Through the work of the inspectors at Votkinsk, as well as several related inspections where U.S. experts were able to view the SS-25 missile system in its operating bases in Siberia, a great deal of data was collected that assisted the U.S. intelligence community in refining its understanding of how the SS-25 operated. This understanding was translated into several countermissile strategies, including aerial interdiction operations and missile-defense concepts.
The abysmal performance of American counter-SCUD operations during the Gulf War in 1991 highlighted the deficiencies of the U.S. military regarding the aerial interdiction of road-mobile missiles. Iraqi Al-Hussein mobile missiles were virtually impossible to detect and interdict, even with total American air supremacy. Despite all the effort put into counter-SCUD operations during that war, not a single Iraqi mobile missile launcher was destroyed by hostile fire, a fact I can certify not only as a participant in the counter-SCUD effort, but also as a chief inspector in Iraq, where I led the United Nations investigations into the Iraqi missile program.
The rapid collapse of the Soviet Union did not leave much time for reflection on the American counter-mobile missile launcher deficiencies. In mid-1993, the Department of Defense conducted a comprehensive review to select the strategy and force structure for the post-cold war era. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the threat to the U.S. from a deliberate or accidental ballistic missile attack by former Soviet states or by China was judged highly unlikely. In Votkinsk, U.S. inspectors observed a Soviet-era defense industry in decline. SS-25 missiles were produced at a greatly reduced rate, and the next generation missile, a joint Russian-Ukrainian design, was scrapped after a few prototypes were produced, but never launched.
After the resounding Republican victory in the midterm 1994 congressional elections, a new program for missile defense was proposed covering three distinct "threat" capabilities ranging from "unsophisticated threats" (an attack of five single-warhead missiles with simple decoys), to highly sophisticated threats (an attack of 20 single-warhead SS-25 type missiles, each with decoys or other defensive countermeasures). Funding for this program ran to some $10.8 billion from 1993 to 2000.
When President Bush came to power in 2001, there was a dramatic change in posture regarding ballistic missile defense. The administration announced it was withdrawing from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, clearing away development and operational constraints. At the same time, the administration laid out a comprehensive plan that envisioned a layered missile-defense system. After studying the SS-25 missile for years, the U.S. military believed it finally had a solution in the form of a multitiered antiballistic missile system that focused on boost-phase intercept (firing antimissile missiles that would home in on an ICBM shortly after launch), space-based laser systems designed to knock out a missile in flight, and terminal missile intercept systems, which would destroy a missile as it reentered the earth's atmosphere.
The NMD system being fielded to counter the SS-25, and any similar or less sophisticated threats that may emerge from China, Iran, North Korea, and elsewhere, will probably have cumulative costs between $800 billion and $1.2 trillion by the time it reaches completion in 2015.
However, the Bush administration's dream of a viable NMD has been rendered fantasy by the Russian test of the SS-27 Topol-M. According to the Russians, the Topol-M has high-speed solid-fuel boosters that rapidly lift the missile into the atmosphere, making boost-phase interception impossible unless one is located practically next door to the launcher. The SS-27 has been hardened against laser weapons and has a highly maneuverable post-boost vehicle that can defeat any intercept capability as it dispenses up to three warheads and four sophisticated decoys.
To counter the SS-27 threat, the U.S. will need to start from scratch. And even if a viable defense could be mustered, by that time the Russians may have fielded an even more sophisticated missile, remaining one step ahead of any US countermeasures. The U.S. cannot afford to spend billions of dollars on a missile-defense system that will never achieve the level of defense envisioned. The Bush administration's embrace of technology, and rejection of diplomacy, when it comes to arms control has failed.
If America continues down the current path of trying to field a viable missile-defense system, significant cuts will need to be made in other areas of the defense budget, or funds reallocated from other nonmilitary spending programs. With America already engaged in a costly war in Iraq, and with the possibility of additional conflict with Iran, Syria, or North Korea looming on the horizon, funding a missile-defense system that not only does not work as designed, but even if it did, would not be capable of defending America from threats such as the Topol-M missile, makes no sense.
The Bush administration would do well to reconsider its commitment to a national missile-defense system, and instead reengage in the kind of treaty-based diplomacy that in the past produced arms control results that were both real and lasting. This would not only save billions, it would make America, and the world, a safer place.
Scott Ritter is a former intelligence officer and weapons inspector in the Soviet Union (1988-1990) and Iraq (1991-1998). He is author of 'Frontier Justice: Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Bushwhacking of America.'
http://www.thenewstribune.com/24hour/opinions/story/1967790p-9983753c.html
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Canadians are asking, why do americans hate us? They hate our freedoms: our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to disagree with each other.
He's saying that because the Russians might have a workable highly advanced missile - the US should just forget about defending itself from any threat at all - that is an interesting conclusion. Foolish, but interesting.
Anti-defense zealots should live in countries like Iran and North Korea if they loathe North America and its inhabitants so much.
Actually, you are trying to play the "If you don't love it, leave it" card -- but that only works in the most mindless of places. Mindlessness is a disservice to your nation. Careful use of national finances, however, can go a hell of a lot further in defending your national security than giving money hand over fist to Lockheed-Martin or Dick Cheney's Haliburton.
If the BMD (Big Money Drain) can't work, why waste so much money on it? The Americans have committed BILLIONS to this foolish and unnecessary project at the exact moment when they are giving less money in aid to Tsunami victims than Australia! A country of 17 million! That's smaller than NYC!
If America can't afford to help pull the world out of tragedy, it is precisely because it is wasting so much money in nepotistic contracts. Mindlessness (which means, using propagandistic slogans instead of thoughts) hurts your American country Monsieur Troll.
There is an alternative between mindlessness and Iran. Didn't your mother troll ever teach the world's a complicated place? And sometimes aphorisms (go look it up) just don't help solve complicated problems.
G
Funny that you'd hear elitism (another RWA cliche) when in fact you should have noted the accusation of elitism and waste against those leaders who willingly spend (y)our money on businesses run by their friends. Or, in Dick Cheney's case, in businesses run by himself!
So how does mindless patriotism (as in don't question the Pres) help the people in pickups at Walmart? It doesn't. It wastes their money. It makes them unsafe.
Why do you want your money wasted? When so many in the world are suffering, how can they justify needless waste? How can they justify needless weapons of mass destruction? Why aren't you asking them yourself?
G
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Why is the cost justified (I'm talking about actual return on investment, not some vague notion of "defending america") when little, if anything, has been proven with regards to its effectiveness? <br />
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Even if current technology can work, for how long can it remain effective before obsolesence renders the system inadequate (this is critical because missile technology always evolves first and faster than any defensive system)? <br />
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What will it cost to keep this system operational (in comparison, "Operation and maintenance costs of the ICBM force, including procurement of minor missile-related items, is estimated at $5.7 billion through the life of the current force (until 2020), according to the proposed 1997 budget. Pentagon spending on more major upgrades and replacement programs adds up to approximately $10 billion. This does not count procurement of such systems as a new RV (Reentry Vehicle), or the new strategic command, control, and communications equipment." Source: <a href="http://www.thebulletin.org/article_nn.php?art_ofn=ja96norris">http://www.thebulletin.org/article_nn.php?art_ofn=ja96norris</a> ) <br />
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Last, but not least, how is this in the interests of Canada (again, I'm not referring to some baseless notion "binational cooperation")? <br />
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As you can see, it is perfectly understandable that someone, I assume, wonders these same questions would refer to something like, "Anti-defense zealots should live in countries like Iran and North Korea if they loathe North America and its inhabitants so much.", as being mindless (Although, I disagree with gorgian in this regard. What anon clearly demonstrates here is simple-mindedness.)
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Since I'm going to have to spell it out, the problem is that bush rescinded a PROVEN and SUCCESSFUL approach to the defense of the planet (and the US) against the threat of ballistic missiles, in the form of the ABM Treaty. He did this so that the US could jump head-first into the BMD boondoggle (which will not result in anything else but some hefty amount of corporate welfare to the US defense contractors, or so I hope). <br />
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<a href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/VAL206A.html">http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/VAL206A.html</a>
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Dave Ruston
On the subject touched on above, of aid spending.... 350 million dollars (not enough but)... Will Indonesia or any of the affected MUSLIM countries be seen as a "threat" to america? Not likely, not in our lifetime. How many Billions spent destroying Iraq? Will Iraq ever be seen as a friend of America? Not really, maybe the puppet regime installed but not the people. All that's going on there is the breeding of terrorism throughout the Middle East... long term terrorism. My point is, it is a lot cheaper to make friends than enemies and america AND the WORLD would be much more secure.
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Canada for Canadians
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<a href="http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0912-02.htm">http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0912-02.htm</a> <br />
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<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/2691013.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/2691013.stm</a> <br />
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<a href="http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/ritter-nuke.htm">http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/ritter-nuke.htm</a> <br />
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That last link indicates he has never been charged with anything. <br />
<p>---<br>"If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill <br />
America turned those two countries around almost single-handedly. Let's hope America can make at least one Arabic/Islamic country into a contributor to peace and prosperity in the world as well.
Unfortunately, it would be the only Arab/Islamic country that contributes to world peace, but that's a start.