Former
SecDef: Long-Range Standoff Missile a Step to
New Cold War
By Bryant
Jordan
July
15, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Military"
-
A former
secretary of defense under President Bill
Clinton told a Senate panel on Wednesday that
going ahead with development and deployment of
the long-range standoff cruise missile only
makes nuclear holocaust more likely.
"We're
now today on the threshold of a new Cold War.
We're on the threshold of a new nuclear arms
race, and in addition but not related to that
there's a rising threat of nuclear terrorism and
a regional nuclear war," former Defense
Secretary William Perry said. "For all these
reasons, I assert today the likelihood of a
nuclear catastrophe is actually greater than it
was during the Cold War."
Perry,
who served as Pentagon chief from 1993 to 1997,
supported a modernization of the country's
nuclear triad, but said that could be done
without the LRSO. "We can reject a modernization
program that would increase the risk of a
nuclear war by accident or miscalculation," he
said.
Perry's
warnings against moving ahead with the LRSO were
not shared by the panel's other witnesses,
former Clinton Deputy Defense Secretary John
Hamre and Franklin Miller, who served as special
assistant on defense policy and arms control to
President George W. Bush.
Hamre
said the LRSO, which could be air-launched from
about 1,500 miles from its target, is less
provocative than intercontinental ballistic
missiles and would be flown aboard aircraft
that, if necessary, could be recalled before
launch.
He also
rejected Perry's contention that cruise
missiles, because they carry both nuclear and
conventional bombs, could confuse a potential
adversary who might respond to a conventional
bomb launch with a nuclear weapon.
"I do
not think it's a plausible argument that people
will be confused about what we're doing," he
said.
Miller
agreed.
"The
launch of a conventional weapon and the launch
of a nuclear weapon occur in context," he said.
"So the launch of [U.S.] cruise missiles against
Iraq or indeed the launch of Russian cruise
missile against Syria did not raise any
questions of nuclear use."
Russia rebuilding
nuclear forces
Both
men also pointed out that Russia is busy
rebuilding its conventional and nuclear forces,
already has new weapons deployed, and that
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Russia
would launch a nuclear first strike if it
believed its territory was threatened.
Russia
has also engaged in military exercises designed
to combat U.S. and European allies, they said.
Perry
has made his opposition to the LRSO known for
some time. He told lawmakers that to go ahead
with the weapon is to accept the heightened
dangers of a nuclear catastrophe as inevitable.
"Should
we accept it as inevitable? If not, where do we
draw the line?" he asked. He also said that if
he believed not having the LRSO would jeopardize
the U.S.'s ability to deter a nuclear threat
from any adversary, he would support it.
Advocates of the LRSO believe it is necessary to
ensure that the U.S. can strike deep into
contested airspace with a nuclear weapon if
necessary without relying on manned bombers.
The
modernization program, including the LRSO, has
backing from much of Congress and the White
House.
Hamre
also noted that the program already is fully
funded.
"It's
not about trying to use it," Hamre said, "It's
about having flexibility."
"Nobody
ever talks about the impact of these [weapons],
about what they do," said ranking member Sen.
Dianne Feinstein, D-California. "It's always
deterrence, it's always more, more, more, newer,
newer, newer. … It's hard for me to accept this
as the answer, because the answer to it really
lies in reason and understanding and diplomacy
and work between leaders."
What is
not needed, she said, is a "hardening of
attitude when both sides are developing new
nuclear weapons."
As a
woman, she said, she thinks about what the
nuclear bombs "would do if dropped."
"It's
not mentioned by the men -- ever," she said.
"But it's a very big deal if you vote for this."
Bearing
responsibility
Perry
has been open about his opposition to the LRSO
for some time.
Though
he agrees that with the rise of Vladimir Putin
Russia has engaged in reckless actions -- in
particular in Georgia, Crimea and Ukraine -- he
said the U.S. bears some responsibility for its
current relationship with Russia.
He told
the panel that "a series of questionable policy
decisions in the United States alienated us from
Russia" starting in the 1990s.
Though
none of the lawmakers asked and he did not
elaborate, Perry has previously said that
warming relations and cooperation that the U.S.
and Russia enjoyed after the collapse of the
Soviet Union began to fall apart when the U.S.
moved aggressively to expand NATO into Eastern
Europe.
President George H.W. Bush, in office when the
Soviet Union collapsed, reportedly had pledged
NATO would not push eastward. That changed
during Clinton's presidency.
Perry
said that in the first years after Russia shook
off communism. the U.S. and Russia cooperated in
dismantling 8,000 nuclear weapons, and Russia
even embedded a brigade into an American
military division for a peacekeeping mission in
Bosnia.
"So at
that time I believed we had ended the Cold War,
that we ended the threat of a nuclear holocaust.
That was not to be," he told lawmakers.
-- Bryant Jordan can be reached
at
Bryant.jordan@military.com. Follow him on
Twitter at@BryantJordan.