Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20001-5403

Phone (202) 842 0200
Fax (202) 842 3490
Contact Us
Support Cato

June 27, 2000
Foreign Policy Briefing no. 58

Let's Make National Missile Defense Truly "National"

by Ivan Eland


PRINT PAGE
CITE THIS
  Sans Serif
  Serif

Share with your friends:

Not all proposals for deploying a national missile defense live up to their name. Many are for "international" missile defense systems that would also defend U.S. allies and "friends," even though they are wealthy enough to build their own missile defenses. For example, some policymakers and analysts on both the left and the right advocate sea-based missile defense as a substitute for the Clinton administration's limited land-based system, which is designed to protect only the territory of the United States. Conservatives would like to build a more comprehensive, layered defense consisting of sea- and space-based weapons or land-, sea-, and space-based weapons. George W. Bush, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, is clear that he wants a comprehensive defense to defend U.S. allies and seems to favor the latter approach.

Any defense expenditure--including spending on missile defense--must be commensurate with the threat. More robust missile defenses are not justified by the limited threat. Also, sinking large amounts of funds into more comprehensive missile defenses--when even the Clinton administration's limited system might fail because of technical risk or lack of adequate testing--is questionable.

Ivan Eland is director of defense policy studies at the Cato Institute.

The main objective of conservatives in supporting more robust missile defense systems does not seem to be defense of the U.S. homeland. Instead, their aim seems to be to create a stronger shield behind which the United States can move against potential regional adversaries possessing weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles to deliver them. The reasoning is that, if such adversaries cannot threaten the United States or its allies with catastrophic retaliation, U.S. policymakers will feel more confident in intervening militarily. But because any missile defense system cannot guarantee that all incoming warheads will be destroyed, that reasoning is a dangerous illusion that could actually undermine U.S. security. Thus, development of a missile shield should be confined to the more limited land-based system that the Clinton administration has proposed.

Download the PDF of Foreign Policy Briefing no. 58 (61 KB)
Get Acrobat Reader Get Adobe Reader


Share with your friends:  

Full text of Foreign Policy Briefing no. 58

© 2009 The Cato Institute
Please send comments to webmaster