3. NMD Deployment Decision
US Defense Secretary William Cohen appears to be leaning toward a recommendation that President Clinton take the first step toward deploying a national missile defense system, but he is likely to take another week or two. If Cohen were to determine that 2006 or 2007 is a more reasonable target date than 2005, he might proceed with the first phase of construction in Alaska to better the odds of meeting that timetable.
"Cohen May OK Missile Defense System"
The Council for a Livable World published the respective platforms of the Democratic and Republican parties on the US proposed National Missile Defense (NMD) programs. The draft of the Democratic platform has eliminated a point-blank endorsement of development of a limited national missile defense system, and now endorses "the development of the technology" of a system and says that the four criteria of threat, technological feasibility, cost, and impact on national security should be considered before a deployment decision is made. The Republican Party's adopted platform calls for deploying at the earliest possible date a defense system which can protect from missile attack all fifty states, US forces overseas, and US allies. It continues that a Republican president would withdraw the US from the 1972 ABM Treaty if Russia does not permit it to be amended.
"Democratic and Republican Platforms on NMD"