Terrorism, Missile Defense and Arms
Control
May 5, 2004
By Peter Huessy
In August 2001, a former chief terrorism expert at the
Department of State wrote in the New York Times
that the Bush Administration was obsessed with terrorism
and using it to persuade the American people to build
missile defenses. Larry Johnson complained that
terrorism posed little threat to
America,
and whatever threat it did pose was receding. In 2002,
two National Security Council experts on terrorism
during the Clinton Administration, Daniel Benjamin and
Steven Simon, argued in a newly published book that the
Bush administration’s obsession with building a missile
defense blinded it to the threat of terrorism, a false
claim echoed by former Clinton official Richard Clarke.
Who are we to believe?
Given the polar
opposite views of White House and State Department experts on terrorism, it
is now easy to believe Clarke’s 2002 claim that between 1998 and 2001, the
Clinton Administration could not even agree to come up with a
counter-terrorism plan. It is as Dick Morris writes in his 2003 book.
Clinton simply found the job “too hard to do”, a point echoed by none other
than Richard Clarke himself who is quoted in Richard Minister’s “Losing Bin
Laden” that Clinton failed to take terrorism seriously in large part because
it was too hard to do.
There are many who
see no threats from ballistic missiles and see terrorism as more of a law
enforcement issue than a matter for military intervention. Senator Kerry
recently theorized that the threat of terrorism is primarily a law
enforcement issue. By definition, of course, a law enforcement solution
generally requires a reaction “after the fact.” Seeking to arrest the bad
guys once they have detonated a bomb that kills thousands isn’t very
helpful.
Law enforcement
measures are, obviously, inadequate to the task before us. The question we
have to ask those wedded to this approach is: “how many Americans have to
perish in terrorist attacks before the United States decides to take action
against the complicit rogue states?” One member of the U.S. law enforcement
community said after the World
Trade Center bombings in 1993 that
“we don’t do states” in response to an inquiry of why the FBI wasn’t
seriously examining the state sponsor connections.
Part of the problem
is the prejudice against “preemption.” For some reason, preventive action
using combined military, political and diplomatic power to avoid attacks
somehow is beyond the boundaries of permissive action. We are forced instead
to wait for, as our President so eloquently put it, “permission slips from
the UN.” Ironically, the aversion to pre-emption disappears, however, when
the Bush administration critics need to be its strongest backers in order to
be against another favorite whipping boy, missile defenses.
Believe it or not,
the most passionate opponents of missile defense, for example, support the
preemptive use of military force to destroy missile-launching facilities!
Joseph Cirincione of the Carnegie Endowment, (CEIP), for example, argued in
a debate with me on NPR that missile defenses against North Korea were
unnecessary because we could simply “take the missiles out.” Philip Coyle, a
former Clinton defense official, now with the Center for Defense
Information, (CDI), argued in an interview that Canada need not cooperate
with the U.S. on missile defense because any missile deployment by North
Korea would simply be destroyed by a US pre-emptive strike. And one Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC) official argued at a recent National
Defense
University conference that missile defense was simply a waste of money
because, he argued, “we can just pre-emptively destroy the missiles on the
ground.”
Now, pre-boost phase
defense, meaning destroying enemy rockets before they have lifted off, is a
great idea. Let's do it. But to be successful, we have to know where the
rockets are, and we can’t miss. On the other hand, the CEIP, the CDI and the
NRDC have all been rabidly against missile defenses for Americans. And at
the same time, they have been the loudest critics of pre-emption as a policy
tool for dealing with weapons of mass destruction, terrorism, rogue regimes
or other threats. What gives?
The answer is
simple. Any argument that can be used against the administration will be
used, no matter how contradictory, silly or out of bounds. These pretzel
type arguments made by opponents of this administration were also on display
at an arms control conference held at
Georgetown
University in late January of this year.
One major issue
discussed was whether our nuclear deterrent needed to be made more credible,
in addition to whether missile defenses should be deployed or pre-emptive
action taken. Senator Biden, for example, argued we didn’t need smaller
nuclear weapons because building new weapons would violate our pledge under
the Non Proliferation Treaty, or NPT, to disarm, but then admitted the US
had enough small nuclear weapons, some of which were developed during the
Clinton administration. And he opposed building missile defenses because he
said whether or not we intercept an incoming warhead, we are still going to
strike back. I guess the idea of saving millions of Americans lives has
never occurred to the Senator from Delaware!
But the conference
gets better. One panel of experts claimed the North Korean nuclear deal of
1994 was wonderful, but then quietly admitted the North Koreans were
blatantly cheating, only then coming back to their conclusion that the Bush
Administration ought to sign the same deal all over again!! One commentator
admitted a good and solid agreement could be proposed, one that ended the
North’s nuclear weapons program, but it could never be negotiated with the
current regime —shorthand for admitting that North Korea simply has no
intention of giving ups its nuclear weapons program.
Despite most
participants being wedded to relics of the Cold War such as the ABM treaty,
one speaker made the excellent point that the deployment of missile defenses
made excellent sense as part of an overall counter-proliferation policy. To
the extent that the President’s new initiative on interdicting ballistic
missile technology, or prohibiting the sale or transfer of such technology,
makes any deployment of such missiles less robust, missile defenses need not
be either perfect or initially capable of destroying all types of missiles.
Both measures are complimentary and will be improved and expanded over time.
As National Security Adviser Rice so correctly noted, ‘there is no silver
bullet.’ Unfortunately, you didn’t read any of this in the Washington
Post or The New York Times. But you read it here.
Peter Huessy is President of GeoStrategic Analysis, a Maryland defense
consulting firm. He is Senior Defense Associate at NDUF. He specializes in
nuclear weapons, missile defense, terrorism and rogue states. These views
are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of his affiliated
organizations.
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