http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/opinion/columnists/orl-oped-reese061401.co

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Missile-defense plan could backfire on U.S.

By Charley Reese
Published June 14, 2001

It's a heck of a note when you find that reason and logic are on the side of
the Russians and Chinese. But that's the case in regard to George W. Bush's
desire to build an anti-ballistic missile-defense system.

Let's look at the facts. Bush says we need the system to protect us from the
launch by small rogue nations of one or two ICBMs. He often mentions North
Korea and Libya.

This argument is absurd. It is impossible to launch an intercontinental
ballistic missile without the United States knowing precisely where it came
from. Any small country that launched one against us would face certain and
total annihilation.

For this scenario to occur, you would have to have a suicidal lunatic willing
to destroy himself and his country for the dubious pleasure of inflicting
what would be, from the United States point of view, relatively minor damage.
And since no one man can launch an ICBM, you would also need a chain of
command of military officers willing to sacrifice themselves and their
families for, in effect, stinging an elephant. That is simply not believable.

Furthermore, Bush is saying that while the threat of retaliation deterred the
Soviet Union when it had thousands of missiles and warheads, it will not
deter some little two-bit country with only three or four. That doesn't make
sense. It is far more likely that, if some small country wished to do us
harm, it would simply load a warhead on a rusty freighter and detonate it in
the harbor of an American city.

Now when you conclude that Bush's stated reason for scrapping the ABM Treaty
and proceeding to build a defense system is nonsense, you are faced with two
disturbing inferences. One, the leader of a superpower is stupid as is his
whole top echelon of advisers; or two, he is lying and has another reason for
wanting to build an ABM system.

The latter is the far more believable. And, if I were a Russian or a Chinese,
I would infer that his real reason for wanting this system is to nullify any
nuclear deterrent by both China and Russia. In other words, I would conclude
that Bush seeks to have the United States in a position to dominate the world
without fear of challenge.

That being the case, the solution is obvious. The only way to overcome an ABM
system is to throw more missiles at it than it can handle. Hence, the
Russians and the Chinese are telling the truth when they say that if Bush
proceeds, it will set off a nuclear-arms race. Neither country is going to
sit still while the United States achieves nuclear superiority.

I truly cannot understand Bush's reasoning on this issue. I pray he is not so
na�ve as to believe that the Russians and Chinese are going to believe him
when he says he's willing to spend billions of dollars to protect the United
States from small countries. They have already made it clear that they are
not buying his story.

Nor should we make the mistake of thinking the Chinese and the Russians are
too broke to add missiles to their arsenals. Command economies have the
advantage that they can ignore the sacrifices a military buildup would impose
on other areas of the economy. The Russians are already producing a new road-
and rail-mobile ICBM.

For a country that always depicted itself as the champion of peace and
democracy, we have acted strangely since the end of the Cold War. Instead of
disbanding NATO, we expanded it and used it to launch an offensive war
against Yugoslavia. Instead of bringing Russia into the family of Western
nations, we have deliberately poked it in the eye at every opportunity. We
have launched military operations against Panama, Iraq, Sudan and Somalia.
And we continue to peddle advanced armaments all around the world.

From the outside looking in, America must present a picture of an arrogant
bully intent on establishing hegemony over the rest of the world. That is the
road to endless conflicts. It is not the road to peace.

If Bush is sincere about fearing small nations, then he should propose that
Russia, China and the United States pool their money and talent and work
jointly on an ABM system all three countries could deploy. I doubt he will do
that. I fear he will take steps that in the long run will lead the world to
the misery of war.

Americans have traditionally not paid much attention to foreign policy, but
it is by far the most dangerous area. What damage bad domestic policy does
can usually be corrected with a new election and without bloodshed. Mistakes
in foreign relations, however, can have very nasty consequences. Ten million
people died in World War I, which not a single one of the nations involved
wanted to happen. A chain reaction of mistakes, bad judgments, delays and
misunderstandings led to that destructive war.

I would feel better if Bush read more history.

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