
Engineering and Test
Engineering
75% miss ratio < is this a jock