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Lockheed Martin Inaugurates Target Single Integration Capability For The MDA

Targets will delivered around the globe to test Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, Aegis, Ground-based Midcourse, Airborne Laser, sensors and other Ballistic Missile Defense System elements.
by Staff Writers
Courtland AL (SPX) Oct 16, 2007
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) and Lockheed Martin inaugurated the new Targets and Countermeasures Single Integration Capability in Courtland, Ala., today. The Courtland capability will provide the most efficient, effective method for assembling and integrating realistic targets for the Ballistic Missile Defense System.

Lockheed Martin, as the MDA's prime contractor for Targets and Countermeasures, will deliver targets from Courtland to ranges around the globe to test Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, Aegis, Ground-based Midcourse, Airborne Laser, sensors and other Ballistic Missile Defense System elements - demonstrating both element- and system-level capabilities against current and future threats to the U.S., friends, allies and troops abroad.

Approximately 200 people attended the event. Prominent among the attendees were: Rep. Robert B. Aderholt; Maj. Gen. Chris T. Anzalone, deputy for Test, Integration and Fielding, MDA; and Mary Ann Stasiak, Targets and Countermeasures program director, MDA. State and local officials included: State Rep. John J. "Jody" Letson and Courtland Mayor Ted Letson. Lockheed Martin officials included: Linda Reiners, vice president, Lockheed Martin Missile Defense Systems; James Tevepaugh, vice president, Lockheed Martin Target and Countermeasure Programs; and Bruce Thompson, director, Lockheed Martin Courtland Operations.

"Missile defense has become an increasingly important part of our national defense," said Rep. Aderholt. "With this new capability I believe Lockheed Martin will continue to be a leader in the field, benefiting not only Courtland and North Alabama, but the nation as well."

Reiners, who leads the Missile Defense Systems line of business for Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, expressed the strong Lockheed Martin commitment to Northern Alabama. "We chose Courtland because of our confidence in the workforce and our dedication to the community," she said. "We would like to thank Mayor Letson of Courtland and the local Alabama team, Gov. Riley and Lt. Gov. Folsom, Senators Sessions and Shelby and Representatives Aderholt and Cramer, as well as Lt Gen. Obering for all the support that made this day possible."

She continued, "This capability in Courtland will produce the Flexible Target Family, or FTF. The FTF will provide the most flexible, cost-effective, reliable targets available to prove the capabilities of the Ballistic Missile Defense System." At the ceremony, Reiners expressed her confidence in the Courtland team led by Thompson to fulfill its mission of delivering targets with enhanced realism efficiently and with the highest probability of mission success.

The inauguration ceremony occurred in a new building constructed specifically for the Targets and Countermeasures Program by the Doster Walbridge Company, a general contractor based in Birmingham, Ala. This is the first building needed to support integrated processing planned for the 660-acre Courtland site. Lockheed Martin also has selected Courtland as its assembly and integration site for the Multiple Kill Vehicle program, for which Lockheed Martin Space Systems is MDA's prime contractor; Multiple Kill Vehicle work in Courtland will begin in about three years.

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Outside View: U.S., Russia at odds on BMD
Moscow (UPI) Oct 12, 2007
On Friday and Saturday the Russian and U.S. foreign and defense ministers are planning to discuss in Moscow the U.S. plan to create the third position area in Europe for its national missile defense system. By tradition, on the eve of the meeting the sides outlined their positions on the issue. (United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)







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