Crazy Kim and the Tippy Twos

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un presides over a plenary meeting of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea in Pyongyang March 31, 2013.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un presides over a plenary meeting of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea in Pyongyang March 31, 2013.

By Steve Russell – Kim Jong Un certainly seems crazy. But sound mind isn’t a requirement for predictable action. Tyrants often mask steady goals with wild behavior. One need only think of world pests like Fidel Castro and Saddam Hussein to realize entire regions can be thrust into unwanted global crises.

Like Castro and Saddam, Kim Jong Un has made clear he’s dedicated to expanding his ability to harm America and her allies. The difference is, he has a nuclear capability, not a borrowed or boasted one. North Korea has a proven record of long-range missile development that could ultimately hit the American mainland.

North Korea can already hit our bases abroad, our trading partners and our allies. Worse still, it’s exporting this technology to other friendly loons in the Middle East.

Not to respond is dangerous. Not to understand the growing threat is disastrous. Regarding the current danger with North Korea, it comes as no surprise that Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel chose to deploy the “Army Navy Transportable Radar Surveillance” (AN/TPY-2) radar to the Japanese mainland.

Also known as the “Tippy Two,” this radar outpost is part of a broader strategy to better protect against the growing missile threat posed by Kim Jong Un.

The Tippy Two is the most advanced mobile radar system on the planet. Numerous simulations have proven its ability to identify and track a wide variety of missiles with great precision. Tippy Two radars can also conduct “real-time discrimination” – tech speak for being able to look at a complex radar picture and determine what is a real and what isn’t. But right now, there aren’t enough Tippy Twos – a point that I and many others have been making for a while.

Eight Tippy Twos are already in use. Four are currently deployed around the globe to help protect the United States, our military and our allies. Redeploying one of these units to Japan would leave American soldiers and our friends vulnerable to attacks.

Three others are part of a missile defense system called THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense). Stripping radars from any one of the three THAAD batteries would render the systems useless and deprive our warriors of a critical defense capability.

The final Tippy Two unit is the one most likely headed to Japan. It has been reserved for technological research and testing.

Deploying this unit would have consequences. Without it, researchers will have a much harder time translating technological developments into improved missile detection on the battlefield, before a disaster strikes. Geo-politically, we also can’t underestimate the important message a successful test sends. To our citizens and friends, it’s a message of reassurance. To our enemies, it’s a powerful deterrent.

Simply put, the U.S. needs to manufacture more Tippy Twos by sticking to a commitment already made back in 2011. Defense officials can do it, and the plans are there to expand the Tippy Two supply to a size proportional to the global rogue-missile threat.

The 2011 federal budget included production plans for 18 new Tippy Twos. In 2012, however, amid growing fiscal discipline calls, federal officials scaled back that order to 11. The order was then bumped up to 12 by Congress. That total still isn’t nearly enough.

Retired Army Lt. Col. Steve Russell was involved in the capture of Saddam Hussein and is the author of “We Got Him! A Memoir of the Hunt and Capture of Saddam Hussein.” He is an infantry veteran of Kosovo, Kuwait, Afghanistan and Iraq, a military analyst for Concerned Veterans for America and served as chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee in the Oklahoma Senate.

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  1. just this month a law went into effect that repeals a law that banned domestic propaganda.so now programs like Voice Of America,Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty and the Middle east Broadcasting Network can now be read and viewed by people in the US.these networks,especially VOA have always been engaged in government propaganda.VOA is owned and funded by the US government.and it gets worse.especially with the article above put out by the VOA.VOA is scare-mongering,and issueing all the talking points of the military/industrial complex.they want us to believe that north korea is a major threat to America.that's laughable.it's bad enough that most of the main siream media including all the major TV networks are already mouthpieces for the government.now we have to deal with a tax-payer funded agency.this is the kind of stuff that was done in former soviet union.

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