Every Type Of Missile Interception Explained

This video presents a structured breakdown of how missiles are intercepted, explaining the full chain of detection, tracking, decision-making, launch, guidance, and destruction used in modern missile defense systems. From early warning satellites and long-range radar to fire control radar, discrimination systems, command and control networks, fire control systems, interceptor launch platforms, interceptor missile types, high-altitude area defense, short-range point defense, hit-to-kill technology, proximity detonation, and missile defense failures — each layer is explained by its role, strength, weakness, and operational purpose. You’ll learn how early warning satellites detect missile launches by spotting infrared heat signatures, how long-range radar builds a precise trajectory, how fire control radar locks onto the incoming threat, and how discrimination systems separate real warheads from decoys and debris. The video also explains how command and control systems decide whether to launch an interceptor, how fire control systems calculate the firing solution, and how interceptor platforms — from fixed silos and mobile launchers to naval vessels — position themselves to stop incoming missile threats before impact. You’ll also see how different interceptor types work at different stages of flight, why high-altitude systems like THAAD and Arrow-3 protect wide regions, and why short-range point defense systems like Iron Dome and IRIS-T become the final layer when every other defense has failed. The breakdown also compares hit-to-kill interception with proximity detonation, showing why some systems destroy missiles through direct collision while others rely on blast fragmentation. Finally, the video explores the limits of missile defense — including decoys, saturation attacks, hypersonic glide vehicles, multiple warheads, and the reality that no defense system can stop everything. Examples from the United States, Israel, Russia, China, Germany, Romania, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Japan, and Ukraine are used throughout the video to show how missile interception works in real strategic and battlefield environments. The full video follows a clear grid-based format, comparing how each missile defense layer differs in function, range, timing, vulnerability, and battlefield role. In modern warfare, missile interception is not one system firing one missile. It is a full defensive chain — and if any link fails, the missile may still get through. #MissileDefense #MissileInterception #MilitaryTechnology #AirDefense #THAAD #IronDome #PatriotMissile #Aegis #BallisticMissileDefense #HypersonicMissiles #RadarSystems #EarlyWarningSatellites #ModernWarfare #DefenseTechnology #KrisisLogs 🔎 Visual Use, Copyright & Attribution Notice This video includes modern military footage, publicly available defence imagery, open-source intelligence references, Creative Commons–licensed material, technical diagrams, licensed stock elements, AI-assisted reconstructions, and original visual edits. All visuals are used for educational, analytical, and informational purposes. Fair Use / Educational Context Visual material appears only to support factual explanation, structural comparison, and technical context alongside original narration. The presentation is transformative and does not replace or replicate any original source material. General Attribution Missile defense systems, interceptor platforms, radar systems, early warning networks, fire control systems, command networks, countermeasure examples, and technical references are based on publicly available defence documentation, manufacturer disclosures, open-source intelligence, and recognized military analysis sources. Symbols, Markings & Insignia All national markings and military insignia appear strictly for identification and technical accuracy. No endorsement, affiliation, or political implication is intended. Accuracy Notice Every effort has been made to ensure factual and technical accuracy. Minor inaccuracies may occur. Verified corrections and clarifications are welcome. Credit or Attribution Requests 📩 Email: [email protected] Please include the video link, timestamp, and proof of ownership. Reuse Policy Unauthorised re-uploads, compilations, or derivative works are not permitted without prior written permission from Krisis Logs. © 2026 Krisis Logs. All rights reserved.