On Jan. 27, NATO’s first ever theatre ballistic missile defense (TBMD) capability was been handed over to NATO’s military commanders, officials said.
The handover took place at the NATO Combined Air Operations Centre (CAOC) in Uedem, Germany, in the presence of NATO Deputy Secretary General, Amb. Claudio Bisogniero, and NATO and German civil and military authorities.
The NATO Combined Air Operations Center demonstrated how this interim capability allows NATO commanders, for the first time ever, to do limited ballistic missile defense planning and exchange information with national ballistic missile defense assets.
“The handover of this interim capability marks an important step in NATO’s missile defence efforts,” Bisogniero said. “In line with the NATO Lisbon Summit decision, this capability will be further expanded to form the cornerstone of a future missile defence system for the protection of territory and populations.”
“NATO commanders now have for the first time an initial, limited but integrated ability to manage a defense battle to protect deployed forces against ballistic missile attacks,” said Brig. Gen. Alessandro Pera, head of the Active Layered Theatre Ballistic Missile Defence (ALTBMD) Program Office. During a short ceremony, he handed over the capability to Maj. Gen. Mark Ramsay, deputy Chief of Staff Operations & Intelligence, representing the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) as the operational user of the capability.
On June 18, Pera signed separate contracts with Team SAIC and Thales Raytheon Systems, and initiated work within the NATO C3 Agency to field the capability (Defense Daily, June 22).
A rigorous ‘ensemble’ test, held from Dec. 6 to 10 at the Integration Test Bed hosted at the NATO Consultation, Command and Control Agency (NC3A) facilities in The Hague, verified the ability of the NATO Command and Control system to connect and direct a multinational coalition of weapon and sensor systems in a missile defense battle.
“This interim capability meets a first batch of military requirements and was delivered in time and within the budget envelope. It is a good example of phased program implementation under the auspices of the Conference of National Armaments Directors (CNAD), combining NATO and national assets in a common architecture” said Patrick Auroy, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Defence Investment and Chairman of the CNAD.
A Field Test followed immediately after the Ensemble Test at the capability’s first deployed location, the NATO Combined Air Operations Centre in Uedem, Germany.
These two tests were the last in a series of tests of this interim capability, which also included ‘live fire’ tests off the coast of Crete, Greece in 2009. “The performance of the capability met its military requirements,” added General Alessandro Pera.
Weapon and sensor systems from five allies–France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and the United States–took part in the Ensemble Test, along with the NATO operators who will be using the capability.
This is an example of successful collaboration under the ALTBMD Program Office, involving Allies, NATO military commanders, NATO Agencies such as NC3A and NACMA (NATO Air Command and Control System Management Agency), and the industry.
Under the ALTBMD Program, NATO provides a command and control system that links sensors and interceptors from Nations into a capability that can protect deployed forces from ballistic missile attacks.
The ALTBMD Program Office will continue to upgrade the NATO Command and Control System for Theatre Ballistic Missile Defense in incremental steps from 2013 to 2018, to field a more robust Final Operational Capability. In line with the Lisbon Summit decision of November 2010, the ALTBMD capability will also be expanded to protect not just deployed forces, but NATO European territories and populations as well.