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SOLUTIONS/KIMBALL:
What should Obama do about missile defense?
Daryl G. Kimball
Washington Times
Sunday, November 30, 2008
President Obama will have to quickly make many
tough foreign policy judgment calls. Among the most important is
whether to proceed with the Bush administration's crash effort to
install untested anti-missile interceptors in Poland by 2011 to
deal with an as yet nonexistent Iranian long-range missile threat.
The choice should be easy. A decision on new deployments
of strategic missile interceptors can be deferred until the system
is proven effective through realistic tests and has the full support
of U.S. allies.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration should engage
in serious talks with Russia's leaders to explore alternatives or,
at a minimum, achieve a mutual understanding on the eventual size
and capability of U.S. strategic missile defenses. The two sides
also should launch a joint diplomatic strategy to curb global missile
proliferation.
A more balanced, nonideological approach to U.S.
missile defense policy is long overdue. For more than a decade,
proponents of missile defense have hyped the threat of long-range
missiles from the likes of Iran and North Korea and pushed for anti-missile
systems that are not ready for prime time.
President Bush bought their arguments. Over Russian
objections, he abrogated the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002,
arguing that it was constraining U.S. missile defense research.
Since then, the Bush administration has poured nearly $60 billion
into the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency (MDA) and freed MDA from
normal procurement standards and congressional oversight.
The result: MDA rushed a handful of experimental
missiles into the ground ahead of the 2004 election. Their numbers
have grown to about two dozen today, but their capability has advanced
little. The interceptors since 1999 have only scored seven hits
against targets in 12 highly scripted tests; only two of those successes
have occurred since the initial deployment.
In 2007, the Bush administration announced plans
to install 10 modified versions of those interceptors in Poland
and a battle-management radar in the Czech Republic to counter possible
Iranian missiles. Basing agreements were signed in 2008, but they
must still be approved by Czech and Polish legislators.
Mr. Bush and his team maintain the driving threat
is Iran and that 10 missile interceptors are no threat to Russia's
expansive nuclear forces. Russia, however, remains unconvinced.
Russia's ambassador to the United States, Sergey
Kislyak, told Arms Control Today magazine earlier this month that
"there are several strategic defensive bases of Russia in the
European part of Russia that will be within range of this system,
[and] most probably, it is not the last deployment in the region."
An open-ended deployment of U.S. missile interceptors
would not only lead Russia to militarily target Poland and the Czech
Republic. It also would seriously impede U.S. work with Russia on
a range of vital issues, including negotiating new verifiable strategic
nuclear reductions, securing nuclear materials and curbing Iran´s
nuclear program. Without nuclear payloads, Iran's long-range missiles,
which U.S. intelligence predicts will not be developed until at
least 2015, would be essentially impotent.
Mr. Obama has pragmatically pledged that as president
he "will make sure any missile defense, including the one proposed
for Europe, has been proven to work and has our allies' support
before we deploy it." It simply doesn't.
The modified interceptor for Poland is unbuilt
and untested. Planned testing for the system likely will take a
few years to complete. Regardless, the Pentagon's Office of Operational
Test and Evaluation concluded in February that testing of the U.S.
system that the European deployment is based on "is not sufficient
to provide a high level of statistical confidence in its limited
capability."
Even if the performance of U.S. defenses can be
improved, a future adversary could use inexpensive countermeasures
to confuse or overwhelm them. In other words, they can't be counted
on in a shooting war. What can be counted on, however, is that U.S.
conventional and nuclear arms will still provide a strong deterrent
to any foolhardy nuclear-armed aggression.
Although the leaders of NATO's 26 members stated
in May they recognize "the substantial contribution that the
current U.S. proposal could make in protecting against long-range
missiles," many are skeptical and have not embraced it.
Earlier this month, French President Nicholas
Sarkozy was downright dismissive.
"Deployment of a missile defense system would
bring nothing to security in Europe," Mr. Sarkozy said. "It
would complicate things, and would make them [Russia] move backward."
[I don't know if Mr. Sarkozy is saying that Russia would move backward.
I think he is referring to general relations.]
The Obama administration should make clear that
it will look anew with Russia at missile defense in Europe. The
new defense secretary should also reconsider other options to counter
Iran's missiles that the MDA has passed over. These include more
flexible and increasingly capable ship-based missile defense systems
that are less worrisome to Moscow.
The president should also work with Congress to
rein in and redirect MDA spending. The focus should be on more mature
anti-missile systems designed to deal with short- and medium-range
missile threats, which are more numerous and present a more immediate
threat. Even these systems must be pursued with caution to avoid
destabilizing defensive-versus-offensive missile races.
After decades of spending, ambitious timetables
and overstated threat warnings, it is past time to restore reason
to missile defense policy beginning with a nondecision decision
on a new anti-missile site on Russia's border that is unnecessary
and imprudent.
• Daryl G. Kimball is the executive director
of the Arms Control Association, which publishes the monthly journal
Arms Control Today. |