We Could Learn from
the Skeptics
by David Krieger*, December 2000
In a New York Times editorial on December
19, 2000, “Prelude to a Missile Defense,” they rightly
point out that “no workable shield now exists” and
that the diplomatic and financial costs are too high to begin
construction of even a limited system “until the technology
is perfected.”
It is a great leap of faith to believe that this
technology will ever be perfected. Experts repeatedly have warned
us that even a moderately effective offense that includes decoys
will always be able to overcome the type of defensive system we
are capable of deploying.
However, even if we were able to create a foolproof
missile defense against Iraq, Iran and North Korea, we would still
be at risk from nuclear weapons delivered by terrorist groups
or nations by other means than missiles, such as by weapons carried
into US harbors on boats. The geo-political damage that deployment
of a National Missile Defense would do in our relations with Russia
and China would also undermine any advantages such a system might
provide.
The editorial suggests that "Mr. Bush's new
foreign policy team should try to persuade skeptical countries
that a limited defensive system can be built without wrecking
existing arms control treaties or setting off a destructive new
arms race." To succeed in this persuasion, Mr. Bush's new
team will need either superhuman powers or excessive and dangerous
arm twisting skills.
They would be far wiser to listen carefully to
the reasons why many of our closest allies, as well as Russia
and China, are skeptical about our missile defense plans. By trying
to understand rather than convert the skeptics, the Bush foreign
policy team might learn that deploying a costly and unreliable
Ballistic Missile Defense would create greater problems than it
would solve.
The new administration might more fruitfully concentrate
its efforts on providing leadership in fulfilling the promises
made by the nuclear weapons states at the 2000 Non-Proliferation
Treaty Review Conference for an "unequivocal undertaking"
to eliminate all nuclear weapons globally. Such leadership would
be a true gift to humanity. It would also do far more to assure
American and global security in the 21st century.
* David Krieger
is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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