As the LA Times notes, though, the confident tone belies a slew of problems over GMD's long history. The system went live in 2004, but the kill vehicles often couldn't hit their targets even in clearly staged exercises where they were supposed to win. GMD was rushed into service without the usual quality safeguards, and the kill vehicles are both unique and highly complex. If one of them breaks or needs an update, there's often painstaking work involved.

Still, the timing couldn't have been much better. The government is increasingly worried about North Korea's missile program, you see. While an attack isn't exactly imminent (many of the North's test missiles are either off-target or fail to launch), a successful anti-ICBM test shows that the US can act if its enemy is reckless enough to attempt a real missile strike. GMD may have already accomplished its mission if North Korea and other countries start having second thoughts.