February 11, 2009 8:18 PM
- Text
Airline Anti-Missile System Sought
(AP)
The Bush administration announced Tuesday it has chosen three companies to develop plans for anti-missile systems to defend commercial planes against shoulder-fired rockets.
BAE Systems, Northrup Grumman and United Airlines will receive $2 million each over six months to determine whether existing military technology can be used to counter the terrorist threat, said Charles McQueary, the Homeland Security Department's undersecretary for science and technology.
Existing defenses, such as infrared jammers that redirect heat-seeking rockets away from aircraft engines, already are used on military planes and Air Force One.
The companies, chosen from among 24 that sought the contracts, will develop and test prototypes and the government then will decide whether to choose one or more to more fully develop.
The Bush administration has been criticized by some lawmakers who say it has not taken the missile threat seriously enough. Hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of Soviet-style SA-7s — heat-seeking rockets that can hit low-flying aircraft within a range of three miles — are said to be available on the worldwide arms market.
Concerns about terrorists using lightweight rocket launchers to take down commercial airliners increased in November 2002 when terrorists fired two SA-7 missiles that narrowly missed an Israeli passenger jet after it took off from Mombasa, Kenya. Officials concluded that al Qaeda probably was behind the attack, which coincided with a bomb blast at a nearby hotel.
It's estimated that it would cost about $1 million per plane to install anti-missile systems. There are about 6,800 planes in the U.S. commercial fleet.
Airlines say the government should pay all costs for installing the devices.
By Leslie Miller
BAE Systems, Northrup Grumman and United Airlines will receive $2 million each over six months to determine whether existing military technology can be used to counter the terrorist threat, said Charles McQueary, the Homeland Security Department's undersecretary for science and technology.
Existing defenses, such as infrared jammers that redirect heat-seeking rockets away from aircraft engines, already are used on military planes and Air Force One.
The companies, chosen from among 24 that sought the contracts, will develop and test prototypes and the government then will decide whether to choose one or more to more fully develop.
The Bush administration has been criticized by some lawmakers who say it has not taken the missile threat seriously enough. Hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of Soviet-style SA-7s — heat-seeking rockets that can hit low-flying aircraft within a range of three miles — are said to be available on the worldwide arms market.
Concerns about terrorists using lightweight rocket launchers to take down commercial airliners increased in November 2002 when terrorists fired two SA-7 missiles that narrowly missed an Israeli passenger jet after it took off from Mombasa, Kenya. Officials concluded that al Qaeda probably was behind the attack, which coincided with a bomb blast at a nearby hotel.
It's estimated that it would cost about $1 million per plane to install anti-missile systems. There are about 6,800 planes in the U.S. commercial fleet.
Airlines say the government should pay all costs for installing the devices.
By Leslie Miller
Latest Now in National
- Coroner in Ohio changes ruling in 1972 death
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- Ill. Sen. Mark Kirk moved to stroke rehab center
- Comedian's BYU black history video goes viral
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Fight breaks out at a funeral in Phoenix
- Mom who threw tot in NY river can go home to India
- Schoolgirls excluded from Dallas movie screening
- Woman pleads guilty in NY newborn kidnap case
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Dad of NYC subway bomb plotter gets 4 ½ years
- Dispatcher on Powell call: Case a 'nightmare'
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Serial killer's tip leads to remains of 2nd body
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Socialist leader urges vote for austerity measures
- Lawyer: 6 Austrians were injected with malaria
- Doctors telling more adults: Get out and exercise
- Doctors telling more adults: Get out and exercise
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Beyonce and Jay-Z post first photos of Blue Ivy Carter
- Timothy Dolan: Birth control tweak a "first step"
on CBS News






