Time for America to invest in domestic defense systems that protect the whole of the United States, not just parts of it. Fanatical regime in North Korea, apocalyptic government of Iran
A missile defense system for the eastern seaboard that was dropped from the final version of the 2013 Defense Authorization Act is getting a second look, in light of North Korea's escalating threats. Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) characterized that threat as a "wake up call," noting that "the next issue that needs to be taken up right away is [a] missile defense site to protect the East Coast of this country."
It would appear to be a logical argument in light of the administration's recent move to shift $1 billion in defense spending from developing a missile shield for Poland and Bulgaria, to adding 14 land-based interceptors in Alaska. The move would expand to 44 the number of long-range ballistic missile interceptors that comprise part of the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system.