Smoke and Mirror
Security
by Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Petaluma), June 17,
2002
Last week, the
Bush Administration took the American people a step backwards
to the dark days of the Cold War. The U.S. formally withdrew from
the Anti Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty with Russia. The withdrawal
from the treaty will facilitate Bush's development of a National
Missile Defense System.
Now, without the treaty and with $8
billion earmarked for National Missile Defense, the Bush administration
is clear to develop this controversial and questionable program.
But we have a major problem; we simply don't have the technology
to make it work. According to Dr. David Wright of the Union of
Concerned Scientists, President Bush is rushing to develop "systems
[that] will not provide 'emergency capability' against real-world
threats, only the illusion of capability."
A National Missile Defense system would not have
prevented September 11th. Every day we encounter more national
security challenges that do not have military solutions. We don't
need government "hocus-pocus," we need to invest our
scarce economic resources on proven, cost effective ways to provide
for our national security and the future of our children. The
$8 billion ear marked for National Missile Defense could be better
spent on rebuilding our national economy, improving schools, developing
alternative energy resources to lessen our dependency on foreign
fossil fuels and enhancing our homeland security: protecting our
international borders, increasing airline security and expanding
public health measures to combat bioterrorism.
When President Bush first threatened withdrawal,
I introduced House Resolution 313 with the support of 50 of my
colleagues to keep the U.S. on the ABM treaty. Most recently,
I joined 31 of my colleagues in a lawsuit charging that President
Bush does not have the authority to unilaterally withdraw from
a treaty without the consent of Congress.
The ABM treaty is the cornerstone of international
arms control. Now that more countries have nuclear weapons, international
treaties are even more important. International cooperation is
the way to peace and international security; not increased military
build-up. Over the past 30 years, ABM treaty has been a vital
link to working with the international community and it is more
important than ever that we not turn our back on it.
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