
#8
Los Angeles Times
October 17, 2001
Sept. 11 Verdict: Yes to Missile Defense
By PHILIP H. GORDON and MICHAEL E. O'HANLON
Philip H. Gordon and Michael E. O'Hanlon are senior fellows at the Brookings
Institution
Predictably, both supporters and opponents of ballistic missile defenses
claim that the events of Sept. 11 strengthen their case. Proponents claim that
the attacks showed that we need to protect ourselves against unexpected but
devastating threats, while opponents point out that the terrorists did not need
ballistic missiles--merely knives and box cutters--to perpetrate their crimes.
President Bush weighed in on the debate last week, arguing that there is no
better example of the new threats we face than the Sept. 11 attacks and that
"the case is more strong today than it was on Sept. 10 that the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty is outmoded." Bush has a point that the
attacks reinforce the case for missile defense, but only for a defense limited
in size and scale, and deployed in a way that does not threaten other great
powers. Bush will need to show that he understands this point when he meets with
Russian and Chinese leaders this weekend at the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation summit in Shanghai. Opponents of missile defense are clearly right
that a wide range of threats to the United States exists and that addressing
such threats requires resources. If missile defense becomes an exclusive
obsession, we may devote too few dollars to counter other, more likely threats
through means such as airport security, the Coast Guard, immigration and customs
agencies and defenses against chemical or biological attack with "suitcase
bombs." Leading Democrats already were making these arguments before Sept.
11.
Unconstrained pursuit of missile defense could also worsen relations among
the major powers, impeding security cooperation on dangers that may be even more
pressing. To deal with the terrorist threat, for example, we need the
cooperation of Russia and China, primarily to cut off terrorists' access to
financial resources and to track them down through intelligence, customs and law
enforcement activities. We also need Russian and Chinese help to put diplomatic
pressure on key regional players such as Pakistan and Iran and to halt
proliferation so that the next terrorist attack does not involve a weapon of
mass destruction.
These realities do not mean that U.S. foreign policy must be designed to
please Beijing and Moscow. But we must avoid making them feel threatened if we
want them on our side. Given their own sense of the threat from Islamic
fundamentalism, China and Russia are likely to join forces with the United
States in this fight if we play our cards right.
As missile defense proponents rightly argue, however, the Sept. 11 attacks
remind us that seemingly remote or abstract dangers can become tragically real
very quickly. That fact bolsters the case for some type of long-range missile
defense. Currently, among extremist countries only North Korea is believed to be
capable of developing a long-range missile within a few years, but countries
such as Iraq and Iran might have them within a decade.
It is true that terrorists probably will never use long-range ballistic
missiles against the United States. They do not have the resources to acquire
them or the territory on which to base them. Moreover, they can seek to
accomplish their hateful goals with less advanced means, such as dispersing
biological agents at a sporting event or blowing up a cargo ship full of
chemicals as it approaches a port.
Yet even if terrorists may not find ballistic missiles useful, an enemy
country might. Being able to threaten the United States with a biological or
nuclear weapon on a ballistic missile could allow an adversary state to act
aggressively against its neighbors in the hopes that, with Americans at risk,
Washington would not retaliate. A hostile state armed with ballistic missiles
could also harbor terrorists such as Osama bin Laden, with the knowledge that a
U.S. with no missile defense would be highly reluctant to threaten enough force
to capture him or overthrow the country's ruling regime.
The lesson of the terrorist attacks is not that the U.S. should abandon all
missile defense plans. Rather, it should pursue a limited long-range missile
defense within a framework that reassures Russia and China and that does not
hinder other efforts to defend the U.S. against threats that are even more
imminent.
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