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U.S. Eyes Missile Defense Site in Europe
Wade Boese
The United States is currently holding discussions with the Czech
Republic, Hungary, and Poland about building a U.S. missile defense
interceptor site on one of their territories, Arms Control Today
has learned. Although no final decision has been made to establish
a missile interceptor base in Europe, a top Pentagon official previously
indicated that, if a decision were made, the United States might begin
construction on such a site as early as 2006.
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security
John Bolton provided a hint of the previously secret negotiations
during a recent visit to Poland. Speaking May 31 to reporters covering
the one-year anniversary of a U.S.-led counterproliferation initiative,
Bolton said, [W]ere now engaged in discussions with Poland
about the possibility of basing interceptors and radars here.
ACT has learned, however, that consultations with the Czech
Republic and Hungary have also started. Discussions with the three
central European countries are reportedly still in the preliminary
stages.
The general process for military-basing consultations involves the
United States preparing a list of criteria on what it is seeking in
a base and the potential host countries nominating specific sites.
U.S. officials then visit and evaluate the options, select one, and
began negotiations with the respective government on operational parameters,
including command and control issues.
It is unclear when decisions will be made on whether and where to
build such a site. A foreign government official familiar with the
talks said that at this time there are a lot of ifs.
Lieutenant General Ronald Kadish, director of the Pentagons
Missile Defense Agency (MDA), first disclosed general U.S. planning
for a foreign missile defense deployment in congressional testimony
earlier this year.
In a prepared statement on MDAs fiscal year 2005 budget request,
Kadish reported, In Block 2006, we are preparing to move forward
when appropriate to build a third [ground-based interceptor] site
at a location outside the United States. MDA divides its future
plans into two-year periods known as blocks, so Block 2006 refers
to the period between Jan. 1, 2006, and Dec. 31, 2007.
As part of its fiscal year 2005 budget, MDA requested approximately
$35 million for long lead activity for [ground-based interceptors]
at a potential third site. Whether Congress ultimately will
support this request remains up in the air, but the Senate Armed Services
Committee and the House Appropriations Committee have both recommended
that the Pentagon not spend money on this long-lead activity because
no third site has been specified.
Kadish explained in his testimony, For the cost of 10 [ground-based
interceptors] and associated infrastructure, we will be able to demonstrate
in the most convincing way possible our commitment to protecting
U.S. allies and deployed forces.
Reassuring friends and fulfilling President George W. Bushs
repeated claim that U.S. defenses will protect more than just America
are important factors in consideration of a European missile defense
site. Yet, the driving rationale is that the two U.S. interceptor
sites currently under construction are not ideally situated to protect
the U.S. East Coast from a long-range ballistic missile launched from
the Middle East.
Later this summer, the Pentagon will begin stationing interceptors
at Fort Greely, Alaska, and Vandenberg Air Force Base, California,
with this force set to grow to about 20 by the end of 2005. But those
missiles are geared toward defending against a North Korean ballistic
missile strike and would have little utility in other scenarios, particularly
attacks from the opposite direction.
Whether the missiles are based in Europe or the United States, the
missile defense system still faces substantial technical challenges.
Both the General Accounting Office, Congresss investigative
arm, and the top weapons tester for the Department of Defense have
reported that the Pentagon has not yet proven that the interceptors
can perform their mission because they have yet to be subjected to
real-world-type testing. (See ACT, May 2004.) MDA contends
that the interceptors must be deployed before they can be tested in
such a way.
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