US to send first element of anti-missile system in Europe to Romania

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ATIcourses offered a broad range of both open enrollment and on-site courses related to radar and ballistic missile defense using the AEGIS system.
We thought the news below could be or interest to our readers. The firsts components of a US-made anti-missile system are being assembled in New Jersey ahead of their shipping to Romania in a few weeks, reports DefenseNews. In about a year, all the pieces will be reassembled to become the first operational shore-based element of the European Phased Adaptive Approach anti-missile system. According to DefenseNews, the system is the first land-based version of the Aegis combat system, a sophisticated collection of phased-array radars, fire control directors, computers and missiles. The deployment of the Aegis Ashore system in Romania to provide ballistic missile coverage for southern Europe represents the second phase of the European Phased Adaptive Approach, and will also use enhanced SM-3 Block IB interceptor missiles. A second Aegis Ashore site will be built in Poland in the third phase of the project. A ceremony for the USD 134 million Aegis Ashore installation was held in late-October 2013 at Deveselu Air Base in Romania. The local component of the shield at Deveselu will cover 175 hectares and around 200 American staff and troops will be stationed in Romania once the base becomes functional, in 2015. According to the agreement signed in 2011, Deveselu remains under Romania’s property and sovereign jurisdiction.


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