The Missile Defense Agency called its planned long-range missile defense system test from Vandenberg AFB, Calif., a “no test” because the target vehicle “failed to reach the defended area,” states an MDA release. MDA chief, Air Force Lt. Gen. Trey Obering, said that the target “did not reach sufficient height to be deemed a threat, so the ballistic missile defense system did not engage it, as designed.” He added that such a situation is always “a risk” since the program is “flying old intercontinental ballistic missile motors in our targets.” Obering also said that MDA has planned a target modernization program “within our existing budget. The agency expects to repeat this test later this summer.
The withdrawal of about 700 U.S. forces from Somalia required a massive nocturnal airlift, movement of fighters and tankers from the Middle East, and other overwatch from drones and other special operations aircraft, all planned and executed within weeks. The mission, called Operation Octave Quartz, came after former President Donald…