usman_1112
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Missile defense shield Pretext for a new arms race.
Ballistic missile launch by North Korea has apparently changed the position of US President Barack Obama, who stated in Prague (5 April) he now wants the Central Europe-based missile defence shield to be built The United States will develop anti-missile defences as long as an Iranian nuclear threat persists, and North Korea must be made to change after its rocket launch, President Obama said in Prague in a major speech focusing on nuclear non-proliferation. The system would use radar in the Czech Republic to detect and track an Iranian missile, with interceptor missiles fired from batteries in Poland to stop such an attack.
Planning for the shield began in fiscal 2007, and the system will receive $456 million in fiscal 2009. Between 100 to 200 troops, contractors and Defense Department civilians could be running each site with everything operational by 2013 if host-nation agreements are ratified.
Russia has received new U.S. proposals on confidence measures on the missile defense issue and the reduction of strategic arms, a source with the Russian Foreign Ministry .--As to the missile defense issue, Rood said that the document in particular includes new proposals on securing the access of Russian officers to missile defense facilities in Poland and the Czech Republic.
As to strategic arms, he said that this document is a follow-on to the START I of 1991, which expires in December 2009, and was sent to Moscow. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 bans the build up or stockage of military weapons including nuclear arms or weapons of mass destruction -- in orbit and their installation on the moon, but not the shooting down of satellites."Weapons deployment in space by one state will inevitably result in a chain reaction.
And this, in turn, is fraught with a new spiral in the arms race both in space and on the earth Ballistic Missile Defence is not mentioned in the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP), or EU Strategies on Security or Weapons of Mass Destruction. The Secretary General of the Council of the European Union, Javier Solana, has said that the EU has no plans to participate in a US anti-missile system but that its member states are free to join if they wish.
However, members may consider that the relevance of the issue to the whole of Europe USSR, CHINA, India, Pakistan, Japan,Brazil,South Africa, would suggest that Poland and the Czech Republic should at least consult with other states before making a deal with the US.
Russia in strongly criticizing the missile defense plan, which would build a radar base near Prague as part of a missile shield The question today is does Europe need an anti-missile defense shield and it is Undoubtedly being posed at this time because of the recent request by the United States to position bases in the Czech Republic and Poland as part of its National Missile Defence (NMD) system.
Within Europe there is some unease about the deteriorating U.S.-Russian relationship.German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has been quoted in a newspaper article in March as saying that, in protecting against a possible Iranian threat, the price of security must not be new suspicion or, worse still, fresh insecurity.
He also stated that [We cannot allow a missile defense system to be either a reason or a pretext for a new arms race. The arms race may already be with us. Russia has already announced new additions to its armoury to overcome the missile shield and missile defence encourages nuclear states to enlarge their arsenals so as to keep their deterrent effective.
Russia is to build new space and missile defence shields and put its armed forces on permanent combat alert, President Medvedev announced September 27, 2008.
It can therefore be accused of being responsible for contravening the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Barack Obama is keeping people guessing about whether he will pursue a Bush administration plan to set up a missile shield in central Europe but analysts say Russia has shot itself in the foot with threats to deploy missiles in retaliation. Analysts see the threats as amounting to loose rhetoric and do not expect a showdown that will test Obama during his first six months in office after his inauguration as president on January 20.
Hours after Obama's victory on Wednesday, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced plans to deploy Iskander short-range missiles in the western Russian territory of Kaliningrad, wedged between Lithuania and Poland, in response to US plans for a missile shield in former Soviet bloc territory.
What is the threat of missile attack?
How effective is missile defence likely to be?
What are the consequences of deploying a European missile defence system?
Are there alternative forms of action?
Before we look at these we will need to say something about what missile defence systems are.
What is Missile Defence?
The US Ground Based Mid Course Defence (GMD) system currently consists of some 40silo-based interceptors at Ft Greely, Alaska and Four at Vandenberg AFB, California. There would also be 130 interceptors based on. There are also associated ground based early warning and tracking radars, including those at Thule in Greenland and Fylingdales in the UK (recently upgraded for the NMD role) and a $1 billion sea-based X-band radar to track, discriminate and assess targets from a mobile semi-submersible platform in the Aleutian Islands. The US has proposed that a further 10 interceptors be based in Poland and a modified Xband radar system moved to the Czech Republic.
The U.S. claims it needs to have these sites operational by 2012 in order to counter any possible future threat from Iran or North Korea. Although originally conceived as a system for long range missiles aimed at the US, the suggestion now is that it be combined with the missile defence system under consideration by NATO to form an integrated European defence system.
A Charter for an Active Layered Theatre Ballistic Missile Defence (ALTBMD) was approved by NATO in March 2005. The 20-year cost of this undertaking is reported to be 1 billion euros and in addition some 20 billion euros would be spent by individual member states on missile defence batteries. Increasing costs are the cause of some concern; most European NATO states are unable or unwilling to increase spending on defence as other concerns such as education and health take precedence. Despite this, NATO is considering extending the system to protect population centres - leading to the possible eventual integration with the US NMD system.
What is the threat?
None of the EU member states appears to have any immediate concern about the threat of a missile attack. There are differences of opinion within NATO on the assessment of threats from states of concern but even NATOs own parliamentary assembly does not have immediate access to classified threat assessments carried out on their behalf. It does seem odd that parliamentary democracies are expected to act on and pay for threat assessments and feasibility studies that they are not even allowed to see.
The United States is very concerned about the threat of missile attack and successive US governments have continued to fund and develop a cut-down version of President Reagans unrealistic idea of a missile defence umbrella. In the justification of their 2008
budget request for European NMD sites the US Missile Defence Agency stated that the bases are needed to improve protection of the United States by protecting its existing European based radars and providing additional and earlier intercept opportunities.
Currently Iran has no nuclear warheads and may not obtain any for some time (if at all). It does however, posses a medium-range ballistic missile with a range of 1,200kms but has denied that it is developing the next generation with a range of 2,900kms. Although that denial may be controversial what is certain is that they are not developing the Shahab-5 which, with a range of 6,000kms, would be able to reach greater parts of Europe but still not threaten the US (some 10,000kms away).
It has been predicted that Iran may possibly develop missiles that could reach the US by 2015 at the earliest. However, placing a primitive nuclear warhead on an unreliable ballistic missile would be a risky and costly business and even if successful would result in a retaliation so devastating that it would mean national suicide.
Additionally, the shield will be integrated within NATOs structure, which means that NATO will most likely place an Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) base in Poland. The AGS base will create at least 3,000 new NATO jobs in Poland and will be the first base of this type ever to be built in a Central or Eastern European country.
Because of the initial missile shield agreement signed between the United States and Poland in August 2008, Poland will receive a Patriot III missile battery in 2009 in order to address potential threats from Russia or other nuclear states. This missile battery will most certainly have U.S. military personnel tied to it as well. It is important to note that despite what decisions are made regarding the shield this year, Poland will most likely receive this Patriot III missile battery. Having an American Patriot III missile battery and U.S. personnel on Polish territory inextricably ties the U.S. military to defending Polish territory.
What are the costs of this missile defense program? Between 1983 and 2008, the United States spent a total of $120 billion on missile defense. $56 billion of this was from between 2002 and 2009. the government has spent $144 billion on missile defense since 1985, according to the CBO
According to the most conservative predictions, the U.S. is likely to spend another $50 billion between 2009 and 2013. according to some estimates cost the U.S. at least $95 billion, which excludes replacing infrastructure and the impact on financial markets.
Even if the shield is better than complacency, does the missile defense system even work? Since September 2005, the Missile Defense Agency has successfully conducted 25 out of 26 tests.4 However, it is important to note that these tests did not include decoy missiles. If a rogue nation attacks the U.S. or its allies, it would most definitely use decoys of some sort. In short, these successful tests occurred when the Defense Department knew the exact time, location, and trajectory of the missile launch. Additionally, the type of missile used in the interceptors in Poland will be standard missile-2. The missiles in American defenses in California and Alaska are standard missile-3 (SM-3) and all the previous missile tests have also been conducted on SM-3. Therefore, President Obama could technically and accurately claim that the missiles to be used in the interceptors in Poland have never been tested and are not proven to work.
.The US is preparing for a future potential threat rather than an imminent one. Their desire to place interceptors in Europe requires European co-operation and this can be hastened by persuading Europe that there is an imminent threat to them. There is no evidence that Iran wishes to attack Europe. Their reason for developing a nuclear capability (if they are) could well be the same as that claimed by all nuclear states for deterrence purposes.
Effectiveness President George W. Bush unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in 2002, in order to build an effective missile defence system.
annual report of the Pentagons testing office, released earlier this year,stated that a lack of flight-test data limits confidence in assessments of the system.
A report by the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) in March this year concluded that the system has not completed sufficient flight testing to provide a high level of confidence that [it] can reliably intercept ICBMs. In addition the system can be readily overcome by numbers. Ten interceptors would be seriously challenged by eleven or more real or decoy warheads. There is an added complication for the proposed European interceptor site. The groundbased interceptor missiles in Poland will only need to be two-stage missiles rather than the three-stage interceptors in Alaska and California. Research and development on a twostage interceptor has only just begun.
There is also a question as to whether testing of the new intercepts would be illegal under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty which eliminated nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500kms. If it cant be tested, how will we know if it works? So, with missile defence we seem to be considering the use of interceptor missiles that have not so far been developed as part of a costly, unproven system that is easily overcome to defend against a threat that probably doesnt exist.
What are the consequences?
The cost of building the bases in Poland and Czech Republic is estimated to be some $3.5 billion and there is also a probability that the program would later be extended to protect all European territory by the inclusion of sea-based missiles and missile tracking systems in space at considerable (but unspecified) extra cost. The technological problems
encountered in developments of this kind are complex and cannot be accurately predicted and massive extra costs and overruns are common.
Perhaps the biggest problem with missile defence however, is how its development is perceived by others. It is argued by some that a workable missile shield would enable the U.S. to strike first with nuclear weapons as any limited retaliation could be dealt with effectively. Even if this is not the intention, it is easy to see how the antagonistic nature of U.S. defence policy leads many states to this conclusion. The highly accurate nuclear missiles in the U.S. arsenal are not required by deterrence but could be used to destroy enemy missile silos.
The proposed new U.S. NMD bases are in states formerly in an alliance with Russia which the US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently included in a list of potential threats to US security. Is it so surprising then that Russia has reacted strongly to the NMD proposals calling them an unfriendly step with President Putin threatening to target European sites with nuclear weapons? The U.S. says that the missiles are not aimed at Russia.
However, an analysis of the geographic locations and missile trajectories shows that the radar and interceptors could be deployed against Russian missiles from some of its western launch sites and even though 10 interceptors clearly do not pose a threat to the 500 or so missiles in Russias nuclear arsenal
A Russian Foreign Ministry statement suggests that: one cannot ignore the fact that U.S. offensive weapons, combined with the missile defense being created, can turn into a strategic complex capable of delivering an incapacitating blow. The U.S. proposal to include Russia in further cooperation on missile defenses has generated an interesting response from President Putin who has suggested joint US Russian use of an early warning radar in Gabala, Azerbaijan.
This radar would give a good coverage of missiles from Iran but not of Russian launches because of an intervening range of mountains. However, the U.S. has now said this cannot replace the proposed Czech radar. Within Europe there is some conmcern. In the 2003 EU document entitled A Secure Europe in a Better World, European Security Strategy, we find the following: In contrast to the massive visible threat in the Cold War, none of the new threats is purely military; nor can any be tackled by purely military means. Each requires a mixture of instruments.
The Obama Administrations recent announcement to cut missile defense isnt exactly logical, Missile Defenses Are Necessary to Fighting the Wars America Is in, but Secretary Gates Proposes Cutting the Missile Defense Budget by $1.4 Billion. Secretary Gates is fond of saying that he is focused on re-balancing the Department of Defense's programs
Missile Defence is an example of an instrument applied too late. There is a danger that if a convincing defence against missiles did exist we would put too much faith in that and not enough effort in preventing situations getting to the stage where it might be deployed and engage with states outside to build mutual trust and security. Indeed, if we are to survive as a civilization, as a species, even as a planet, we need to learn how to develop technologies for a positive future and tolerate cultural differences. This is our greatest challenge and to fail is unthinkable.why amercian want to make peace of world fargile just need to study
usman karim based in lahore lmno25@hotmail.com
Ballistic missile launch by North Korea has apparently changed the position of US President Barack Obama, who stated in Prague (5 April) he now wants the Central Europe-based missile defence shield to be built The United States will develop anti-missile defences as long as an Iranian nuclear threat persists, and North Korea must be made to change after its rocket launch, President Obama said in Prague in a major speech focusing on nuclear non-proliferation. The system would use radar in the Czech Republic to detect and track an Iranian missile, with interceptor missiles fired from batteries in Poland to stop such an attack.
Planning for the shield began in fiscal 2007, and the system will receive $456 million in fiscal 2009. Between 100 to 200 troops, contractors and Defense Department civilians could be running each site with everything operational by 2013 if host-nation agreements are ratified.
Russia has received new U.S. proposals on confidence measures on the missile defense issue and the reduction of strategic arms, a source with the Russian Foreign Ministry .--As to the missile defense issue, Rood said that the document in particular includes new proposals on securing the access of Russian officers to missile defense facilities in Poland and the Czech Republic.
As to strategic arms, he said that this document is a follow-on to the START I of 1991, which expires in December 2009, and was sent to Moscow. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 bans the build up or stockage of military weapons including nuclear arms or weapons of mass destruction -- in orbit and their installation on the moon, but not the shooting down of satellites."Weapons deployment in space by one state will inevitably result in a chain reaction.
And this, in turn, is fraught with a new spiral in the arms race both in space and on the earth Ballistic Missile Defence is not mentioned in the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP), or EU Strategies on Security or Weapons of Mass Destruction. The Secretary General of the Council of the European Union, Javier Solana, has said that the EU has no plans to participate in a US anti-missile system but that its member states are free to join if they wish.
However, members may consider that the relevance of the issue to the whole of Europe USSR, CHINA, India, Pakistan, Japan,Brazil,South Africa, would suggest that Poland and the Czech Republic should at least consult with other states before making a deal with the US.
Russia in strongly criticizing the missile defense plan, which would build a radar base near Prague as part of a missile shield The question today is does Europe need an anti-missile defense shield and it is Undoubtedly being posed at this time because of the recent request by the United States to position bases in the Czech Republic and Poland as part of its National Missile Defence (NMD) system.
Within Europe there is some unease about the deteriorating U.S.-Russian relationship.German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has been quoted in a newspaper article in March as saying that, in protecting against a possible Iranian threat, the price of security must not be new suspicion or, worse still, fresh insecurity.
He also stated that [We cannot allow a missile defense system to be either a reason or a pretext for a new arms race. The arms race may already be with us. Russia has already announced new additions to its armoury to overcome the missile shield and missile defence encourages nuclear states to enlarge their arsenals so as to keep their deterrent effective.
Russia is to build new space and missile defence shields and put its armed forces on permanent combat alert, President Medvedev announced September 27, 2008.
It can therefore be accused of being responsible for contravening the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Barack Obama is keeping people guessing about whether he will pursue a Bush administration plan to set up a missile shield in central Europe but analysts say Russia has shot itself in the foot with threats to deploy missiles in retaliation. Analysts see the threats as amounting to loose rhetoric and do not expect a showdown that will test Obama during his first six months in office after his inauguration as president on January 20.
Hours after Obama's victory on Wednesday, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced plans to deploy Iskander short-range missiles in the western Russian territory of Kaliningrad, wedged between Lithuania and Poland, in response to US plans for a missile shield in former Soviet bloc territory.
What is the threat of missile attack?
How effective is missile defence likely to be?
What are the consequences of deploying a European missile defence system?
Are there alternative forms of action?
Before we look at these we will need to say something about what missile defence systems are.
What is Missile Defence?
The US Ground Based Mid Course Defence (GMD) system currently consists of some 40silo-based interceptors at Ft Greely, Alaska and Four at Vandenberg AFB, California. There would also be 130 interceptors based on. There are also associated ground based early warning and tracking radars, including those at Thule in Greenland and Fylingdales in the UK (recently upgraded for the NMD role) and a $1 billion sea-based X-band radar to track, discriminate and assess targets from a mobile semi-submersible platform in the Aleutian Islands. The US has proposed that a further 10 interceptors be based in Poland and a modified Xband radar system moved to the Czech Republic.
The U.S. claims it needs to have these sites operational by 2012 in order to counter any possible future threat from Iran or North Korea. Although originally conceived as a system for long range missiles aimed at the US, the suggestion now is that it be combined with the missile defence system under consideration by NATO to form an integrated European defence system.
A Charter for an Active Layered Theatre Ballistic Missile Defence (ALTBMD) was approved by NATO in March 2005. The 20-year cost of this undertaking is reported to be 1 billion euros and in addition some 20 billion euros would be spent by individual member states on missile defence batteries. Increasing costs are the cause of some concern; most European NATO states are unable or unwilling to increase spending on defence as other concerns such as education and health take precedence. Despite this, NATO is considering extending the system to protect population centres - leading to the possible eventual integration with the US NMD system.
What is the threat?
None of the EU member states appears to have any immediate concern about the threat of a missile attack. There are differences of opinion within NATO on the assessment of threats from states of concern but even NATOs own parliamentary assembly does not have immediate access to classified threat assessments carried out on their behalf. It does seem odd that parliamentary democracies are expected to act on and pay for threat assessments and feasibility studies that they are not even allowed to see.
The United States is very concerned about the threat of missile attack and successive US governments have continued to fund and develop a cut-down version of President Reagans unrealistic idea of a missile defence umbrella. In the justification of their 2008
budget request for European NMD sites the US Missile Defence Agency stated that the bases are needed to improve protection of the United States by protecting its existing European based radars and providing additional and earlier intercept opportunities.
Currently Iran has no nuclear warheads and may not obtain any for some time (if at all). It does however, posses a medium-range ballistic missile with a range of 1,200kms but has denied that it is developing the next generation with a range of 2,900kms. Although that denial may be controversial what is certain is that they are not developing the Shahab-5 which, with a range of 6,000kms, would be able to reach greater parts of Europe but still not threaten the US (some 10,000kms away).
It has been predicted that Iran may possibly develop missiles that could reach the US by 2015 at the earliest. However, placing a primitive nuclear warhead on an unreliable ballistic missile would be a risky and costly business and even if successful would result in a retaliation so devastating that it would mean national suicide.
Additionally, the shield will be integrated within NATOs structure, which means that NATO will most likely place an Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) base in Poland. The AGS base will create at least 3,000 new NATO jobs in Poland and will be the first base of this type ever to be built in a Central or Eastern European country.
Because of the initial missile shield agreement signed between the United States and Poland in August 2008, Poland will receive a Patriot III missile battery in 2009 in order to address potential threats from Russia or other nuclear states. This missile battery will most certainly have U.S. military personnel tied to it as well. It is important to note that despite what decisions are made regarding the shield this year, Poland will most likely receive this Patriot III missile battery. Having an American Patriot III missile battery and U.S. personnel on Polish territory inextricably ties the U.S. military to defending Polish territory.
What are the costs of this missile defense program? Between 1983 and 2008, the United States spent a total of $120 billion on missile defense. $56 billion of this was from between 2002 and 2009. the government has spent $144 billion on missile defense since 1985, according to the CBO
According to the most conservative predictions, the U.S. is likely to spend another $50 billion between 2009 and 2013. according to some estimates cost the U.S. at least $95 billion, which excludes replacing infrastructure and the impact on financial markets.
Even if the shield is better than complacency, does the missile defense system even work? Since September 2005, the Missile Defense Agency has successfully conducted 25 out of 26 tests.4 However, it is important to note that these tests did not include decoy missiles. If a rogue nation attacks the U.S. or its allies, it would most definitely use decoys of some sort. In short, these successful tests occurred when the Defense Department knew the exact time, location, and trajectory of the missile launch. Additionally, the type of missile used in the interceptors in Poland will be standard missile-2. The missiles in American defenses in California and Alaska are standard missile-3 (SM-3) and all the previous missile tests have also been conducted on SM-3. Therefore, President Obama could technically and accurately claim that the missiles to be used in the interceptors in Poland have never been tested and are not proven to work.
.The US is preparing for a future potential threat rather than an imminent one. Their desire to place interceptors in Europe requires European co-operation and this can be hastened by persuading Europe that there is an imminent threat to them. There is no evidence that Iran wishes to attack Europe. Their reason for developing a nuclear capability (if they are) could well be the same as that claimed by all nuclear states for deterrence purposes.
Effectiveness President George W. Bush unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in 2002, in order to build an effective missile defence system.
annual report of the Pentagons testing office, released earlier this year,stated that a lack of flight-test data limits confidence in assessments of the system.
A report by the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) in March this year concluded that the system has not completed sufficient flight testing to provide a high level of confidence that [it] can reliably intercept ICBMs. In addition the system can be readily overcome by numbers. Ten interceptors would be seriously challenged by eleven or more real or decoy warheads. There is an added complication for the proposed European interceptor site. The groundbased interceptor missiles in Poland will only need to be two-stage missiles rather than the three-stage interceptors in Alaska and California. Research and development on a twostage interceptor has only just begun.
There is also a question as to whether testing of the new intercepts would be illegal under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty which eliminated nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500kms. If it cant be tested, how will we know if it works? So, with missile defence we seem to be considering the use of interceptor missiles that have not so far been developed as part of a costly, unproven system that is easily overcome to defend against a threat that probably doesnt exist.
What are the consequences?
The cost of building the bases in Poland and Czech Republic is estimated to be some $3.5 billion and there is also a probability that the program would later be extended to protect all European territory by the inclusion of sea-based missiles and missile tracking systems in space at considerable (but unspecified) extra cost. The technological problems
encountered in developments of this kind are complex and cannot be accurately predicted and massive extra costs and overruns are common.
Perhaps the biggest problem with missile defence however, is how its development is perceived by others. It is argued by some that a workable missile shield would enable the U.S. to strike first with nuclear weapons as any limited retaliation could be dealt with effectively. Even if this is not the intention, it is easy to see how the antagonistic nature of U.S. defence policy leads many states to this conclusion. The highly accurate nuclear missiles in the U.S. arsenal are not required by deterrence but could be used to destroy enemy missile silos.
The proposed new U.S. NMD bases are in states formerly in an alliance with Russia which the US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently included in a list of potential threats to US security. Is it so surprising then that Russia has reacted strongly to the NMD proposals calling them an unfriendly step with President Putin threatening to target European sites with nuclear weapons? The U.S. says that the missiles are not aimed at Russia.
However, an analysis of the geographic locations and missile trajectories shows that the radar and interceptors could be deployed against Russian missiles from some of its western launch sites and even though 10 interceptors clearly do not pose a threat to the 500 or so missiles in Russias nuclear arsenal
A Russian Foreign Ministry statement suggests that: one cannot ignore the fact that U.S. offensive weapons, combined with the missile defense being created, can turn into a strategic complex capable of delivering an incapacitating blow. The U.S. proposal to include Russia in further cooperation on missile defenses has generated an interesting response from President Putin who has suggested joint US Russian use of an early warning radar in Gabala, Azerbaijan.
This radar would give a good coverage of missiles from Iran but not of Russian launches because of an intervening range of mountains. However, the U.S. has now said this cannot replace the proposed Czech radar. Within Europe there is some conmcern. In the 2003 EU document entitled A Secure Europe in a Better World, European Security Strategy, we find the following: In contrast to the massive visible threat in the Cold War, none of the new threats is purely military; nor can any be tackled by purely military means. Each requires a mixture of instruments.
The Obama Administrations recent announcement to cut missile defense isnt exactly logical, Missile Defenses Are Necessary to Fighting the Wars America Is in, but Secretary Gates Proposes Cutting the Missile Defense Budget by $1.4 Billion. Secretary Gates is fond of saying that he is focused on re-balancing the Department of Defense's programs
Missile Defence is an example of an instrument applied too late. There is a danger that if a convincing defence against missiles did exist we would put too much faith in that and not enough effort in preventing situations getting to the stage where it might be deployed and engage with states outside to build mutual trust and security. Indeed, if we are to survive as a civilization, as a species, even as a planet, we need to learn how to develop technologies for a positive future and tolerate cultural differences. This is our greatest challenge and to fail is unthinkable.why amercian want to make peace of world fargile just need to study
usman karim based in lahore lmno25@hotmail.com