Transcript: President
Bush Speech on Missile Defense
May 1, 2001
Thank you very much, Mr. Secretary. I appreciate
you being here.
I also want to thank Secretary Powell for being
here as well.
My national security advisor, Condi Rice, is here,
as well as the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs, General Myers.
Appreciate Admiral Clark and General Ryan for being here as well.
But most of all, I want to thank you, Admiral Gaffney, and the
students for NDU for having me here today.
For almost 100 years, this campus has served as
one of our country's premier centers for learning and thinking
about America's national security. Some of America's finest soldiers
have studied here: Dwight Eisenhower and Colin Powell. Some of
America's finest statesmen have taught here: George Kennan (ph).
Today, you're carrying on this proud tradition
forward, continuing to train tomorrow's generals, admirals and
other national security thinkers, and continuing to provide the
intellectual capital for our nation's strategic vision.
This afternoon, I want us to think back some 30
years to a far different time in a far different world. The United
States and the Soviet Union were locked in a hostile rivalry.
The Soviet Union was our unquestioned enemy, a highly armed threat
to freedom and democracy. Far more than that wall in Berlin divided
us.
Our highest ideal was and remains individual liberty.
Their's was the construction of a vast communist empire. Their
totalitarian regime held much of Europe captive behind an Iron
Curtain. We didn't trust them, and for good reason. Our deep differences
were expressed in a dangerous military confrontation that resulted
in thousands of nuclear weapons pointed at each other on hair-trigger
alert.
The security of both the United States and the
Soviet Union was based on a grim premise that neither side would
fire nuclear weapons at each other, because doing so would mean
the end of both nations.
We even went so far as to codify this relationship
in a 1972 ABM Treaty, based on the doctrine that our very survival
would best be ensured by leaving both sides completely open and
vulnerable to nuclear attack. The threat was real and vivid. The
Strategic Air Command had an airborne command post called the
Looking Glass, aloft 24 hours a day, ready in case the president
ordered our strategic forces to move toward their targets and
release their nuclear ordnance.
The Soviet Union had almost 1.5 million troops
deep in the heart of Europe, in Poland, in Czechoslovakia, Hungary
and East Germany.
We used our nuclear weapons, not just to prevent
the Soviet Union from using their nuclear weapons, but also to
contain their conventional military forces, to prevent them from
extending the Iron Curtain into parts of Europe and Asia that
were still free.
In that world, few other nations had nuclear weapons,
and most of those who did were responsible allies, such as Britain
and France. We worried about the proliferation of nuclear weapons
to other countries, but it was mostly a distant threat, not yet
a reality.
Today, the sun comes up on a vastly different world.
The Wall is gone, and so is the Soviet Union. Today's Russia is
not yesterday's Soviet Union.
Its government is no longer communist. Its president
is elected. Today's Russia is not our enemy, but a country in
transition with an opportunity to emerge as a great nation, democratic,
at peace with itself and its neighbors.
The Iron Curtain no longer exists. Poland, Hungary
and Czech Republic are free nations and they are now our allies
in NATO, together with a reunited Germany. Yet, this is still
a dangerous world; a less certain, a less predictable one.
More nations have nuclear weapons and still more
have nuclear aspirations. Many have chemical and biological weapons.
Some already have developed a ballistic missile technology that
would allow them to deliver weapons of mass destruction at long
distances and incredible speeds, and a number of these countries
are spreading these technologies around the world.
Most troubling of all, the list of these countries
includes some of the world's least-responsible states. Unlike
the Cold War, today's most urgent threat stems not from thousands
of ballistic missiles in the Soviet hands, but from a small number
of missiles in the hands of these states -- states for whom terror
and blackmail are a way of life.
They seek weapons of mass destruction to intimidate
their neighbors, and to keep the United States and other responsible
nations from helping allies and friends in strategic parts of
the world. When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, the world
joined forces to turn him back. But the international community
would have faced a very different situation had Hussein been able
to blackmail with nuclear weapons.
Like Saddam Hussein, some of today's tyrants are
gripped by an implacable hatred of the United States of America.
They hate our friends. They hate our values. They
hate democracy and freedom, and individual liberty. Many care
little for the lives of their own people. In such a world, Cold
War deterrence is no longer enough to maintain peace, to protect
our own citizens and our own allies and friends.
We must seek security based on more than the grim
premise that we can destroy those who seek to destroy us. This
is an important opportunity for the world to rethink the unthinkable
and to find new ways to keep the peace. Today's world requires
a new policy, a broad strategy of active nonproliferation, counter-proliferation
and defenses.
We must work together with other like-minded nations
to deny weapons of terror from those seeking to acquire them.
We must work with allies and friends who wish to
join with us to defend against the harm they can inflict. And
together, we must deter anyone who would contemplate their use.
We need new concepts of deterrence that rely on
both offensive and defensive forces. Deterrence can no longer
be based solely on the threat of nuclear retaliation. Defenses
can strengthen deterrence by reducing the incentive for proliferation.
We need a new framework that allows us to build
missile defenses to counter the different threats of today's world.
To do so, we must move beyond the constraints of the 30-year-old
ABM Treaty. This treaty does not recognize the present or point
us to the future. It enshrines the past.
No treaty that prevents us from addressing today's
threats, that prohibits us from pursuing promising technology
to defend ourselves, our friends and our allies is in our interests
or in the interests of world peace.
This new framework must encourage still further
cuts in nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons still have a vital role
to play in our security and that of our allies.
We can and will change the size, the composition,
the character of our nuclear forces in a way that reflects the
reality that the Cold War is over. I'm committed to achieving
a credible deterrent with the lowest possible number of nuclear
weapons consistent with our national security needs, including
our obligations to our allies.
My goal is to move quickly to reduce nuclear forces.
The United States will lead by example to achieve our interests
and the interests for peace in the world.
Several months ago, I asked Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld to examine all available technologies and basing modes
for effective missile defenses that could protect the United States,
our deployed forces, our friends and our allies. The secretary
has explored a number of complementary and innovative approaches.
The secretary has identified near-term options
that could allow us to deploy an initial capability against limited
threats. In some cases, we can draw on already established technologies
that might involve land-based and sea-based capabilities to intercept
missiles in mid-course or after they re-enter the atmosphere.
We also recognize the substantial advantages of
intercepting missiles early in their flight, especially in the
boost phase. The preliminary work has produced some promising
options for advanced sensors and interceptors that may provide
this capability. If based at sea or on aircraft, such approaches
could provide limited but effective defenses.
We have more work to do to determine the final
form the defenses might take. We will explore all of these options
further. We recognize the technological difficulties we face,
and we look forward to I've made it clear from the very beginning
that I would consult closely on the important subject with our
friends and allies, who are also threatened by missiles and weapons
of mass destruction.
This treaty ignores the fundamental breakthroughs
in technology during the last 30 years. It prohibits us from exploring
all options for defending against the threats that face us, our
allies and other countries.
That's why we should work together to replace this
treaty with a new framework that reflects a clear and clean break
from the past, and especially from the adversarial legacy of the
Cold War.
This new cooperative relationship should look to
the future, not to the past. It should be reassuring, rather than
threatening. It should be premised on openness, mutual confidence
and real opportunities for cooperation, including the area of
missile defense.
It should allow us to share information so that
each nation can improve its early warning capability and its capability
to defend its people and territory. And perhaps one day, we can
even cooperate in a joint defense.
I want to complete the work of changing our relationship
from one based on a nuclear balance of terror to one based on
common responsibilities and common interests. We may have areas
of difference with Russia, but we are not and must not be strategic
adversaries.
Russia and America both face new threats to security.
Together, we can address today's threats and pursue today's opportunities.
We can explore technologies that have the potential to make us
all safer.
This is a time for vision, a time for a new way
of thinking, a time for bold leadership. The Looking Glass no
longer stands its 24- hour-a-day vigil. We must all look at the
world in a new, realistic way to preserve peace for generations
to come.
God bless.
(APPLAUSE)
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