Denmark halted site visitors in a busy transport lane and closed the airspace above it on Thursday, warning of a attainable unintentional missile launch and falling particles.
During a check of a Harpoon anti-ship missile, its booster — the rocket engine that launches the missile — was “activated” however not ignited, after which it couldn’t be deactivated, the Danish army stated.
“Until the booster is disabled, there’s a threat that the missile might launch and fly a number of kilometers,” it stated in a press release.
Denmark’s Maritime Authority warned that there was a threat of missile fragments falling close to the transport lane, referred to as the Great Belt.
The army stated that solely the booster was activated, not the engine that takes over after launch, and never the warhead, so the missile couldn’t journey far and the warhead couldn’t detonate.
The mishap got here only a day after the Danish authorities fired its chief of protection, the highest-ranking uniformed army officer, Gen. Flemming Lentfer, after a report of weapons methods failing on a ship that was participating within the U.S.-led effort to protect transport close to the coast of Yemen.
The missile check on Thursday was carried out aboard a frigate, the Niels Juel, within the port of Korsør, which sits beside the Great Belt.
The Great Belt is the strait between Denmark’s two largest islands, Zealand and Funen, and is a part of the primary transport route between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. Annually, tens of hundreds of vessels of all sizes and kinds cross by means of it, transporting cargo and folks, based on DanPilot, the nation’s pilot service. The strait has dense site visitors and robust currents.
“From these I’ve spoken to within the Navy, they’re taking it very calmly,” stated Søren Nørby, an assistant professor on the Norwegian Defense Academy. “They will not be evacuating Korsør city or something. If it goes off, there may be about 52 kilograms of steel object flying and falling down.”
It may do some harm, he stated, “however there’s nothing about to blow up.”