platform arriving in Pearl Harbor in January 2006. GMD is tied into existing United States missile warning infrastructure, as well as purpose-built radar sites. It also encompasses 44 ground-based missile interceptors housed at two military bases.
Boeing Defense, Space & Security is the prime contractor of the program, tasked to oversee and integrate systems from other major defense sub-contractors, such as
Computer Sciences Corporation and
Raytheon. The key sub-systems of the GMD system are: •
Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV) – Raytheon •
Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) – boost vehicle built by
Orbital Sciences; for every interceptor missile there is a
missile silo and a silo interface vault (SIV), which is an underground electronics room adjacent to the silo. •
Battle management command, control and communications (BMC3) –
Northrop Grumman • Ground-based radars (GBR) – Raytheon •
AN/FPS-132 Upgraded Early Warning Radar (UEWR) – Raytheon • Forward-based
X band radars (FBXB), such as the
sea-based X-band platform and the
AN/TPY-2 — Raytheon Interceptor sites are at
Fort Greely,
Alaska and
Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. A third site was planned for a proposed
US missile defense complex in Poland, but was canceled in September 2009. In late 2013, there were plans for a proposed Eastern United States site to house a battery of these missiles. Four sites were shortlisted in January 2014 for an East Coast site -
SERE Remote Training Site in Maine (
Rangeley),
Fort Drum in
New York,
Camp James A. Garfield in
Ohio, and
Fort Custer Training Center in
Michigan.
Camp Ethan Allen Training Site in
Vermont was dropped from consideration in late 2013. In January 2014 the Pentagon announced they were starting a two-year environmental impact study under the 2013 defense authorization bill, which required two missile-defense sites to be identified on the East Coast. In December 2008, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency awarded Boeing a $397.9 million contract to continue development of the program. In March 2013, the Obama administration announced plans to add 14 interceptors to the current 26 at Fort Greely in response to North Korean threats. The deployment of a second TPY-2 radar to Japan was announced at the same time. While President Obama said that the additional deployment was a hedge against unexpected capabilities, Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Hong Lei complained that the additional defenses would affect the global strategic balance and strategic trust. On 30 April 2014, the Government Accountability Office issued a report stating that the system may not be operational any time soon because "its development was flawed". It said the GBI missile was at that point "capable of intercepting a simple threat in a limited way". On 12 August 2015, Lt. General David L. Mann (commanding general
USASMDC/
ARSTRAT) characterized GMD as the nation's only ground-based defense against limited
ICBM attacks. In 2019, the government issued a stop work order for the RKV after recent test results indicated that the current RKV plan is not viable. The government "initiated an analysis of alternative courses of action"; on 21 August the MDA cancelled the $5.8 billion contract for the RKV. The current GMD programs continue per plan, with up to 64 GBIs (meaning an additional 20) in the missile fields for 2019. ==Program costs==