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The Pentagon has announced an extension of the THAAD intercept deadlines in its agreement with Lockheed-Martin from July 16, 1999 until “late July, early August,” said Jennifer Canaff, public affairs officer for the Pentagon’s Ballistic Missile Defense Organization in a recent interview with Taxpayers for Common Sense.
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Canaff cited “programatic” reasons and then clarified “for reasons that deal with the program. It was done internally.”
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On May 13, 1998, after the THAAD missile defense system failed to hit its target five consecutive times, the Department of Defense (DOD) entered a “cure agreement” with Lockheed-Martin. The agreement created punitive fines if the weapon system continued to fail intercept tests by specified dates.
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On March 29, 1999, Lockheed-Martin was fined $15 million following THAAD’s sixth failure. However the latest agreement by Ballistic Missile Defense Organization with Lockheed-Martin will return that punitive fine if THAAD achieves three successful intercepts by December 31, 1999.
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Lockheed-Martin was to be fined $20 million unless it could produce two successful intercepts by June 30, 1999. But the deadline was extended to July 16, 1999 following problems with the target missile (HERA) during a test on May 25, 1999.
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Canaff explained the first extension: “The technical reason was the HERA” target missile’s malfunction. As for the newest extension, she said that DOD would not state a specific deadline date “right now.”
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The next THAAD test is slated for July 26, 1999. The first – and only – successful intercept took place on June 10, 1999 during THAAD’s 7th test flight. Â
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Contact: Keith Ashdown
(202) 546-8500 x110