-Caveat Lector-

America's Heart Is About To Be Speared

  Leslie Schentag
  Gremlin Research Consultants
  Web Site: http://firms.findlaw.com/gremlinz
  Fax #: 1-978-334-2586

  Myautomail: http://www.myautomail.com/auto2011.htm

  "When Freedom Is Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Be Free"
                                        -F.T.W. Productions, 1992.

"It is better to die on your feet than live a lifetime on your knees"
                                        -Emiliano Zapata


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 07:41:36 -0500
From: Lloyd Miller
To: New Paradigms Discussion Group
Subject: [prj] Fw: America's Heart Is aAbout To Be Speared

Test drive popular Income Tax Preparation Software and
Get a Free Gift! http://www.alpinenterprises.com/
Try a leading tax return program which has helped millions do
their taxes quickly, easily and accurately.

              A Nuclear Knife Aimed at America's Heart
                           Joel M. Skousen
                           March 25, 1999

In November 1997, President Clinton signed a top-secret Presidential
Decision Directive (PDD-60) directing U.S. military commanders to
abandon the time-honored nuclear deterrence of "launch on warning."
Ironically, this was done in the name of "increased deterrence."
Every sensible American needs to understand why this reasoning is
fraudulent at best and deadly at worst. First, some background.

The impetus to change U.S. strategic nuclear doctrine came on the
heels of Clinton's demand to the Joint Chiefs of Staff in early 1997
that they prepare to unilaterally reduce America's nuclear warhead
deployment to 2,500 in eager anticipation of the ratification of the
START II disarmament treaty. This pact has yet to be ratified by the
Russian Duma.

Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, responded that
he couldn't comply, since the U.S. military was still operating on a
former Presidential Decision Directive of 1981 to prepare to "win a
protracted nuclear war." A winning strategy couldn't be implemented
without the full contingent of current nuclear strategic warheads.

According to Craig Cerniello of Arms Control Today (November/December
1997 issue), "the administration viewed the 1981 guidelines as an
anachronism of the Cold War. The notion that the United States still
had to be prepared to fight and win a protracted nuclear war today
seemed out of touch with reality, given the fact that it has been six
years since the collapse of the Soviet Union."

Certainly, the apparent collapse of the Soviet Union is the linchpin
in every argument pointing toward the relaxation of Western vigilance
and accelerated disarmament. Indeed, it is the driving argument that
is trumpeted constantly before Congress, U.S. military leaders, and
the American people.

Almost everyone is buying it -- even most conservatives who should
know better.  However, the most savvy Soviet-watchers can point to a
host of evidence indicating that the so-called "collapse" was
engineered to disarm the West and garner billions in direct aid to
assist Russia while inducing the West to take over the economic
burden of the former satellite states.

But the most ominous evidence is found in defectors from Russia who
tell the same story: Russia is cheating on all aspects of
disarmament, and is siphoning off billions in Western aid money to
modernize and deploy top-of-the-line new weapons systems aimed at
taking down the U.S. military in one huge, decapitating nuclear
strike.

Contrast this with the Clinton administration's response. Incredibly,
while still paying lip service to nuclear deterrence, Assistant
Secretary of Defense Edward L. Warner III went before the Congress on
March 31, 1998, and bragged about the litany of unilateral
disarmament this administration has forced upon the U.S. military:

Warner noted the "success" the Clinton administration has had in
recent years, which has:

Eliminated our entire inventory of ground-launched non-strategic
nuclear weapons (nuclear artillery and Lance surface-to-surface
missiles).

Removed all nonstrategic nuclear weapons on a day-to-day basis from
surface ships, attack submarines, and land-based naval aircraft
bases.

Removed our strategic bombers from alert.

Stood down the Minuteman II ICBMs scheduled for deactivation under
Start I.

Terminated the mobile Peacekeeper and mobile small ICBM programs.

Terminated the SCRAM-II nuclear short-range attack missile.  In
January 1992, the second Presidential Nuclear Initiative took further
steps which included:

Limiting B-2 production to 20 bombers.

Canceling the entire small ICBM program.

Ceasing production of W-88 Trident SLBM (submarine-launched missile)
warheads.

Halting purchases of advanced cruise missiles.

Stopping new production of Peacekeeper missiles (our biggest
MIRV-warhead ICBM).  "As a result of these significant changes, the
U.S. nuclear stockpile has decreased by more than 50 percent," Warner
enthused.

All of this has been done without any meaningful disarmament by the
Russians.

The Clinton administration would counter this charge by citing the
"successful" dismantling of 3,300 strategic nuclear warheads by
Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Belarus, and the destruction of their 252
ICBMs and related silos -- all paid for with U.S. taxpayer funds to
the tune of $300 million per year. But the real story is otherwise.

Yes, Americans paid for the dismantling of these systems -- the
oldest and most out-of-date in the Soviet inventory. They were
scheduled for replacement anyway, so the U.S. taxpayer ended up
saving the Russians over a billion dollars, allowing them to use this
and other Western aid to develop and build new systems, coming on
line right now. But that isn't all.

What the administration doesn't say is that they allowed the Russians
to reclaim all the nuclear warheads, and paid them to recycle the
usable material into new, updated warheads. We didn't diminish the
threat at all.  We only helped them to transform it into something
more dangerous.

Thus, the Russians still maintain a more than 3-to-1 advantage over
the United States in both throw-weight and nuclear delivery vehicles.
That disparity is widening dramatically with the Clinton
administration's unilateral disarmament while at the same time
encouraging the Russians to proceed not only with the deployment of
500 new Topol-M missiles (which are mobile-launched and therefore
difficult to target), but to put three MIRVed warheads on each
missile instead of the treaty limit of one warhead -- for a total
deployment of 1,500 warheads.

Not counting the presumed minimum 4,000 to 6,000 warheads in the
current Russian inventory, these 1,500 new warheads would overwhelm a
measly 200-interceptor ABM system in North Dakota -- which the
Clinton administration is insisting should NOT be deployed before
2005. I wonder why?

With our 50 Peacekeeper ICBMs scheduled to be decommissioned in 2003,
that gives the Russians or Chinese a wide-open window for attack,
should they choose to exercise their first-strike,
nuclear-decapitation option.

So much for the "new realism" of the Clinton disarmament team and
their assertion that Russia poses no threat. Judging strictly by
public data from establishment sources (which is always understated
due to Moscow's heavy shroud of secrecy) the Russian threat is much
greater than it ever was, both in quantity and quality of strategic
nuclear forces. This is thanks, in part, to ongoing technology
transfers by IBM and other defense contractors with the knowing
participation and encouragement of this administration.

Now let's take a close look at this presumed "increased deterrence"
the Clinton Department of Defense is promising. The administration
claims its brand of deterrence is still based on the "mutual assured
destruction" (MAD) concept -- a truly appropriate acronym.

This is the presumption that, since both sides have an overwhelming
capability to destroy each other, that no sane leadership would
engage in nuclear war. Let's examine this closely. MAD could only
stand as a viable assumption if:

Both sides had sufficient weapons and delivery vehicles to inflict
total devastation.

Neither side had an effective anti-ballistic-missile system.

Neither side had electronic jamming capability on its incoming ICBMs.

Neither side had hardened shelters protecting its population and
leadership.  These assumptions clearly do not exist today:

First, we barely have enough nuclear warheads to take out the Russian
arsenal as presently constituted if we used them all at once (which
no sane military commander could afford to do, leaving him with no
reserves).  Russia, on the other hand, has enough to devastate our
entire strategic forces and still retain 60 percent of her weapons in
reserve, for a prolonged conflict.

Second, we have no ABM system to protect against ICBMs at all. Our
dumbed-down and slowed-down Patriots are theater weapons (built to
conform to the flawed ABM Treaty) and can barely catch slow,
low-flying Scud missiles, let alone ICBMs that coming screaming in
from space at 6 to 12 kilometers per second. The Russians have (in
violation of the same ABM Treaty) a nationwide system of ABMs tied to
phased-array radars and satellite guidance systems.

Third, we have no electronic jamming on our missiles to help them
penetrate the Russian ABM system, and the Russians claim their newest
Topol-M missiles do have such a capability. Whether or not this claim
is a bluff is immaterial. The fact is, they are building new,
high-tech missiles and our technology is 10 years old and stagnant.
We are not developing or building anything new. This aspect can only
worsen as time goes on.

Fourth, our civilian population is totally unprotected, while a large
portion of the Russian cities have public fallout shelter facilities.
New bunkers are being constructed for the Russian leadership despite
the economic hardships the people suffer. This should tell us
something about Russian leadership intentions.

Is this Mutually Assured Destruction? Hardly. It equates to United
States Assured Destruction! In every category of deterrence, we are
disarming and stagnant, and the Russians are building and deploying.
There is, in fact, only one type of deterrence that is capable of
somewhat balancing the scales: the nuclear response doctrine of
Launch on Warning.

Launch on Warning takes advantage of the fact that long-range
ballistic missiles take time to arrive on target -- up to 25 minutes,
depending on where the missiles are fired from. If the Russians were
to launch a first strike, our satellites would detect and confirm
that launch within seconds.  In a Launch on Warning doctrine, our
missiles (if on alert status) could be launched before the Russian or
Chinese missiles hit our silos. There is also time to retarget our
missiles so that they are not wasted on Russian silos that are now
empty.

Thus, one of the great advantages for a Launch on Warning doctrine is
that it allows the nation that launches second to have an advantage
over the nation that launches first. The one to launch first wastes a
certain number of its missiles on our silos that are now empty. By
contrast, our missiles (utilizing real-time targeting data from
satellites) strike targets that are still viable.

Now that is deterrence -- a deterrence that we presently do not have
due to PDD-60.

Clinton national security aide Robert Bell proudly proclaimed to a
group of disarmament advocates, "In this PDD, we direct our military
forces to continue to posture themselves in such a way as to not rely
on Launch on Warning -- to be able to absorb a nuclear strike and
still have enough force surviving to constitute credible deterrence."

This is patently preposterous. Respond with what?

We have no mobile missiles to avoid being targeted. We have already
unilaterally agreed to keep over half of our ballistic missile
submarines in port at any one time, so they can easily be targeted.
After all, we don't want our Russian "allies" to feel insecure!

All of our Navy and Air Force strategic forces are incapable of
withstanding a nuclear strike. Even the remaining Trident subs on
patrol would be unable to respond when communication links and
satellites are downed in a first strike.

PDD-60 removes all alternate submarine launch codes so that our subs
cannot fire without direct communication with the president. Those
vital communications links will assuredly not survive a massive first
strike.  When you tell the Russians we are going to absorb a first
strike, you induce them to make sure they hit us with everything
necessary to make sure we cannot respond.

This is not deterrence. This is suicide.

Joel M. Skousen is a political scientist by training and former
chairman of the Conservative National Committee. He is a specialist
in security matters and consults nationwide on "Strategic Relocation"
-- the title of his latest book. Visit his web site here.

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to