WASHINGTON ICBM CONTRACTORS (ICons) GROUP This is a day to remember those who died to keep us free. 24 May 2020 May DC ICons: 26 May from 1100-1200 (EDT) with Mr. Drew Walters, currently performing the duties of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Matters. 1 ADMINISTRATION/PROGRAM SPECIFICS Trump touts new 'super-duper' missile that can allegedly travel 17 times faster than current missiles See article on: thehill.com // By: Marty Johnson President Trump on Friday touted a mysterious new military asset: a missile that could travel significantly faster than any warhead the U.S. currently has in its arsenal. "We are building, right now, incredible military equipment at a level that nobody has ever seen before. We have no choice. We have to do it with the adversaries we have out there. We have, I call it the super-duper missile, and I heard the other night - 17 times faster than what they have right now," Trump said in the Oval Office. Trump's comments came during a White House event where he signed the 2020 Armed Forces Day Proclamation. During the ceremony, the administration also unveiled the flag of the country's newest military wing, the Space Force. It's the first new military flag to be unveiled in 72 years. "Space is going to be the future, both in terms of defense and offense and so many other things," Trump said. "And already, from what I'm hearing and based on reports, we're now the leader in space." A Pentagon spokesman was asked about the "super-duper missile" during a subsequent press call and referred reporters back to the White House. Friday evening, Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman tweeted, "The Department of Defense is working on developing a range of hypersonic missiles to counter our adversaries." Trump Tips Brand-New 'Super-Duper Missile' That Puts China's Best Missiles to Shame Trump Drops Game-Changing Military Announcement By C. Douglas Golden for the Western Journal // Published May 16, 2020 at 8:15am If you’re developing something that’ll put China’s best missiles to shame, what do you dub it? The “super-duper missile,” of course. The media’s going to seize upon that moniker bestowed upon a new missile tipped by President Donald Trump at the White House on Friday. It’s made it into pretty much every headline I’ve seen (including ours, to be fair). And, if the missile turns out to live up to the specs laid out at the event, it’s going to be very much worthy of the branding. The occasion was the unveiling of the official Space Force flag at the White House, but Trump had one more thing to talk about: a new hypersonic missile which would match and beat similar efforts from China and Russia. “We’re building right now incredible military equipment at a level that nobody’s ever seen before,” Trump said at the news conference. “We have no choice. We have to do it with the adversaries we have out there. We have, I call it the super-duper missile,” he continued. “I heard the other night, 17 times faster than what they have right now.” “You’ve heard Russia has five times, and China is working on five or six times, we have one 17 times, and it’s just gotten the go-ahead.” 2 It’s the “fastest in the world by a factor of almost three,” Trump added. The media had its usual field day over this one — particularly after the Pentagon refused comment and deferred to the White House, only for White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany to defer back to the Pentagon. In response, Pentagon official Jonathan Rath Hoffman tweeted back that they were working on “a range of hypersonic missiles.” So, what is a hypersonic missile? It’s defined as any missile which goes past Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound. The United States conducted a test of a newly developed hypersonic missile glide body in March, Reuters reported. The missile follows an unpredictable path, which makes it difficult to neutralize. It’s fired on a rocket up to 25 miles in the atmosphere, at which point the hypersonic glide body detaches and flies toward the target. This unpredictability is actually why they’re considered so lethal; regular ballistic missiles have a predictable arc, whereas hypersonic glide vehicles can do extraordinary things to evade a country’s missile defenses. A senior NATO official told Agence France-Presse that in a hypersonic missile strike, the target country wouldn’t know what happened “until there’s a boom on the ground.” It’s unclear whether this was the missile Trump was referring to in his comments on Friday, but given the context, one would assume it was something else. Both China and Russia have tested hypersonic missiles, and Russia says it has an operable version. It’s always a good day at the White House when both China and Russia can be put on notice like this. It’s even better when you consider that Russia has used the threat of aiming their putative hypersonic missile arsenal at the United States if we were to deploy intermediate-range ballistic missiles in Europe. Russia, however, clearly isn’t the main target for the “super-duper missile,” when it arrives. China has been fairly aggressive about pushing its hypersonic missile, the DF-17. When 16 of them appeared at last year’s National Day parade, the Beijing-friendly South China Morning Post said the “boost-glide missile may be powerful enough to penetrate US missile shields in the region, transforming Beijing’s previously defensive strategy of containing independence-leaning forces in the Taiwan Strait.” That’s a dangerous statement to begin with, particularly when it comes from a paper that — if certainly not under the heel of the Chinese Communist Party the same way Xinhua news agency or similar propaganda mills are — clearly amplifies pro-Beijing voices. If Beijing is going to saber-rattle over the issue of Taiwan with its hypersonic missiles, well, the best medicine is to saber-rattle right back. Mutually assured destruction worked during the Cold War. Even in the 21st century, that paradigm still works. Every headline seemed to trumpet what the president called the missile. Few seemed to grasp the import of those words. If this missile can deliver on something even remotely like what the president said it would, the big news from Friday’s news conference won’t be that Space Force flag. Air Force Splits ICBM Directorate in Two as GBSD Development Continues Air Force Magazine Online, 19 May 20 Brian W. Everstine The Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center is splitting its management of intercontinental ballistic missiles in two as the next-generation Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent progresses. 3 AFNWC’s former Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Systems Directorate at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, will now be the Minuteman III Systems Directorate and the Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent Systems Directorate. “This restructuring is a natural progression of the Air Force’s increasing focus on the modernization of the ICBM, the third leg of our strategic nuclear triad,” said Maj. Gen. Shaun Morris, AFNWC commander and Air Force program executive officer for strategic systems, in an Air Force Materiel Command release. “It also allows us to centralize some functional requirements, such as manpower and security, at a central operating location at Hill AFB, thus freeing up our subject matter experts to better focus on both sustaining the Minuteman III and acquiring the new GBSD weapon system.” The Minuteman III directorate will focus on maintaining the operational readiness of the aging ICBM system, while the new GBSD directorate will focus on bringing the new system online. The $22 billion GBSD program will include more than 600 missiles. Northrop Grumman is now the sole contractor, after Boeing pulled its bid, and the company expects to deliver the new missiles in 2029. “GBSD will ensure uninterrupted deterrence against current and future adversaries through 2075,” said Col. Jason Bartolomei, who will lead the new directorate and continue serving as the system program manager for GBSD. “At the same time, it will provide more efficient operations, maintenance, and security by modernizing a critically aged infrastructure and lowering lifecycle costs,” Bartolomei said. Separate from these two, the AFNWC also has directorates overseeing Air Delivered Capabilities; Nuclear Command, Control, and Communications Integration; and Nuclear Technology and Integration Directorate. The move comes after the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center realigned its oversight of fighters, bombers, and mobility aircraft. The Fighters and Bombers Directorate has been split into a Fighters and Advanced Aircraft Directorate and a Bombers Directorate. The Tanker Directorate also moved to the Mobility and Training Aircraft Directorate.Pentagon to Spend Billions Mass-Producing Hypersonic Weapons By Jon Harper for National Defense Magazine // 18 May 2020 The Defense Department plans to spend billions of dollars in the coming years on large-scale production of hypersonic weapons, a senior official said March 4. The systems are designed to fly faster than Mach 5 and challenge enemy defensive systems with their high speed and maneuverability. They have been a top priority of Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Mike Griffin. “We're actually to the point where we're beginning to believe that, at least for rocket-boosted hypersonic glide vehicles, we really think we have the technology close to being in hand,” he said at the McAleese & Associates annual conference in Washington, D.C. To compete with great power competitors China and Russia, the U.S.
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