Bush Team Unveils Missile Defense Plans; Democrats Upset
Wade Boese
Throughout July, the Bush administration sketched out details of
its proposed $8.3 billion ballistic missile defense testing program.
But getting its plans fully funded will require winning over Senate
Democrats who have severely criticized the program, in large part
because the Bush administration contends its testing will come into
conflict with the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty within months.
At the first in a series of July congressional hearings, Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz and Lieutenant General Ronald
Kadish, head of the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (BMDO),
testified July 12 that the administration would conduct a robust
research and development program with the goal of fielding a layered
defensepossibly consisting of ground-, sea-, air-, and space-based
systemsenabling multiple intercept attempts after a hostile
ballistic missile launch. BMDO oversees U.S. missile defense programs.
Although the two officials claimed that no decision has been made
on procuring any specific systems and that no deployment dates have
been set, BMDO prepared briefing slides calling for three emergency
capabilities by about 2005. These contingency
capabilities will be ground-based missile interceptors, sea-based
interceptors, and an airborne laser (ABL). Only the ground-based
system is expected to be capable of countering long-range ballistic
missiles by 2006.
The primary emergency capability is the deployment
of up to five ground-based interceptors at Fort Greely in Alaska.
A private Alaska company started preparatory work, such as clearing
trees and digging water wells, at the site on August 28. The Pentagon
plans to start construction in April and finish the work as early
as 2004.
Kadish told senators on July 17 that he wouldnt expect
the changes to be difficult to convert Fort Greely from a
testing to an operational site. Wolfowitz testified that such a
decision would depend upon how testing proceeds and the status of
the threat, though he underscored that the administration wants
to have the option to use the facility for emergency deployment.
While describing Fort Greely as a test site, Wolfowitz acknowledged
in a July 19 House Armed Services Committee hearing that no test
missile interceptors could be launched out of Fort Greely until
some safety concerns are resolved. For instance, burned-out boosters
from the missile interceptors could potentially fall on populated
areas.
Wolfowitz admitted that starting construction at Fort Greely could
be viewed as a treaty violation. At the July 12 hearing, he said
that a central issue for U.S. plans is whether development of a
test site becomes illegal if you harbor the intention or the
plan or the possibility of turning [it] into an operational capability.
He concluded, Its going to take a great deal of legal
argument to decide what the answer is to that.
The 1972 ABM Treaty prohibits the United States and Russia from
building nationwide defenses against strategic ballistic missiles
but permits each country to build test ranges and to possess a single
operational missile site for a regional defense. Washington selected
North Dakota as the location for its permitted site under the treaty.
The Sea- and Air-Based Options
BMDO also plans to press ahead with testing ship-based missile
interceptors. It aims to flight-test an interceptor designed to
counter short- and medium-range ballistic missiles this fall and
wants to hold five more of these tests during the next fiscal year.
The goal is to have a potential contingency capability in 2004,
but Kadish said July 13 that he would not expect to have a ship-based
capability against long-range missiles before the end of the decade.
Similarly, ABL is currently designed to counter short- and medium-range
missiles, but Kadish noted in his July 12 prepared statement that
BMDO is taking deliberate steps to prepare ABL for a strategic
defense role as well. The Pentagon intends to conduct the
first ABL flight test within the coming fiscal year, and it will
try to shoot down a target the year after. Although BMDO plans call
for an emergency capability in 2004, BMDO does not expect an actual
initial capability until 2008.
The Pentagons ABM Treaty Compliance Review Group reported
a preliminary finding July 30 that proposed testing plans could
violate the treaty. The Pentagon refused to supply specifics, saying
only that a potential violation would not take place before the
end of September. Earlier in the month, the administration claimed
that its plans could conflict with the accord in months, not
years.
Though the ABM Treaty proscribes the development, testing, and
deployment of air-, sea-, space-, and mobile land-based systems
and components for defenses against strategic ballistic missiles,
the current sea- and air-based programs are legal under the treaty.
BMDO would violate the accord once it begins to upgrade the systems
to counter strategic missiles or once it starts testing the systems
against long-range targets.
At a July 17 hearing, Wolfowitz offered three possibilities for
future violations: the start of construction at Fort Greely, the
use of a ship-based radar to track a long-range target, and the
use of ABM and non-ABM radars together during a short-range intercept
test.
U.S. officials, including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,
have repeatedly insisted that the United States will not violate
the ABM Treaty, indicating that they expect to reach an agreement
with Russia quickly to permit strategic missile defenses or that
the United States will soon withdraw from the treaty. If neither
has occurred by the time a potential treaty-violating test takes
place, Wolfowitz said the test would be postponed or would be modified
so that it would comply with the treaty.
A Fight for Funding?
At the July 17 hearing, Wolfowitz said a successful July 14 intercept
test (Missile Defense Interceptor Hits
Target, But Not All Perfect in Test) showed the potential
for success, but warned, let us not fail because we
did not adequately fund the necessary testing.
Senate Armed Services Chairman Carl Levin (D-MI) lamented at a
July 19 hearing the unfortunate absence of specific details
in the Pentagons proposed missile defense funding request.
The Pentagon has asked for blocks of funds for essentially six broad
categories, such as boost-phase defenses, permitting Kadish to spend
the money within each category as he sees fit. The proposal would
increase the missile defense budget by 57 percent.
Like Levin, Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE), chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee, declared at a July 24 hearing, Frankly,
I marvel at the audacity of a request for $8 billion to conduct
unspecified research and development on programs which may or may
not violate the [ABM] Treaty.
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD), who said Democrats could
support the deployment of limited missile defenses under the
right circumstances, argued against the administrations
budget increase in an August 9 speech, claiming that missile defense
is the most expensive possible response to the least likely
threat we face. He said the increase in missile defense spending
would cannibalize the personnel and force structure that deal
with the threats we are far more likely to face.
Other Democrats in both houses of Congress expressed similar concerns
during the July hearings. Arguing July 12 that other threats are
more imminent than long-range missiles, Senator Max
Cleland (D-GA) recommended, Congress ought to use the power
of the purse in rejecting this increase.
Cleland sits on Levins Armed Services Committee, which will
be responsible for the first Senate markupexpected to be completed
in early Septemberof the Pentagons budget request. The
House Armed Services Committee finished its markup August 1, recommending
a minimal cut of $135 million in the Pentagons requested missile
defense budget.
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