“This award demonstrates the US government’s continued confidence in the THAAD Weapon System and in its unique endo- and exo-atmospheric defence capability,” Dan Nimblett, Vice President of Upper Tier Integrated Air and Missile Defense at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, said in a news release. “With 16 of 16 successful flight test intercepts and recent combat success clearly documenting the effectiveness of THAAD, adding an eighth battery will further enhance readiness against existing and evolving ballistic missile threats.”
Other THAAD batteries are deployed in Romania, South Korea, Guam, and Japan. Each battery consists of at least six launcher vehicles, which carry eight missiles each; two mobile tactical operations centres; and a powerful AN/TPY-2 ground-based radar.
Xing said Seoul “should not be treading in that step again,” noting that following the first deployment in 2016, their relations became “really bad”. He added that they had “recovered the right track because the two nations made joint efforts,” according to US military news outlet Stars and Stripes.
In February, South Korea’s Agency for Defence Development test-fired a potential domestic replacement for THAAD. the L-SAM, built by South Korean contractors Hanwha Group and LIG Nex 1. It has also worked to develop its own alternatives to the US’ Patriot missile and Israel’s Iron Dome systems.