Friday, March 24, 2006

Britain is 'likely base for son of Star Wars'

original
By Alec Russell in Washington
(Filed: 24/03/2006)

Britain has been named as a prime candidate to host missiles for America's controversial "son of Star Wars" defence system, a senior US general has revealed.

The disclosure risked infuriating Left-wing Labour MPs and prompting a fresh examination of transatlantic links and the relationship between Tony Blair and President George W Bush.

Lt Gen Trey Obering, head of the US Missile Defence Agency, said Britain was one of three candidates to be the European host of interceptors designed to shoot down incoming ballistic missiles.

British officials were startled by the disclosure, insisting that, as far as they were concerned, nothing had changed since Geoff Hoon, then the defence secretary, told parliament in 2004 that a decision to base interceptors in Britain would be "open to scrutiny and debate in the normal way".

**I had always wondered when the price would come, and what it would be, for the UK...EG:)**

"No one asked us the question [whether Britain was now ready to be a formal candidate]," a British Embassy spokesman said.

Previously, it was privately acknowledged that Britain is a strong candidate but it has never been formally identified as being in the running.

The revelation came in a PowerPoint presentation to a military conference earlier this week when Lt Gen Obering identified Britain, Poland and the Czech Republic as the three candidates, Britain seeming to have replaced Hungary on the final shortlist.

The Pentagon and the Ministry of Defence denied there had been any formal discussions over a missile defence site in the UK.

"There has been no planning, no approach no request and no invitation," a Pentagon spokesman said.

"America has not yet decided to place interceptors in Europe, has not yet asked for further British participation and the government has not yet decided whether or not to pursue missile defence for the UK," an MoD spokesman said.

Britain already plays a key part in American plans for a global defensive shield through the radar station at Fylingdales on the North York moors.

The planned missile defence shield, intended to protect America and its allies, has been dubbed "son of Star Wars", in a reference to the nickname for the Reagan-era defence system.

The Bush administration is now heading for a decision on where to put its third base of interceptors. The other two are in Alaska and California.

Sources close to Lt Gen Obering played down the impact of the disclosure saying Britain had two just brief mentions in his presentation.

He told the 4th Annual US Missile Defence Conference on Monday that the system which is to integrate land sea and air-based defences is making swift progress.

"It's a very daunting challenge but one that I think the men and women of the Missile Defence Agency, the army, navy and air force are pulling together and are now achieving," he said.

"A lot of people wonder if this is going to work and is it worth the investment," he added. "The testing we've conducted shows the technology is valid and viable."

He cited Iran and North Korea as potential threats but added that America and its allies must be ready to confront terrorist networks and future rogue states.

"Pakistan, one of our key allies today, tomorrow could have a fundamentalist Islamic government controlling their nuclear-tipped missiles," he said.

16 January 2003: Labour anger at decision to back 'son of star wars'
13 January 2003: Britain ready to accept US missile defence
1 May 2001: Bush pushes ahead with Star Wars laser shield

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