Thursday, September 17, 2009

Pentagon Discuses Scrapping of Bush European Missile Defense Agreement

News in Balance

News in Balance:

WASHINGTON, Sept. 17, 2009 -- President Barack Obama today fulfilled a campaign promise by announcing that he is scrapping plans for a missile defense system in Europe in favor of one he claims will provide greater flexibility and faster deployment of legacy technologies.

“This new approach will provide capabilities sooner, build on proven systems, and offer greater defenses against the threat of missile attack than the 2007 European missile defense program,” Obama said.

The 2007 plan, put in place by the Bush Administration, called for fixed radars to be positioned in the Czech Republic, and 10 interceptor missiles in Poland.

U.S defense officials said the system would protect its allies in Europe and the United States against ballistic missile attacks launched from the Middle East, specifically Iran.

The new plan is based on recent intelligence reports that reassess Iran's weapons capabilities to show short-and medium-range ballistic missiles to be developing more rapidly than projected, and intercontinental ballistic missile capabilities developing much slower than estimated.

Under the new Obama plan, the United States will begin building the missile defense system in a phased approach. First, by 2011, it will field its current radars and interceptors, such as the Navy's Aegis-equipped ships, with the Standard Missile 3 interceptor. The system has proven its capabilities in the past few years, specifically when it stopped a crippled reconnaissance satellite over the Pacific Ocean before it re-entered Earth's atmosphere in February 2008.

This puts in place a defense system in northern and southern Europe that can protect against the more immediate threats from Iran nearly seven years earlier than the plan for installing the ground-based interceptors in Poland, officials said.

The plan is to then build on the system, eventually installing some ground-based radars and interceptors, enlarging the defense system’s range, and continuing to augment the system with sea-based systems that can position themselves according to the threat.

“To put it simply, our new missile defense architecture in Europe will provide stronger, smarter and swifter defenses of American forces and America's allies,” Obama said. “It is more comprehensive than the previous program; it deploys capabilities that are proven and cost-effective; and it sustains and builds upon our commitment to protect the U.S. homeland against long-range ballistic missile threats; and it ensures and enhances the protection of all our NATO allies.”

The new plan alleviates some concerns of Russian leaders, who strongly opposed the positioning of the ground-based interceptors and radar system so near its borders.

U.S. officials traveled several times to Moscow to discuss the system’s intention with the Kremlin. The United States offered to allow Russia to have representatives at each site, if the host nation agreed, to provide technical monitoring of activities. The United States promised it would not make the sites operational until the Iranians had tested a missile that could reach most of Western Europe, including parts of Russia.

Still, defense officials said it is likely Russia will not fully embrace any U.S. plans for a missile defense system in Europe.

The Associated Press today reported that the the world's top atomic watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said Iran now has the ability to make a nuclear bomb and is on the way to developing a missile system able to carry an atomic warhead.

(From a report by Fred W. Baker III, American Forces Press Service, and additional newswire sources.)

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Lisa said...

I hope this is a positive move in the right direction for our country.

10:38 PM EDT  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's just like the other positive moves that have brought us an unadjusted 16 percent unemployment, the passing of spending bills no one bothered to read, the taxpayer's funding of ACORN, and the growing division in this country. Elected Democrats think it's OK to vilify everyone, including a majority of the American people, just to stay in power.

If you want to see if this is the right decision is, look at the European press' reaction. They think we abandoned them.

7:10 AM EDT  

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