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U.S Missile |
Missing
USA Missile Shows Up In Cuba, What Happened? - An inactive Hellfire missile sent to Europe for
training was inadvertently shipped to Cuba, where it has remained since 2014,
sources familiar with the matter said Friday.
Hellfires
are air-to-ground missiles typically fired from helicopters. Although initially
designed as anti-tank weapons, they are often modernized and currently deployed
from drones in anti-terrorism operations.
The
missile wrongly sent to Cuba is called a Hellfire Captive Air Training Missile
(CATM), a "dummy missile" used in exercises. Sources said that it
contained an incomplete guidance section and was not fitted with a warhead,
fusing system rocket monitor or operational seeker- all components needed to
successfully hit a target.
But
while it was not operational, the missile still contained sensitive American
weapons technology, such as targeting and sensor information, that U.S.
officials said would be concerning if it fell into the hands of adversaries.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the missile's location.
"This is an issue that the administration takes very, very seriously. I think for quite obvious reasons," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Friday when asked about the issue.
The
sources said the U.S. has been trying for more than a year to get the Cuban
government to return the missile. The delay could have been complicated by the
attention paid to the historic thaw between the U.S. and Cuba last December,
followed by the restoring of ties and opening of embassies in Washington and
Havana this summer.
One
source described the training missile as "fairly common" and noted
that the U.S. just notified Congress this week of a sale of such dummy missiles
along with active Hellfires to Iraq.
"The manufacturer shipped the dummy missile to Europe for a NATO training exercise in the summer of 2014," the source said. The missile was sent to Spain for the exercise from Orlando, source said.
The
sources said the State Department, which oversees the sharing of sensitive
military technology with allies, approved a license for a temporary export.
Under the Arms Export Control Act, this licensing is needed for any exports of
such technology by U.S. companies.
During
its return from Rota, Spain, to the United States, the sources said missile was
misrouted by the cargo-shipping firm as it traveled from Madrid for its flight
back to Florida. Instead of flying from Madrid to Frankfurt, Germany, and then
back to Florida, the missile was misrouted to Paris and on to Havana.
Upon
realizing the mistake, the company notified the U.S. government about the error
as it was required to do under its export license. Sources said it is typically
the responsibility of the company that holds the license to retrieve the lost
article. The company, however, asked for help from the U.S. government because
the missile was in Cuba, with which the U.S. has only recently restored ties
and where direct flights between the U.S. and Havana do not currently operate
under an aviation agreement between the two countries.
"The shipping was routine and by the book. When they became aware of the misrouting, they notified the State Department. Since then, they have actively cooperated in (U.S. government) efforts to both review the incident and to recover the item," one of the sources said.
The
source continued, "As warranted, the department may support the U.S.
company's corrective efforts in carrying out our general mission to further
U.S. national security and foreign policy by assisting U.S. companies overseas
and ensuring compliance with the applicable laws."
David
McKeeby, a State Department spokesperson, said that by law he couldn't comment
on defense trade licensing cases and compliance issues.
But
he did say that "under the Arms Export Control Act, the Department
licenses permanent and temporary exports by U.S. companies of regulated defense
articles. U.S. companies are responsible for documenting their proposed
shipping logistics in the export license as well as reporting any shipping
deviations to the Department as appropriate.
The
sources said the Department of Homeland Security is investigating to make sure
the missile was not intentionally sent off course as part of an espionage or
criminal operation, rather than just an accidental misrouting of the shipment.
The Department of Justice, however, has the lead in the investigation.
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