Ever see that thing in Pearl Harbor that looks like a giant floating golf ball?

It’s technically a Sea-Based X-Band Radar designed to find missiles far away and send rockets to blow聽them up before they hit American soil.

But a calls the military project聽a “$2.2 billion flop.”

“Although it can powerfully magnify distant objects, its field of vision is so narrow that it would be of little use against what experts consider the likeliest attack: a stream of missiles interspersed with decoys,” the newspaper reported Sunday.

060109-N-9643K-102<br /><br />
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (Jan. 9, 2006) - A fisherman watches as the heavy lift vessel MV Blue Marlin enters Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, with the Sea Based X-Band Radar (SBX) aboard after completing a 15,000-mile journey from Corpus Christi, Texas. SBX is a combination of the world脮s largest phased array X-band radar carried aboard a mobile, ocean-going semi-submersible oil platform. It will provide the nation with highly advanced ballistic missile detection and will be able to discriminate a hostile warhead from decoys and countermeasures. SBX will undergo minor modifications, post-transit maintenance and routine inspections in Pearl Harbor before completing its voyage to its homeport of Adak, Alaska in the Aleutian Islands. U.S. Navy photo by Chief Journalist Joe Kane (RELEASED)

A fisherman watches as the heavy lift vessel MV Blue Marlin enters Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, with the Sea Based X-Band Radar (SBX) aboard after completing a 15,000-mile journey from Corpus Christi, Texas.

Marion Doss/U.S. Navy

“SBX was supposed to be operational by 2005. Instead, it spends most of the year mothballed at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii,” the story says.

“The project not only wasted taxpayer money but left a hole in the nation鈥檚 defenses. The money spent on it could have gone toward land-based radars with a greater capability to track long-range missiles, according to experts who have studied the issue.”

Read the full report .

SBX sunset

Sea-Based X-Band Radar at Pearl Harbor.

Rafael Matsunaga/Flickr

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