Are you sure? - I thought the interceptor missiles used an explosive detonation to scatter shrapnel rather then a 'bullet', myself.
Some do, some don't. It depends on the generation and designers. I'm not sure which the currently in-service landbased version(s) do, but the SM-2 ER Block IV LEAP that the Navy designed uses an explosive.
I'm fairly certain that the latest generation Russian missles can easily evade the US' non-working missle-defense shield, so stationing it in Poland and the Czech Republic is....well, I don't know exactly what it is. Trying to piss of the Russians? Trying to waste large amounts of taxpayer money? Those are the only possible explanations.
Actually, your misappreciation is rather amusing. It works. Quite well. Well, some of it. The Air Force proved amusingly incompetent with their part of the project, but they seem to have a reasonable amount of their **** together by this point.
But anyways, placing the interceptors in Poland and the Czech Republic actually makes them much more effective, because they can engage any missile launched from Russia (towards Europe anyways) while it is still in its boost phase of flight. They're much slower and more vunerable while taking off.
Actually it's rather decent of the US to move some of the shield there, because it really doesn't offer any protection to the United States. Any missiles launched from Russia at the US would go over the pole. The only people who benefit from having the shield in that part of the world are members of the EU or NATO.
In theory, yeah. And I would be pissed too, if I thought it had any chance of working. But almost any country that is likely to have long-range missles in the first place is likely going to have missles which can fly circles around the missle-defense systems.
ICBMs don't dodge, son. At most you have some dummy warheads on your MIRV. Much of the point of the interceptor program was to get it before it deploys the MIRV, so you're basically ****ed.