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----- Original Message -----
From: Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Bruce K. Gagnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2002 3:27 PM
Subject: RUMSFELD CONSIDERS NUCLEAR-TIPPED STAR WARS INTERCEPTORS


Published on Thursday, April 11, 2002 in the Washington Post

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0411-01.htm

Going Backwards
Nuclear-Tipped Interceptors Studied
Rumsfeld Revives Rejected Missile Defense Concept

by Bradley Graham

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has opened the door to the possible use
of nuclear-tipped interceptors in a national missile defense system,
reviving an idea that U.S. authorities rejected nearly three decades ago as
technically problematic and politically unacceptable.
William Schneider Jr., chairman of the Defense Science Board, said yesterday
that he had received encouragement from Rumsfeld to begin exploring the idea
as part of an upcoming study of alternative approaches to intercepting enemy
missiles.

"We've talked about it as something that he's interested in looking at,"
Schneider said in an interview.

The Pentagon experimented with nuclear-armed interceptors in the 1950s and
1960s and, for a short time in the mid-1970s, deployed an anti-missile
system that relied on them. But the notion of nuclear explosions going off
high overhead to block incoming missiles proved unsettling for many people.
And the prospect that ionized clouds and electromagnetic shock waves
associated with the explosions could end up blinding radar on the ground and
scrambling electronic equipment eventually helped kill the plan.

Since then, defense officials have focused on developing interceptors to
destroy targets without the need for explosives, relying instead on the
force of direct impact, a concept known as "hit to kill."

Driving the new interest in arming interceptors with nuclear devices is the
problem of dealing with decoys and other measures that an enemy might use to
confuse an interceptor, Schneider said.

The hit-to-kill approach depends on interceptors picking out the real enemy
targets and homing in on them. By contrast, nuclear-armed interceptors need
not distinguish actual targets from clusters of decoys but could rely on
explosive power or radiation to wipe out everything in the vicinity.

One other arguable advantage of nuclear interceptors, Schneider suggested,
is their potential for ensuring destruction of missile-borne biological
warfare agents such as anthrax.

President Bush has made clear his interest in pursuing technological
solutions to missile defense, removing long-standing constraints by deciding
last December to withdraw the United States from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty with Moscow.

The Pentagon has embarked on experimental anti-missile programs, including
land- and sea-based interceptors as well as airborne lasers and space-based
weapons, with the hope of having at least a rudimentary capability in place
by fall 2004. But until now, defense officials had shied away from the
nuclear option.

An extensive Pentagon review of missile defense alternatives undertaken in
the first months of the Bush administration raised the possibility of
nuclear-tipped interceptors, according to two officials familiar with the
review. But the idea failed to make the list of programs worth funding.

Its return comes in the context of other recent signs of the
administration's general readiness to consider broader uses of nuclear
weapons. A Pentagon review of U.S. nuclear policy, concluded late last year,
put new emphasis on possible nuclear strikes against Third World adversaries
and backed development of low-yield nuclear bombs to hit hardened or deeply
buried targets.

Russia, which built a missile defense system around Moscow in the 1960s that
survives to this day, relied from the start on nuclear-armed interceptors.
Although U.S. defense experts regard the Russian system as anachronistic,
Russian military officials worry that the United States will eventually
adopt the nuclear approach, according to Pavel Podvig, editor of an
authoritative book about Russian strategic nuclear forces published last
year by the Center for Arms Control Studies in Moscow.

"They believe strongly that you cannot get an effective missile defense
system using hit-to-kill," Podvig said.

The Defense Science Board, set up in the 1950s, is a senior advisory body
that reports to the secretary of defense on technological, operational and
managerial matters. One of its task forces already is looking at some
aspects of missile defense, including command and control systems,
international cooperation and countermeasures such as decoys. Schneider said
he plans to initiate the review of nuclear interceptors and other
alternatives to hit-to-kill after the task force completes its study this
summer.

"The issue hasn't been looked at for about 30 years," said Schneider, a
consultant and undersecretary of state for security assistance under
President Ronald Reagan. "The last test involved a four-megaton device on a
Spartan interceptor in 1971."

Richard L. Garwin, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and
prominent missile defense skeptic, said nuclear interceptors still pose
several significant technical problems.

"When you actually look at the question, you find that it takes a very large
warhead -- more than a megaton -- to destroy anthrax spores in bomblets that
may be spread over a distance of five kilometers or more," he said.

"Worse, there are hundreds of civilian satellites as well as many U.S.
military satellites vital to our national security that would be imperiled
by nuclear explosions. And there are electromagnetic pulse vulnerabilities
in an advanced society such as ours that would occur to any point within
line-of-sight of the nuclear explosions."

� 2002 The Washington Post Company



Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL. 32607
(352) 337-9274
http://www.space4peace.org
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