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Saturday, April 05, 2008

The Real Obstacle to Missile Defense in Europe

It's no secret that the Democratic Party is openly opposed to missile defense. So, when NATO leaders endorsed a defensive shield for Europe earlier this week, it put the party (and its presidential candidates) in a difficult position.

Wary of criticizing alliance leaders--who would be their partners if they win the fall election--both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have adopted a slightly different tack in criticizing NATO's missile defense stance. While welcoming progress on the issue, Obama and Clinton fretted about the deployment of "unproven" technology, and its potential impact on the alliance. According to Bloomberg's Janine Zacharia:

Their criticisms came a day after the North Atlantic Treaty Organization endorsed the Bush administration's plan to build a radar station in the Czech Republic to track ballistic missiles that might be launched from Iran. The system also would include 10 interceptor missiles based in Poland.

"Senator Obama welcomes the progress on missile defense out of the NATO summit, and notes with appreciation the shared commitment among our allies to address this challenge,'' Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton said in an e-mail. ``Now we must ensure we do not rush to deploy technology that is not proven.''

[snip]

Clinton questioned whether such a system could protect U.S. allies in Europe against a missile threat and if the deal was worth the strains it put on the transatlantic alliance.

"Senator Clinton welcomes the fact that NATO has developed a unified position to help deter and prepare for threats to its security,'' Clinton campaign national security director
Lee Feinstein said in an e-mail.

Unfortunately, the agreement on missile defense reached at the Bucharest summit has come at significant -- and unnecessary -- cost to the harmony of the alliance, and has given Russia an opportunity to divide NATO.''

Let's be charitable and say both arguments are overstated, to say the least.

As for the status of missile defense technology, we'd advise Mr. Obama and Ms. Clinton to review the recent testimony of Lt Gen Trey Obering, Director of the Missile Defense Agency. General Obering appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee earlier this week, outlining the status of the missile defense program and its budget for Fiscal Year 2009.

Obviously, Lt Gen Obering is a tireless advocate for ballistic missile defense; that's part of his job description. But Obering also has a reputation as something of a straight shooter, unwilling to make unrealistic performance guarantees. Obering has held senior positions in the Pentagon's missile defense organization for the past seven years, offering some indication of his reputation inside the Beltway--and his ability to get along with politicians of all stripes.

In his latest testimony, General Obering outlined missile defense programs that are maturing rapidly--and already providing limited protection for the U.S. and its allies:

In 2007 we conducted many system ground and flight tests. Our flight test program for Ground-Based Midcourse Defense, Aegis BMD, and Terminal High Altitude Area Defense confirmed technological progress for short-, medium-, and long-range defensive capabilities. Last year we executed successfully a long-range ground-based intercept, six SM-3 intercepts of separating and unitary targets, and three THAAD intercepts of unitary targets. As of today, we have demonstrated hit-to-kill in 34 of 42 attempts since 2001. Last year alone we successfully intercepted the targets in 10 of 10 attempts.

Obering also noted the flexibility of BMD systems that successfully engaged a defunct spy satellite in late February:

This was a very successful joint mission involving the Navy, U.S. Strategic Command, the Missile Defense Agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Reconnaissance Office, and other national security offices. Missile Defense Agency engineers worked closely with the Navy to modify the interceptor and the Aegis weapon system for this one-time engagement. This was a case where the missile defense system was unexpectedly pushed into service and performed exceptionally well.

General Obering also offered compelling reasons for continuing missile defense research--and deployments:

"...there were over 120 foreign ballistic missile launches in 2007, significantly exceeding what we observed in previous years. This comes on the heels of a very active 2006, during which time both North Korea and Iran demonstrated an ability to orchestrate campaigns involving multiple and simultaneous launches using missiles of different ranges.

Currently, North Korea has hundreds of deployable short- and medium-range ballistic missiles and is developing a new intermediate-range ballistic missile and a new short-range, solid-propellant ballistic missile, which it test-launched in June 2007. Iran has the largest force of ballistic missiles in the Middle East (several hundred short- and medium-range ballistic missiles), and its highly publicized missile exercise training has enabled Iranian ballistic missile forces to hone wartime skills and new tactics.

North Korea’s ballistic missile development and export activities remain especially troubling. Pyongyang continues to press forward with the development of a nuclear-capable ICBM. While the firing of the Taepo Dong 2 in July 2006, launched together with six shorter-range ballistic missiles, failed shortly after launch, North Korean engineers probably learned enough to make modifications, not only to its long-range ballistic missiles, but also to its shorter-range systems. North Korea’s advances in missile system development, particularly its development of new, solid fuel intermediate range and short-range ballistic missiles, could allow it to deploy a more accurate, mobile, and responsive force.

North Korea’s nuclear weapons program makes these advances even more troubling to our allies and the commanders of our forces in that region. In addition to its uranium enrichment activity, Iran continues to pursue newer and longer-range missile systems and advanced warhead designs. Iran is developing an extended-range version of the Shahab-3 that could strike our allies and friends in the Middle East and Europe as well as our deployed forces. It is developing a new Ashura medium-range ballistic missile capable of reaching Israel and U.S. bases in Eastern Europe.

Iranian public statements also indicate that its solid-propellant technology is maturing; with its significantly faster launch sequence, this new missile is an improvement over the liquid-fuel Shahab-3.3 Iran has reportedly bought a new intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) under development by North Korea;4 this underscores the urgent need to work with our allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to field and integrate long-range missile defenses in Europe.

In other words, U.S. missile defense efforts are maturing in response to a very real threat--one that (in the case of Iran) may lead to an ICBM, capable of striking the CONUS, by 2015. Mr. Obama might want to rethink his contention that BMD technology is unproven, or that other Democratic chestnut, the idea that the ballistic threat is overstated.

As for Mrs. Clinton, she should note that the NATO communique from Bucharest was a remarkable show of alliance unity in the face of near-constant Russian pressure (emphasis ours). Since the U.S. unveiled its plans to base missile interceptors and tracking radars in eastern Europe, Moscow has used a variety of tricks to create divisions within the alliance. The missile defense statement suggests those efforts have failed, at least for now.

Indeed, one might argue that one of the biggest obstacles facing missile defense in Europe is not pressure from Russia, or potential hesitation within NATO's ranks. Instead, it's Washington's potential to go "wobbly" on the deployment under a Democratic administration.

NATO took an important, even courageous step, in supporting missile defense at this week's summit. The alliance needs continued strong leadership to press ahead with the planned missile shield. But, with their feckless posturing on the Bucharest communique, both Senator Clinton and Senator Obama have demonstrated that they're incapable of providing that leadership.

7 comments:

  1. I can understand the basis of the Democrats' opposition to most forms of defense expenditure (no matter how wrongheaded it seems to me).

    I've never been able to understand though exactly what motivates their objection to missile defense. As the cost of ballistic missiles continues to fall, their position seems to amount to a willful desire to expose whole American cities to attack by an ever wider range opponents.

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  2. No, if this post at Uncorrelated's blog is to be believed, Democrat refusal to support BMD goes far deeper than a naive unwillingness to support defense (emphasis mine):

    The Democrats horror was less about national security and more about political security. The status quo had worked in their favor for over thirty years and they saw the distinct possibility of joining the Soviets on the ash heap of history.

    Subsequent events bore out that concern. Dozens of countries adopted democratic governance and embraced principals of globalism, dooming socialism to living-museum status. The uni-polar world had made it safe for the real enemy to prosper--free enterprise. Prosperous middle classes don't vote for socialism.


    Unfortunately, this point of view has a clear ring of truth to it, in my mind. One only has to follow all the choices that the Clintons have made over the past 16 years, and by extension, Democrat foreign policy choices from 1976 onwards, to see that all they truly care about politically are three things:

    1. Creating a Socialist type welfare state (bordering on Communism, but not quite, just yet);

    2. Enlarging the powers and reach of Government as much as possible, to remove choice from the common man and use the Government's twin powers of law and purse to whittle away at the power of the middle class;

    3. Using monetary "help" provided to the poor to permanently enslave them in poverty, turning them into an eternal sub-class of people who are continually dependent on their nice Democrat masters for basic life needs; and

    4. Maintain the status-quo of a weak USA against its global threats, so that the common man is continually under a "state of fear" that requires the benevolent Democrat masters to protect him from, and require him to surrender his freedoms and his wealth (per my comments above) so they can run things.

    Democrats [as a political party, though not necessarily as individuals] are certainly not stupid. One only has to look at their conduct during Reagan's "rollback" strategy during the 1980's, where they fought Reagan at every step of the way - including, in Theodore Edward Kennedy's (D-Chivas Regal) case, consorting with the Soviet Union against the will of the US Government.

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  3. Re #4 in the prior comment, the Democrat position on missile defense would seem to be that, au contraire, we have nothing to fear.

    It's the only justification I can imagine for a preference for remaining undefended against incomng warheads, at what is after all a trivially small cost per citizen.

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  4. They would rather us depend on their superior negotiating skills than be respected for our military might.

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  5. I am cautious to comment where there are such well-thought out points of view, but may I point out that, given the expenditure of $120 billion to date for a partially deployed missile defense system, one would hope that it was "proven" technology. The question becomes, what is the correct balance of resources for deterrence vice protection?

    That is to say, given that we spend billions each year maintaining thousands of nuclear weapons that are supposedly deterring governments from thinking about such ballistic missile attacks, how many missile defense platforms do you need, exactly? two? five? twenty? What are the operating costs of this redundant system? Or isn't that important, because we must protect America at all costs! every city in every state, yesser.

    And of course NATO partners aren't complaining - it's more than a free meal, the hosting countries are getting millions in up-front defense equipment for their own militaries (Poland) plus annual subsidies in the form of hosting Americans on their soil. What's not to like? Except the rationale and cost/benefit strategy, of course...

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  6. That is to say, given that we spend billions each year maintaining thousands of nuclear weapons that are supposedly deterring governments from thinking about such ballistic missile attacks, how many missile defense platforms do you need, exactly? two?

    Please explain how to deter a rogue or accidental launch.

    Short answer: you can't.

    Deterrence works against deliberate, volitional acts.

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  7. Anonymous2:42 PM

    If BMD did not exist and the few anti-americans got their way, we would have had perhaps hundreds of attacks against our vulnerable cities. Not, our distant places such Alaska, Hawaii, and Guam who were deem great targets in 1941. Today's targets are Colorado, Ny, California, Florida and any area that involved in projects beneficial to our Country.
    Today's weapon is the ballot box, yes, democrats (Pelosi, reid, Schumer and others) you have to eat crow and get in line to protect
    us and not your biilfolds.
    Last, MR. Bush is not on the ballot, so grow up and do the right thing.
    Socrates once said that he was not a great orator but if you listened to him his message would have more sustance than his accusers. Long before him another great person said the same to God, Select my brother Aaron for he has the gift of speech.
    This is How I see Mr. John McCain.
    I see Obama as a huckster that is still selling snake oil and uninformed soulsare stll buying.

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