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Latest Story Antimissile System Slated To Grow by $2.2 Billion The Clinton administration plans to ask Congress for an additional $2.2 billion over the next five years to build a system for guarding the United States against ballistic missile attack, a jump of about 20 percent over the $10.5 billion price tag projected only a year ago, defense officials said yesterday. Related Stories November 14, 1999 Pentagon's Antimissile Program Needs Defense The Washington Post October 04, 1999 Anti-Missile Test Marks a Measured Step : Interceptor's Reliability Still in Question The Washington Post October 03, 1999 Missile Defense Plan Scores a Direct Hit The Washington Post September 08, 1999 Quick ABM Overhaul Rejected by Clinton The Washington Post August 20, 1999 Pentagon Gives Missiles a Boost The Washington Post August 03, 1999 Anti-Ballistic Missile Has 2nd Hit : After Failures, Pentagon Elated at Intercepting Target in Space The Washington Post April 18, 1999 Quality Concerns Plague Army Antimissile System The Washington Post March 30, 1999 Antimissile System Misses Again, Clouding Larger Plans The Washington Post March 16, 1999 Army Hit in New Mexico Test Said to Bode Well for Missile Defense The Washington Post March 22, 1998 Panel Fires at Antimissile Programs The Washington Post March 10, 1999 Sea-Based Missile Defense Promoted The Washington Post ©2000 The Washington Post
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