December 20, 2007 :: News
On December 18, Japan successfully executed the first test of its sea-based ballistic missile defense system. During the test, the Japanese destroyer JS KONGO stationed off the coast of Hawaii destroyed an incoming "SCUD-like" missile with a U.S.-developed SM-3 interceptor and the larger Aegis missile defense system. The simulated hostile missile was fired at 12:05 pm from the Pacific Missile Range Facility on the island of Kauai, Hawaii. Detecting the missile, the Japanese Aegis destroyer then fired a SM-3 Block IA interceptor three minutes later. At 12:08 pm, the SM-3 interceptor destroyed the target some 100 miles above the Pacific Ocean, the twelfth successful intercept for the Aegis SM-3.
The intercept exercise was a joint-operation between the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Forces and the United States' Missile Defense Agency. The test, designated Japan Flight Test Mission 1 (JFTM-1), marks the first time a Japanese ship has attempted a ballistic missile intercept. In previous tests, Japanese ships had however monitored and tracked target missiles.
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» Video of Japanese SM-3 Aegis Intercept on December 18, 2007