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MISSILE DEFENSE
BRIEFING REPORT NO. 206, August 21, 2006
American Foreign Policy Council, Washington, DC
Editor: Ilan
Berman
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BACK
TO BRITAIN
After months of discussions with potential partners in Eastern Europe, the
United States appears to be revisiting the possibility of England as a European
missile defense basing site. According to The Australian (August 16),
British officials have confirmed that the Pentagon has made "discreet inquiries"
about whether London would accept the basing of interceptor missiles and
additional early warning radars on its soil. The shift which comes amid domestic
resistance in both Poland and the Czech Republic to missile defense basing,
could reignite a similar debate in Britain. "A few weeks ago, it looked like we
were out of the woods on this one," one British official has remarked. "That has
changed because [Eastern] Europe no longer looks like such an easy option."
A NEW FOCUS FOR U.S.-ISRAELI MISSILE DEFENSE TIES
The month-long war between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon has given the
already-robust missile defense ties between Washington and Jerusalem another
shot in the arm. Al-Jazeera (August 16) reports that, in the wake of the
just-concluded conflict, which saw the firing of hundreds of Katyusha rockets
against Israeli population centers, the Israeli government is stepping up its
focus on defenses against short-range missiles. As part of this effort, the
Israeli Ministry of Defense is said to have recently requested information from
the Pentagon regarding "Skyguard," a high-energy chemical laser system designed
to destroy incoming artillery rockets and ballistic missiles. "We have been
working with the Israelis... as they go through with development of their own
indigenous capabilities for that threat," Lieutenant General Henry Obering, the
head of the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency, has confirmed.
CLOSING THE GAPS IN CRUISE MISSILE DEFENSE
Inside Defense (August 17) reports that the Pentagon is scrambling to
patch holes in the country's emerging cruise missile defense capabilities after
a recent assessment found "capability gaps" that could persist well into the
next decade. Among other deficiencies, the "Integrated Air and Missile Defense
Functional Needs Analysis" concluded in April by the U.S. Air Force discovered
problems in the North American Aerospace Defense Command's (NORAD) capability to
detect and track small, low-speed and low-altitude targets, as well as a lack of
"common operating picture" between NORAD, the U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM)
and the Air Force's Air Combat Command. In response, the Air Force has launched
a multi-Command study to determine "the best approaches for mitigating high-risk
joint gaps in the [Homeland Air and Cruise Missile Defense of North America]
mission area."
THE LOGIC BEHIND CHINA'S MISSILE EFFORTS
China is deploying a new generation of missiles capable of providing it with a
second-strike nuclear capability in the event of a conflict with the United
States, a top American expert has said. "It is clear to me that China is now
embarking on a significant investment in a second-strike capability to ensure
the survival and, thus, viability of its nuclear forces," Richard Fischer of the
International Assessment and Strategy Center told a July conference at the
American Enterprise Institute in comments carried by Insight on the News
(week of August 1-7). Other specialists concur. "For China, nuclear weapons
largely have four purposes: one, strategic deterrence; two, retaliation; three,
counter-coercion; and four, great-power status," Evan Medeiros, a senior analyst
at the Rand Corporation, told the same conference.
NORTH KOREA'S MOUNTING MISSILE THREAT...
In the wake of its July 4th missile tests, the regime of Kim Jong-il is hard at
work expanding its ability to threaten the United States and its allies in Asia.
The Agence France Presse (August 3), citing South Korea's Yonhap news agency,
reports that the DPRK is building new underground missile bases on its eastern
seaboard in order to target American deployed forces in the region. "The new
bases clustered along the east coastal line are for medium- and long-range
missiles targeting Japan and U.S. military bases in Japan," a study by South
Korea's state-run Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security (IFANS)
cited by the news agency has confirmed. According to the IFANS study, some 200
Rodong and 50 SSN-6 missiles (with ranges of 2,200 kilometers and 2,500-4,000
kilometers, respectively) are already deployed at the new facilities.
...AND THE AMERICAN RESPONSE
The Pentagon, meanwhile, is stepping up the pace of its deployments of Aegis
cruisers to the Pacific. Reuters (August 16) reports that U.S. defense officials
have confirmed plans to double the current deployment of the missile defense
vessels, from three to six, by the end of the year. The accelerated deployment
is expected to provide the U.S. with "more options" for intercepting short- and
medium-range ballistic missiles fired in the region, a top defense official has
confirmed.
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Copyright
© 2006, American Foreign Policy Council.
All Rights Reserved.
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