-Caveat Lector-

http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=24078

Published Wednesday, November 12, 2003
Missile Defense System misguided

With the recent $823 million Boeing Co. Missile Defense System contract and
Congressional approval of $9.1 billion for missile defense in the fiscal
year 2004 budget, it appears that the construction of a National Missile
Defense (NMD) system in the United States is now just a matter of time.

With a Pentagon-projected price tag of $50 billion over the next five
years, one wonders whether such a system would be worth the cost and to
what degree it would increase the security of the United States. Officials
have given a variety of justifications for building an NMD system, ranging
from scenarios of nuclear war with North Korea to a ballistic missile
attack from a terrorist organization.

The efficacy of the proposed NMD system is called into serious question
after examining its history of deficiencies. Replete with failed tests and
unproven technology, the ground-based midcourse intercept system scheduled
to be built in Alaska is doomed to fail. With a self-set deadline of
October 2004, officials are scrambling to begin construction. To expedite
the process, the Pentagon has decided to use old satellites and to deploy
radar systems without adequate testing.

It is absolutely necessary to test and modify these technologies, for
hitting a supersonic projectile is by no means an easy task. When speaking
about the feasibility of destroying missiles in flight, most policymakers
seem to have in mind a false image close to Atari's classic video
game "Missile Command" -- where stopping a nuclear missile is as easy as
moving a cursor in its path. Even if general targeting obstacles can be
overcome, there still exists the issues of debris, decoys and bad weather
conditions -- all impediments that have confused existing radars.
Furthermore, successful tests of the system have been performed under
impractical conditions: pre-programmed trajectories and targets, low speeds
and low altitudes. If an attacker varied a missile's velocity, sent out
multiple warheads or decoys, or launched at night, an NMD system would be
hard-pressed to neutralize those targets.

To this date, no government figure has given an adequate reason as to why
deterrence policy is not enough to prevent a nuclear conflict in the
future. The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction has worked to preserve
peace among the traditional nuclear rivals for the past half-century, even
in the midst of more precarious situations than the current one. Assuming
that North Korea or Iran (or any other newly United States-identified
threat) gains the capability to strike U.S. soil, the threat of a
devastating retaliatory strike by the United States would be more than
enough to discourage such action.

The most recent, and arguably most important, threat to United States
interests comes in the form of terrorism. In the rare instance that
terrorists gain possession of a nuclear weapon, it is difficult to imagine
the use of a ballistic missile. A terrorist organization would, most
likely, employ a simpler and more discreet means of detonation, such as
steering a boat into the harbor of a major city. More probable, however, is
the non-nuclear detonation of radioactive material (i.e. a "dirty bomb") on
U.S. soil. Which of these attacks is more lethal is not important, but what
is significant is to realize that an NMD system would do nothing to prevent
these more plausible events from occurring.

Perhaps the strongest argument of NMD proponents is that while a system may
not be successful 100 percent of the time, it may be successful part of the
time. Why not proceed with construction so that there is at least a chance
of stopping incoming attacks? The answer to this question is that there is
a unique disadvantage to building a missile defense system: it would
decrease the security of the United States. From a global perspective, it
is easy to understand other countries' reservations about a U.S. defense
system. Deterrence prevents nuclear attack by threatening complete and
utter retaliation; every player in the game essentially has a gun and does
not fire at another player for fear of being shot in return. Thus, a stable
balance results in which firearms are possessed but no casualties result.
In a world where the United States builds a successful NMD system, the
United States would possess both a gun and a bullet-proof vest, undermining
deterrence. The international tension that would result could take form in
refusal by other countries to cooperate on issues of non-proliferation and
attempts to build new nuclear weapons in order to strengthen one's
deterrent.

In the midst of all its deficiencies and failures, a national missile
defense may indeed have the chance of being successful for a fraction of
the time. The central question we are faced with today is whether this
chance of a solution is worth the hefty price tag of an NMD system or the
dangerous risk of international instability that it would bring. It doesn't
take a rocket scientist to figure out that National Missile Defense is
misguided.

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