The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) is the section of the United States government's Department of Defense responsible for developing a layered defense against ballistic missiles. See National Missile Defense for the history of DoD missile defense programs.
MDA divides its systems into 3 categories, boost phase, mid-course phase and terminal phase, each corresponding to a different phase of the threat ballistic missile flight regime. Each phase offers different advantages and disadvantages to a missile defense system (see missile defense classified by trajectory phase), thus the layered defense approach concept should improve overall defense effectiveness.
One can distinguish disabling the warheads and just disabling the boosting capability. The latter has the risk of "shortfall": damage in countries between the launch site and the target location.
See also APS report.
An important aspect for this phase is distinguishing between actual warhead(s) and decoys.
Missile defence | United States Department of Defense agencies
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"Missile Defense Agency".
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