From: Eugene Leitl (Eugene.Leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)
Date: Thu Aug 23 2001 - 07:20:37 MDT
-- Eugen* Leitl leitl
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Date: Thu, 23 Aug 2001 00:00:36 -0400
From: J. Hughes <jhughes@changesurfer.com>
Reply-To: transhumantech@yahoogroups.com
To: Transhumantech <transhumantech@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [>Htech] Media ignores Ballistic Missile Defense lies
Monday, August 20, 2001 in the Los Angeles Times
The Media Must Demand Truth From the Testers
by Thomas A. Halsted
GLOUCESTER, Mass. -- For years, the Pentagon and its Ballistic Missile
Defense Organization have engaged in a continuing effort to delude the
public and Congress into believing the United States is well on its way to
developing a workable defense against ballistic missiles. Unfortunately, a
gullible news media have unwittingly played along.
Now the truth is coming out. Last week, Air Force Lt. Gen. Ronald T. Kadish,
director of the missile-test organization, acknowledged that we don't yet
know how to hit a missile with another missile, let along distinguish enemy
warheads from decoys without radio aids. We are a long way from a national
missile defense and a testing program that focuses on the problems that such
a system must overcome.
But the Pentagon has staged a series of show-biz events that have been
rigged to appear successful when, in fact, they prove next to nothing. Who
benefits from such deception? Not the president. Not the defense secretary.
Not U.S. allies. Certainly not the American people, who are no better
defended against a missile attack than they would be by holding a cheap
umbrella over their heads. The only clear winners are the missile-defense
system's principal contractors--Boeing Co., Raytheon Corp., TRW Inc. and
Lockheed Martin Corp.--and those among our enemies and detractors who might
seek to alienate the United States further from the rest of the world.
The flight tests conducted so far have incorporated homing beacons,
unrealistic decoys and other techniques designed to create the appearance of
success. But these aids to detection and target discrimination can provide
no meaningful information to help a planner learn how to intercept a real
missile. Later revelations of flaws in the test data or manipulated data go
unreported. It's as though a baseball coach trained his outfielders with
nothing but pop flies aimed directly at them.
The latest integrated flight test of a missile interceptor took place July
14 and was immediately trumpeted by the Bush administration as an
unqualified success. According to initial news accounts, the target, an
intercontinental ballistic missile warhead launched from Vandenberg Air
Force Base, was intercepted high over the Pacific Ocean and destroyed on
impact by an Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV) launched from Kwajalein Atoll
in the Marshall Islands. Reportedly, the EKV successfully identified and
ignored an accompanying decoy before homing in on the warhead to destroy it.
The evening television broadcasts showed cheering test personnel watching
the "kill" unfold on their monitors.
Now the truth about the test, the fourth successive failure to conduct a
valid test of current missile-defense technology, is coming out. Less than a
week after the test, it was revealed that the Raytheon X-band radar, the
brains of the national missile defense system, had properly detected the
target warhead and provided data before the interception, but that its
data-analysis capability was then overwhelmed by the cloud of debris caused
by the collision of target and interceptor. The radar would thus have been
incapable of tracking any additional targets or discriminating between them
and any decoys, an essential task in any real attack scenario. This is a
major flaw. A missile defense system that can find and destroy only one
target is no defense at all.
More recently, the journal Defense Week reported that the X-band radar was
able to detect and track the warhead, and distinguish it from the
accompanying decoy, because of a beacon implanted in the warhead that
emitted a stream of identifying radio signals. A Reuters dispatch reporting
on the Defense Week story has been largely ignored by media outlets.
The July 14 test was no more useful than any of its predecessors at
providing data that would realistically simulate a real missile attack, but
the public doesn't know it largely because the media have not vigilantly
followed up on the original test. News people need to be more skeptical of
these tests. When they report on the front page or lead the television news
with a story that the Pentagon has conducted a successful missile-defense
test, then learn that the test was a failure or that test data were rigged,
they have an obligation to report the news as prominently as they reported
the original story. Instead, there has been near-silence.
This is not to say that responsible voices have not been raised. Rep. John
F. Tierney (D-Mass.) recently forced a reluctant Pentagon to release an
unclassified report on the national missile defense test program prepared
last year by its own chief civilian test evaluator, Philip E. Coyle. The
Coyle report documents in detail the deceptive practices used, the failure
of tests to provide meaningful data on which to base any deployment
decisions and the failure to test against any realistic countermeasures an
actual missile defense would almost certainly encounter. The report includes
52 recommendations for improving the testing and evaluation program, not one
of which has been implemented. Regrettably, Tierney's release of the Coyle
report has been largely met by silence in the media.
The day may soon come when Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld will tell
President Bush that his experts have developed a defense system capable of
defending Americans citizens against a missile attack. Will he be willfully
deceiving the president? Will the president then order the abrogation of the
Antiballistic Missile Treaty and the deployment of a missile defense system
that almost certainly will be incapable of protecting the Americans he has
taken an oath to defend?
Thomas A. Halsted was the founding director of the Arms Control Assn. and
director of public affairs for the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency.
Copyright © 2001 Los Angeles Times
----------------------------------------------
J. Hughes "What if there is
jhughes@changesurfer.com no future?"
www.changesurfer.com Tristan Bock-Hughes
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