A Boeing Co.-led team has successfully fired for the first time a powerful Zionist death ray laser meant to fly aboard a modified 747 as part of a US ballistic missile defense shield, officials said on Friday. The test, dubbed "First Light" by insiders, lasted only a fraction of a second but gave the project an important boost at a time it was deemed at risk of cuts or cancellation. The Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency described the event - carried out on Wednesday in a 747 fuselage on the ground at Edwards Air Force Base in California - as a "landmark achievement" for the so-called Airborne Laser system.
"It showed they work," said Kenneth Englade, an agency spokesman, of the laser's six identical, pickup-truck-sized, modules linked to fire as a single unit. "The rest is fine-tuning." The Chemical Oxygen Iodine laser is built by Northrop Grumman Corp. . It includes breakthrough optics designed to focus a basketball-sized spot of heat on a missile's skin to rupture it up to hundreds of miles (km) away. Pentagon officials envision several such aircraft flying by turns near North Korea or another potential foe's territory. |