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The following op-ed appeared in the New York Times on September 20, 2009
A Better Missile Defense For A Safer Europe
By Robert M. Gates, US Secretary of Defense
THE future of missile defense in Europe is secure. This reality is contrary to what some critics have alleged about President Obama's proposed shift in America's missile-defense plans on the continent - and it is important to understand how and why.
First, to be clear, there is now no strategic missile defense in
Europe. In December 2006, just days after becoming secretary of
defense, I recommended to President George W. Bush that the United
States place 10 ground-based interceptors in Poland and an advanced
radar in the Czech Republic. This system was designed to identify and
destroy up to about five long-range missiles potentially armed with
nuclear warheads fired from the Middle East - the greatest and most
likely danger being from Iran. At the time, it was the best plan based
on the technology and threat assessment available.
That plan would have put the radar and interceptors in Central Europe
by 2015 at the earliest. Delays in the Polish and Czech ratification
process extended that schedule by at least two years. Which is to say,
under the previous program, there would have been no missile-defense
system able to protect against Iranian missiles until at least 2017 -
and likely much later.
Last week, President Obama - on my recommendation and with the advice
of his national-security team and the unanimous support of our senior
military leadership - decided to discard that plan in favor of a
vastly more suitable approach. In the first phase, to be completed by
2011, we will deploy proven, sea-based SM-3 interceptor missiles -
weapons that are growing in capability - in the areas where we see the
greatest threat to Europe.
The second phase, which will become operational around 2015, will
involve putting upgraded SM-3s on the ground in Southern and Central
Europe. All told, every phase of this plan will include scores of SM-3
missiles, as opposed to the old plan of just 10 ground-based
interceptors. This will be a far more effective defense should an
enemy fire many missiles simultaneously - the kind of attack most
likely to occur as Iran continues to build and deploy numerous short-
and medium-range weapons. At the same time, plans to defend virtually
all of Europe and enhance the missile defense of the United States
will continue on about the same schedule as the earlier plan as we
build this system over time, creating an increasingly greater zone of
protection.
Steady technological advances in our missile defense program - from
kill vehicles to the abilities to network radars and sensors - give us
confidence in this plan. The SM-3 has had eight successful tests since
2007, and we will continue to develop it to give it the capacity to
intercept long-range missiles like ICBMs. It is now more than able to
deal with the threat from multiple short- and medium- range missiles -
a very real threat to our allies and some 80,000 American troops based
in Europe that was not addressed by the previous plan. Even so, our
military will continue research and development on a two-stage
ground-based interceptor, the kind that was planned to be put in
Poland, as a back-up.
Moreover, a fixed radar site like the one previously envisioned for
the Czech Republic would be far less adaptable than the airborne,
space- and ground-based sensors we now plan to use. These systems
provide much more accurate data, offer more early warning and tracking
options, and have stronger networking capacity - a key factor in any
system that relies on partner countries. This system can also better
use radars that are already operating across the globe, like updated
cold war-era installations, our newer arrays based on high-powered
X-band radar, allied systems and possibly even Russian radars.
One criticism of this plan is that we are relying too much on new
intelligence holding that Iran is focusing more on short- and
medium-range weapons and not progressing on intercontinental missiles.
Having spent most of my career at the C.I.A., I am all too familiar
with the pitfalls of over-reliance on intelligence assessments that
can become outdated. As Gen. James Cartwright, the vice chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said a few days ago, we would be surprised
if the assessments did not change because "the enemy gets a vote."
The new approach to European missile defense actually provides us with greater flexibility to adapt as new threats develop and old ones recede. For example, the new proposal provides some antimissile capacity very soon - a hedge against Iran's managing to field missiles much earlier than had been previously predicted. The old plan offered nothing for almost a decade.
Those who say we are scrapping missile defense in Europe are either
misinformed or misrepresenting what we are doing. This shift has even
been distorted as some sort of concession to Russia, which has
fiercely opposed the old plan. Russia's attitude and possible reaction
played no part in my recommendation to the president on this issue. Of
course, considering Russia's past hostility toward American missile
defense in Europe, if Russia's leaders embrace this plan, then that
will be an unexpected - and welcome - change of policy on their part.
But in any case the facts are clear: American missile defense on the
continent will continue, and not just in Central Europe, the most
likely location for future SM-3 sites, but, we hope, in other NATO
countries as well.
This proposal is, simply put, a better way forward - as was recognized
by Prime Minister Donald Tusk of Poland when he called it "a chance
for strengthening Europe's security." It is a very real manifestation
of our continued commitment to our NATO allies in Europe - iron-clad
proof that the United States believes that the alliance must remain
firm.
I am often characterized as "pragmatic." I believe this is a very
pragmatic proposal. I have found since taking this post that when it
comes to missile defense, some hold a view bordering on theology that
regards any change of plans or any cancellation of a program as
abandonment or even breaking faith. I encountered this in the debate
over the Defense Department's budget for the fiscal year 2010 when I
ended three programs: the airborne laser, the multiple-kill vehicle
and the kinetic energy interceptor. All were plainly unworkable,
prohibitively expensive and could never be practically deployed - but
had nonetheless acquired a devoted following.
I have been a strong supporter of missile defense ever since President Ronald Reagan first proposed it in 1983. But I want to have real capacity as soon as possible, and to take maximum advantage of new technologies to combat future threats.
The bottom line is that there will be American missile defense in Europe to protect our troops there and our NATO allies. The new proposal provides needed capacity years earlier than the original plan, and will provide even more robust protection against longer-range threats on about the same timeline as the previous program. We are strengthening - not scrapping - missile defense in Europe.