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National Missile Defense
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The Clinton administration is bound by law to
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decide by mid-2000 whether or not to begin deployment of a limited defense
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against long-range missiles. What is the history of missile defense? Could a
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missile system protect the United States? Which nations pose the greatest
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threat to this country? And what are the diplomatic repercussions of building
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such a system?
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In 1967, the Johnson administration proposed the
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"Sentinel" missile defense network to defend against Chinese missile attack.
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Two years later, President Richard Nixon touted an even more limited
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"Safeguard" system to defend the United States' missile silos. As permitted by
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the ABM Treaty inked with Moscow in 1972, the Ford administration unveiled an
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$8 billion, 100-missile site in North Dakota in 1975. That site was closed only
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a few months later as a waste of money. China, meanwhile, did not produce a
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missile that could hit North America until 1979.
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President Ronald Reagan's 1983 "Star Wars" speech
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resurrected the missile defense debate. Ten years and $27 billion later nothing
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had been built. Instead, President George Bush started plumping for a $72
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billion space-based "Brilliant Pebbles" defense system. Its mission was to
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knock out 200 missiles carrying Russian warheads fired by accident or Chinese
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weapons fired by hubris.
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The technology wasn't
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there for Brilliant Pebbles, and in 1993 the Clinton administration announced
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the "end of the Star Wars era." Missile defense spending puttered along in
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research mode until July 1998 when a U.S. study warned of the potential for
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missile mayhem by such "rogue nations" as Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. A month
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later, North Korea fired a three-stage rocket over Japan. The rocket failed to
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orbit its satellite but demonstrated Pyongyang's unsuspected ballistic prowess.
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Then, last July, the GOP Congress maneuvered Clinton into signing a law
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pledging action as soon as possible--which means building a running missile
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defense system by 2005.
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Current plans envision spending $10.5 billion through 2005
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to deploy perhaps 20 high-speed interceptor missiles in Alaska that could deal
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only with a handful of incoming warheads. U.S. radars around the world would be
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upgraded to service this site, which could eventually be bolstered by other
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ground-, ship-, and aircraft-based anti-missile weapons.
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Strategically, few dispute the merits of perfecting
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"theater" defenses, such as the upgraded Patriot missile to swat down
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low-flying shorter-range missiles on overseas battlefields, but the genuine
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operational need for a missile defense system for the U.S. homeland remains a
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much-gnawed bone of contention.
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Over $100 billion in
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current dollars has been spent on missile defense since the early '60s, but the
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task of hitting a hypersonic bullet with a bullet remains a ticklish one. Even
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if the feat could be pulled off under laboratory conditions, real-world
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attackers would load their missiles with decoy warheads to foil or complicate
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interdiction. Critics insist that relatively cheap countermeasures will always
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trump costly missile defenses.
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After numerous highly publicized failures, the Pentagon
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this year successfully tested both its medium-range Theater High-Altitude Area
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Defense anti-missile and a prototype of the long-range, high-speed Ground-Based
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Interceptor slated for the Alaska site. But only four of 19 planned interceptor
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tests will be completed by the time Clinton must make his go or no-go decision
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to deploy next year. An independent study funded by the Pentagon warned in
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mid-November that hasty deployment of the system could undermine its eventual
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success.
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In a recently
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declassified estimate, the CIA projected that over the next 15 years the United
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States will face missile threats from "Russia, China and North Korea, probably
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from Iran, and possibly from Iraq." Russia today is struggling to maintain some
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4,500 warheads mounted on about 1,000 missiles. Washington has long abandoned
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thoughts of defending against a full Russian onslaught--even a launch
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unauthorized by Moscow would easily swamp the proposed U.S. defenses. In any
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event, the CIA terms an accidental Russian firing "highly unlikely so long as
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current technical and procedural safeguards are in place."
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China today boasts some 20 missiles that could hit the
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United States and is working to supplement that force with more survivable,
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mobile launchers. China could never trump the warhead blizzard Washington would
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send in retaliation against any atomic attack, though the country would be
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loath to cede to U.S. missile defenses the deterrence afforded by its handfuls
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of warheads. Beijing's opposition seems to be driven more by apprehension that
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Washington might provide theater missile defenses to Taiwan, which China views
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as a renegade province. Also the recently declassified CIA assessment assumes
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that the "rogue states" are likely to view their few ICBMs more as weapons of
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deterrence and coercive diplomacy than as weapons of war.
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The crux of the strategic
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controversy is whether an imperfect homeland defense could eliminate the
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deterrent and coercive impact of small rogue missile forces. Any nation
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determined to explode a nuclear bomb in Uncle Sam's front yard would have to be
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insane to deliver the insult by missile--it might as well affix a return
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address to the weapon before firing. Detonating a smuggled warhead in the hold
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of a ship docked in, say, New York harbor would make much more sense, while
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avoiding the huge expense and trouble of building complex intercontinental
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rockets. If this logic holds, missile defense is a job for U.S. Customs, not
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the Pentagon.
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Yet the prospect of an atomic apocalypse is so terrible
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that few can argue against spending tens of billions of dollars for insurance
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against remote possibilities. Here's where the debate enters the diplomatic
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arena. Could this anti-missile insurance policy reawaken a Cold War
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confrontation thought dead, lo, these past 10 years?
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The 1972 ABM Treaty
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permits the United States and Russia to deploy 100 interceptors to defend
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either a missile field or the national capital. (The Russians chose to guard
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Moscow with their 100 anti-missiles.) Even the initial 20 anti-missiles slated
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for Alaska would violate this pact due to their nationwide coverage. If Clinton
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blinks the green light next summer, Washington would be in breach of the treaty
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by mid-2001, if it hopes to meet the 2005 deadline.
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The State Department has asked Moscow to amend the ABM
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Treaty--which most missile defense proponents view as an outdated Cold War
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dinosaur anyway. Against the backdrop of the U.S. bombing campaign against
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Serbia, tension over the civil war in Chechnya, and Congress' failure to ratify
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a treaty banning nuclear tests, a Russian political establishment drifting
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toward intransigence seems unlikely to give the United States a free pass on
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missile defenses. The Russians might respond to a breached ABM Treaty by
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abandoning other treaties designed to further reduce the current stock of U.S.
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and Russian warheads. Thus, the construction of a limited shield against North
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Korea might spark a renewed nuclear arms race with Russia and ultimately reduce
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U.S. security.
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The missile defense debate has been as much about
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faith and ideological fervor as about logic and rational calculation. If the
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past is any guide, Clinton's National Missile Defense will probably be stymied
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by the same technical, diplomatic, and financial factors that doomed Johnson's
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Sentinel, Nixon's Safeguard, Reagan's Star Wars, and Bush's Brilliant
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Pebbles.
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