Letter from the US military: 49
Generals and Admirals ask for missile defense delay
Came to me via: Scientists for Global
Responsibility (SGR) http://www.sgr.org.uk/ SGR - promoting ethical
science and technology
Paged added 01-05-05 revised 14/09/09, 12/08/09
The following "Open Letter" released today by the Center for
Arms Control and Non-Proliferation is signed by nearly fifty retired
senior military officers, including former Joint Chiefs Chairman
Admiral
William Crowe, Air Force General Alfred Hansen and Marine Corps General
Joseph Hoar.
The letter concludes: "We therefore recommend, as the militarily
responsible course of action, that you postpone operational deployment
of
the expensive and untested GMD system and transfer the associated
funding
to accelerated programs to secure the multitude of facilities
containing
nuclear weapons and materials and to protect our ports and borders
against terrorists who may attempt to smuggle weapons of mass
destruction
into the United States."
The complete letter, and the list of signers, follows:
March 26, 2004
President George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. President:
In December 2002, you ordered the deployment of a ground-based
strategic
mid-course ballistic missile defense (GMD) capability, now scheduled to
become operational before the end of September 2004. You explained that
its purpose is to defend our nation against rogue states that may
attack
us with a single or a limited number of ballistic missiles armed with
weapons of mass destruction.
To meet this deployment deadline, the Pentagon has waived the
operational
testing requirements that are essential to determining whether or not
this highly complex system of systems is effective and suitable. The
Defense Department's Director of Operational Test and Evaluation stated
on March 11, 2004, that operational testing is not in the plan "for
the foreseeable future." Moreover, the General Accounting Office
pointed out in a recent report that only two of 10 critical
technologies
of the GMD system components have been verified as workable by adequate
developmental testing.
Another important consideration is balancing the high costs of missile
defense with funding allocated to other national security programs.
Since
President Reagan's strategic defense initiative speech in March 1983, a
conservative estimate of about $130 billion, not adjusted upward for
inflation, has been spent on missile defense, much of it on GMD. Your
Fiscal Year 2005 budget for missile defense is $10.2 billion, with $3.7
billion allocated to GMD. Some $53 billion is programmed for missile
defense over the next five years, with much more to follow. Deploying a
highly complex weapons system prior to testing it adequately can
increase
costs significantly.
U.S. technology, already deployed, can pinpoint the source of a
ballistic
missile launch. It is, therefore, highly unlikely that any state would
dare to attack the U.S. or allow a terrorist to do so from its
territory
with a missile armed with a weapon of mass destruction, thereby risking
annihilation from a devastating U.S. retaliatory strike.
As you have said, Mr. President, our highest priority is to prevent
terrorists from acquiring and employing weapons of mass destruction. We
agree. We therefore recommend, as the militarily responsible course of
action, that you postpone operational deployment of the expensive and
untested GMD system and transfer the associated funding to accelerated
programs to secure the multitude of facilities containing nuclear
weapons
and materials and to protect our ports and borders against terrorists
who
may attempt to smuggle weapons of mass destruction into the United
States.
Signed:
Admiral William J. Crowe (USN, ret.)
General Alfred G. Hansen (USAF, ret.)
General Joseph P. Hoar (USMC, ret.)
Lt. General Henry E. Emerson (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Robert G. Gard, Jr. (USA, ret.)
Vice Admiral Carl T. Hanson (USN, ret.)
Lt. General James F. Hollingsworth (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Arlen D. Jameson (USAF, ret.)
Lt. General Robert E. Kelley, (USAF, ret.)
Lt. General John A. Kjellstrom (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Dennis P. McAuliffe (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Charles P. Otstott (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Thomas M. Rienzi (USA, ret.)
Vice Admiral John J. Shanahan (USN, ret.)
Lt. General Dewitt C. Smith, Jr.(USA, ret.)
Lt. General Horace G. Taylor (USA, ret.)
Lt. General James M. Thompson (USA, ret.)
Lt. General Alexander M. Weyand (USA. Ret.)
Major General Robert H. Appleby (AUS, ret.)
Major General James G. Boatner (USA, ret.)
Major General Jack O. Bradshaw (USA, ret.)
Major General Morris J. Brady (USA, ret.)
Major General William F. Burns (USA, ret.)
Rear Admiral William D. Center (USN, ret.)
Major General Albert B. Crawford (USA, ret.)
Major General Maurice O. Edmonds (USA, ret.)
Rear Admiral Robert C. Elliott, (USN, ret.)
Major General John C. Faith (USA, ret.)
Rear Admiral Robert H. Gormley (USN, ret.)
Major General Richard B. Griffitts (USA, ret.)
Major Rear Admiral Charles D. Grojean (USN, ret.)
Major General Raymond E. Haddock (USA, ret.)
Major General Jack R. Holbein, Jr. (USAF, ret.)
Major General Stanley H. Hyman (USA, ret.)
Major General Wayne P. Jackson (USA, ret.)
Major General Frederick H. Lawson (AUS, ret.)
Major General Vincent P. Luchsinger, Jr. (USAF, ret.)
Major General James J. LeCleir (AUS, ret.)
Major General William F. Willoughby (USAF, ret.)
Brig. General George C. Cannon, Jr. (USAF, ret.)
Brig. General John J. Costa (USA, ret.)
Brig. General Alvin E. Cowan (USA, ret.)
Brig. General Lee Denson (USAF, ret.)
Brig. General Evelyn P. Foote (USA, ret.)
Brig. General Leslie R. Forney, Jr. (USA, ret.)
Brig. General John H. Grubbs (USA, ret.)
Brig. General James E. Hastings (USA, ret.)
Brig. General John H. Johns (USA, ret.)
Brig. General Maurice D. Roush (USA, ret.)
John Isaacs
Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
322 4th Street, NE
Washington, D.C. 20002
(202) 543-4100 x.131 www.clw.org