Trump claims the US is building a 'super duper missile' that is much faster than anything it has now
- In the Oval Office on Friday, President Donald Trump boasted about US military strength, revealing the development of what he calls a "super duper missile."
- Trump claimed the weapon can reach speeds 17 times faster than current missiles and that it just got the "go ahead."
- The Pentagon did not offer any clarity on what the president was talking about.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
President Donald Trump claimed during an Oval Office event Friday that the US is developing a "super duper missile" to compete against America's adversaries.
"We're building, right now, incredible military equipment at a level that nobody has ever seen before. We have no choice with the adversaries we have out there," the president said.
"We have, I call it, the 'super duper missile,'" Trump continued. "I heard the other night, 17 times faster than what they have right now, when you take the fastest missile we have right now. You've heard Russia has five times and China's working on five or six times. We have one 17 times, and it's just gotten the go-ahead."
Secretary of Defense Mark Esper nodded along as the president spoke but did not provide any details.
Asked for more information on what exactly the president was talking about, Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said: "I'm going to have to refer you back to the White House on that. I don't have any information to give you on that."
Insider contacted the White House for clarification but has not yet received a response.
Back in February, the president touted US military strength, discussing "super-fast missiles."
"We have the super-fast missiles — tremendous number of the super-fast. We call them 'super-fast,' where they're four, five, six, and even seven times faster than an ordinary missile," he said at the time.
"We need that because, again, Russia has some," he continued. "And China, as you know, is doing it."
It is unclear to what specific weapon the president may have been referring in his comments, but the US is developing hypersonic weapons, a key area of competition with Russia and China.
While the name references speed, hypersonic missiles are not deadly because of their speed, which is actually a little slower than ballistic missiles, but because they can maneuver and fly along unpredictable flight paths, giving them the ability to skirt defenses.
The US conducted a hypersonic glide vehicle test in March, verifying a design that will be used to develop weaponry expected to come online in coming years.
Read the original article on Business Insider