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The Pentagon admitted Friday that it used simpler decoys in recent flight tests of an anti-missile interceptor, bu
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stanley cup onest manipulation to hide a fatal flaw. The first two interceptor flight tests, in 1997 and 1998, used more complex and challenging decoys because the Pentagon was testing competing designs of interceptors built by Boeing Co. and Raytheon Co
stanley cups rp., said Air Force Lt. Col. Rick Lehner, spokesman for the Pentagon s Ballistic Missile Defense Organization. He said the intent was to stress the interceptors sensors as part of choosing the superior design. CBS ReportsCBS News Correspondent David Martin looks at problems the intercepter had distinguishing missiles from decoys.Starting with test flight No. 3, last October, simpler and fewer decoys were used, because that marked the start of testing with the winning design, by Raytheon, and the plan has been gradually to increase the level of difficulty.The October test hit the mock warhead, but the interceptor missed its target in the most recent test, in January. The next test is scheduled for early July, and more than a dozen others are planned. Decoys are used in the testing because it is anticipated that any hostile nation that would fire a long-range ballistic missile at the United States would try to confuse the interceptor with false targets during the missile s flight. Friday s New York Times quoted Theodore Postol, an arms expert at the Massa Cwww Hundreds Of Irish Catholic Priests To Be Implicated In Child Abuse Report
A strange, newly discovered particle could shrink a laptop computer hard drive to the size of a peanut and an iPod drive to the size of a rice grain. The particle, called a skyrmion, is more
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