US missile defence test fails in Hawaii
A test of a US missile interceptor failed in Hawaii on Wednesday, a defense official said, marking the second such unsuccessful attempt in less than a year.
The test using the Aegis Ashore system occurred at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on the island of Kauai, Missile Defense Agency spokesman Mark Wright said in a statement.
Wright said the test was of an SM-3 Block IIA missile, made by arms giant Raytheon and designed to intercept intermediate-range ballistic missiles.
A defense official told AFP the test was a failure and investigators have opened a probe.
Wednesday's failure comes after another unsuccessful test in June of the missile, which is being jointly developed by the United States and Japan.
A test firing in February 2017 was successful. According to the MDA, America has so far spent about $2.2 billion on the system and Japan about $1 billion.
The failure comes amid heighted tensions over North Korea's ballistic missile program.
Hawaii is on edge after its Emergency Management Agency triggered mass panic with a false alert of a ballistic missile headed for the Pacific islands.
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