Meanwhile, At The Pentagon...
Mr. Missile Shield
Mark Thompson/Washington
It has been a restoration, all right, but of which presidency?
First came Dick Cheney, next Paul O'Neill. Now comes Donald
Rumsfeld at the Pentagon, and the new Administration seems to
have as much to do with the Ford Administration of the mid-1970s
as it does with Bush I.
With Rumsfeld at the helm, the Pentagon is likely to be faced
with the same challenge of 25 years ago: the desire to keep its
expensive conventional weapons systems and build an expensive but
unconventional new one. Despite the end of the cold war, the
Pentagon budget Rumsfeld inherits will be larger--at $295
billion--than his 1976 budget of $282 billion, after adjusting for
inflation. But even as his boss talks of modernizing the military
for the surprises of a post-cold war era, Rumsfeld is going to
need all that bigger purse, and more. Bush has pledged more pay
for the troops, and Rumsfeld has called for restarting production
of $2.4 billion B-2 bombers and wants to begin building the $200
million F-22 fighter. Both men want to build a shield to protect
the U.S. from missile attack, which could cost as much as $100
billion, if it is even feasible.
An ex-Navy pilot and Princeton wrestler, Rumsfeld was, at 43, the
youngest Defense Secretary in history when he ran the Pentagon
for the last 14 months of Ford's term. Now 68, the Chicago native
spent six years in Congress and eight in the Nixon and Ford
administrations before beginning a successful pharmaceutical
career at G.D. Searle & Co. Pentagon officials and Bush see
Rumsfeld as a counterweight to Colin Powell, the retired Army
general tapped to run Bush's foreign policy. "General Powell is a
strong figure and Dick Cheney is no shrinking violet, but neither
is Don Rumsfeld," the President-elect said before making clear he
would settle any squabbles among the trio.
If Rumsfeld is serious about remaking the U.S. military, his
outmaneuvering of the CIA two years ago will offer a blueprint
for how he might achieve the goal. In the mid-1990s, the agency
upset G.O.P. boosters of a missile shield because it kept
reporting that any nuclear threat, beyond Russia and China, was
at least 15 years away. But Rumsfeld and his bipartisan panel
concluded in July 1998 that Iran, Iraq and North Korea posed near
term threats, and that they could hide their missile-building
progress until shortly before launching an attack on the U.S.
North Korea bolstered the report's contentions when it fired a
long-range missile over the Pacific a month later.
Rumsfeld's report proved contagious. By 1999 the CIA had changed
its tune and was echoing him. But the agency had to bend the
rules to do it: no longer did a foe have to be capable of
reaching the 48 contiguous states to be deemed a threat to the
U.S.; Alaska and Hawaii were added, putting the territory to be
defended far closer to North Korea. The CIA began assuming enemy
missiles could be fired without years of testing. Most
critically, it stopped predicting what was "most likely" to
happen in favor of what "could" happen.
Rumsfeld likes to quote a fellow Chicagoan on the efficacy of
arms. "You get a lot more with a kind word and a gun than you do
with a kind word alone," Al Capone used to say. Rumsfeld retools
the gangster's words for the post-cold war world. "You can
substitute 'ballistic missile' for the word gun--and put in the
names of some regional Al Capones--and it is every bit as
appropriate today," he says. But even if a missile shield works,
critics fear it will destabilize current alliances and trigger
arms buildups by America's enemies. Back home, the Pentagon
dreads that the program will siphon money from its more cherished
programs. Rumsfeld's challenge is to build a missile defense in
the face of suspicion from allies, from enemies and from the
bureaucracy he will lead.
--By Mark Thompson/Washington
|