No Radiation Threat From THAAD: Korean Media Learns

  • Our Bureau
  • 04:00 PM, July 18, 2016
  • 3600
No Radiation Threat From THAAD: Korean Media Learns
A US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile is launched during a test

The South Korean media along with officials from Seoul’s Defense Ministry and US military visited the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery stationed in Guam to examine the amount of electronmagnetic radiation, the noise level of emergency generators and other possible impacts on the surrounding environment.

South Korea struggles to defuse concerns over the possible health and environmental impact of the system’s planned deployment here.

They were scheduled to look around the battery, its associated AN/TPY-2 X-band radar and other facilities, examining the battery, Korea Herald reported Monday.

The unprecedented trip came as rumors have been snowballing that the equipment may cause cancer, infertility and crop damage, since the allies unveiled their decision to deploy it on July 8 and picked Seongju, North Gyeongsang Province, as the location last Wednesday. The county residents expressed staunch opposition, calling for the plan to be shelved.

During a demonstration, electromagnetic radiation measured 1.6 kilometers away from the radar peaked at 0.0007 and averaged at 0.0003 watts per square meter over a period of six minutes. The distance is similar to that between the proposed location and closest village in Seongju.

The figures are far lower than the 10-watt-per-square-meter limit preserved in local and international guidelines, which indicate that exposure to greater levels could result in body-heat stress and excessive partial tissue heating, officials were quoted as saying by the news daily.

Due to noise from the generator, most conversations could not be heard when approaching the radar. But the noise faded away once arriving at a launch pad some 500 meters away.

“In terms of (electromagnetic) waves, the peak value is a level that can occur in everyday life,” a Seoul military official said.

Introduced in April 2013, the Site Armadillo in Guam is deemed vital to counter North Korea’s missile threats highlighted by its recent successful test of the Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missile, which puts the Pacific island within reach.

The lieutenant colonel-led mission manages of about 200 troops, six truck mounted launchers, a radar and related support installations.

Despite “operational security concerns,” the U.S. had decided to unlock the facility in the face of increasingly stiff public resistance.

But Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Robert Hedelund, the assistant chief of staff for strategy, plans, and policy at the US Forces Korea who accompanied the delegation as a co-chair of a joint working group on the THAAD stationing, warned against “drawing too many conclusions” from the tour.

Every deployment solution is “different and unique” he said, pointing to the difference between Guam and the Korean Peninsula.

He also vowed to prevent any environmental and health effect around Seongju by applying safety rules of the Guam base, which he said are higher than US government standards.

In Guam, for instance, the battery was put in place after clearing about 144,500 square meters of jungle in the north. In Seongju, the radar is expected to be positioned nearly 400 meters above sea level.

Yet even though the Guam radar has proven it is harmless for now, the focal point would be how to manage to convince Seongju citizens and politicians who are against the plan.

In a fresh bid to quell the residents’ opposition, the military is seeking to arrange another tour for them to Guam.

Seongju County Gov. Kim Hang-gon has recently demanded a field inspection with a team of villagers and experts. During a meeting with senior journalists based in Daegu and North Gyeongsang regions later in the day, Defense Minister Han Min-koo said he will consult with the U.S. on the trip if the residents want, while pledging to continue dialogue with them to tackle their concerns. 

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