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Fact File
U.S. Strategic Command Public Affairs, 901 SAC Blvd, Suite 1A1, Offutt AFB NE 68113-6020
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Theater Ballistic Missile Warning
Theater Ballistic Missile proliferation is becoming an ever-increasing
problem in the world in the 21st Century. Many nations possess theater ballistic
missiles and some have made this technology available for purchase. Today,
proliferation poses a significant threat to U.S. field commanders in overseas
locations and this threat will continue to grow in the future.
One of the primary missions of U.S. Strategic Command is to provide
space-based theater ballistic missile warning to U.S. forces worldwide. This
warning provides the troops in the field the opportunity to defend themselves or
take the necessary precautions in the event of a missile threat. Those
precautions could include intercepting the missile when combined with the
current and future theater missile defense systems and the evacuation of
buildings in the threatened area. The command performs this mission with a
variety of ground-based and space-based systems as part of the Theater Event
System.
The Theater Event System consists of the Defense Support Program satellite
constellation, Attack and Launch Early Reporting to Theater system, Joint
Tactical Ground Stations, and Tactical Detection and Reporting System. The data
from these sources is disseminated worldwide via the Tactical Information
Broadcast Service and the Tactical Related Applications Data Dissemination
System.
A brief description of key Theater Event Systems and sensors follows:
- Defense Support Program satellites use an infrared sensor to detect heat
from missile or booster plumes against the relatively cool background of the
Earth's surface. These satellites have provided uninterrupted warning since
the early 1970s when they were first launched into a 22,000-mile
geosynchronous orbit. These satellites were designed to detect strategic
ballistic missiles in the early stage of launch of their flights. However,
during Desert Storm, prior to the start of the air campaign, the detection
software was upgraded and refined to detect short-range theater ballistic
missiles such as the SCUD missile. The follow-on to the Defense Support
Program satellites, the Space Based Infrared System, is presently being
developed from the ground up to detect theater ballistic missiles.
- Attack and Launch Early Reporting to Theater (commonly known as "ALERT")
is the latest means of processing Defense Support Program satellite data. The
heart of ALERT is the Central Tactical Processing Element, composed of
off-the-shelf commercial telemetry hardware and computer work stations running
custom software. This program processes data from all Defense Support Program
satellites simultaneously, as well as incorporating data from other sensors in
detecting theater ballistic missiles launches.
- Joint Tactical Ground Stations is a transportable/mobile, in-theater
element of the Theater Event System that provides theater commanders with a
capability to process data and immediately send a warning of a theater
ballistic missile launch. The system processes data (multiple source) from
Defense Support Program satellites and ties directly to theater communications
systems to send theater ballistic missile position information to support
early warning, targeting, and cueing requirements.
- Tactical Detection and Reporting System is a system based on the combined
ability of a variety of space-based assets to provide warning data.
These systems and sensors, working in harmony and concert with each other,
provide the world's most sophisticated early warning system for the joint
military community to support the warfighter on land, sea, and in the air.
(Current as of March 2004)