5. Missile Defense Commentary
The Council for a Livable World said in a statement that President Bush's speech on missile defense on May 1 only vaguely discussed the threats with which missile defense is to cope. Importantly, said the statement, while missile defense is supposed to be evaluated on the basis of the criteria of cost, technological readiness, effect on arms control, and the presence of a threat, Bush made no mention of the other first three criteria. The statement deconstructs Bush's speech, responding to specific statements with counter-arguments.
"'Fuzzy' Logic on Missile Defense"
James Lindsay and Michael O'Hanlon, Senior Fellows at the Brookings Institution, criticized Bush's speech in an editorial in the Los Angeles Times. They stated that Bush did not elucidate on the proposed US missile defense program, a program that they argue will divert resources from other defense needs and would increase the nuclear and missile threats facing the US. While acknowledging that some aspects of the 1972 ABM Treaty may be outdated, they also said Bush has not justified why it is in US interests to leave Russia and the US unconstrained by the core principles of the treaty.
"Ambiguity Swaddles Bush's Missile Plan"
Gail Collins, in an editorial in the New York Times, argues that missile defense spending will be approved by the US Congress "because nobody ever lost an election by voting for defense appropriations." She contrasts this to the problem of domestic terrorism, which she argues faces bureaucratic infighting, even with the dozen Senate committees and subcommittees attempting to sort through the 46 federal agencies responsible for coping with the threat of domestic terrorism. Collins states that experts would prefer to task Vice President Richard Cheney with the responsibility of coordinating the US response to this threat, "since 'terrorist attack' fits under Dick Cheney's current portfolio of Everything Except Education."
"Beam Me Up, Rummy"