Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
NMD DA
NMD DA.................................................................................................................................................................1
1NC Shell - RUSSIA...............................................................................................................................................2
1NC Shell – CHINA................................................................................................................................................5
Uniqueness: No NMD now......................................................................................................................................7
Uniqueness: No NMD now – Poland.......................................................................................................................9
Link: NMD needs to be resolved...........................................................................................................................10
Link: Soft Power NMD.....................................................................................................................................11
Link: GB key to NMD...........................................................................................................................................13
IL: Russia hates NMD...........................................................................................................................................14
IL: China hates NMD.............................................................................................................................................18
IL: Russia/China hates NMD.................................................................................................................................19
NMD Reckless Wars.........................................................................................................................................20
NMD Arms Races.............................................................................................................................................21
NMD Instability................................................................................................................................................22
NMD Bad – Generic..............................................................................................................................................24
...............................................................................................................................................................................24
AT: NMD Good/Solves Attacks.............................................................................................................................25
AT: NMD necessary – North Korea.......................................................................................................................26
AT: NMD necessary – Iran....................................................................................................................................27
AFF: NMD Good...................................................................................................................................................28
AFF: No US/Russia War........................................................................................................................................29
NMD DA 2
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
1. There is concern over NMD now but global warming is a bigger issue that
could restore US credibility.
Morton H. Halperin, Senior Fellow @ Council on Foreign Relations, 8-15-01, “Bush Unpopular in Europe,
seen as a Unilateralist”, http://people-press.org/report/?pageid=37. [CXia]
Respondents in Great Britain, France, Italy and Germany do not express knee-jerk opposition to all the policies of the
Bush administration. They applaud Bush's support for free trade and his willingness to keep American troops in Bosnia and
Kosovo, reversing a campaign promise to begin taking those troops out. However, echoing the views of their governments,
they express concern about his overall approach as well as his positions on National Missile Defense (NMD), the Kyoto
Protocol and the death penalty. The poll results on National Missile Defense may pose the greatest challenge for the
Bush administration. European publics may or may not favor the principle of missile defense, but overwhelming majorities
disapprove of a deployment that requires withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. More than seven-in-ten
German and French respondents and about two-thirds of the Italian and British respondents share this view. This means that
European governments are unlikely to yield to administration pressure to go ahead with a missile defense system if it leads to
terminating the ABM Treaty. And it suggests that, if any of these governments do go along, the long dormant European anti-
nuclear movement might come to life with a vengeance. Missile defense deployment is the quintessential post-Cold war
issue because, as powerful and as rich as the United States is, it simply cannot proceed on its own. An effective layered
national missile defense of the kind favored by the administration will require the cooperation of many other countries in
providing bases for radar and intelligence-gathering systems, as well as for the deployment of anti-missile launchers or the
support for ship-based systems. Moreover, the cooperation of other countries, including Russia and China, is necessary if
states such as North Korea, Iraq, and Iran are to be prevented from developing relatively simple decoys which would
neutralize any small missile defense system. This may help explain why Bush administration officials who favor giving early
notice to Russia that the United States is withdrawing from the ABM Treaty have not yet prevailed. Those who give priority
to negotiating an agreement with Russian President Vladimir Putin should have their hands strengthened by these poll results,
which suggest serious difficulties for U.S.-European relations, and for an effective anti-missile deployment, if the
administration is seen as cavalierly rejecting the treaty. These problems can only be overcome by reaching agreement with
Russia both on substantially lower levels of nuclear warheads and on amendments to the ABM treaty which permit the
deployment of a modest NMD against potential small missile threats. Global warming also poses a serious challenge for
the Bush administration. The majorities concerned about the American policy in this area are even larger than on
missile defense, and nothing can be accomplished without the cooperation of other states. To reduce tensions over the Kyoto
Protocol, the Bush administration will have to fulfill its commitment to present a proposal on global warming at the
next international meeting. Proponents of this position within the administration should also be strengthened by this poll,
which leaves no doubt that a continuing rift over this issue will have a profound impact on the overall relationship
between the United States and Europe.
NMD DA 3
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Russia, which continues by orders of magnitude to be the greatest missile threat, considers national missile-defense
systems as an attempt to gain "unilateral military and security advantages" as well as a violation of the ABM treaty.
Russia has announced plans to dramatically reduce its nuclear arsenal from the approximately six thousand nuclear warheads
deployed to under fifteen hundred by the end of the decade. But Russian leaders have warned that future reductions are
highly conditioned on the United States not deploying a missile defense system. President Putin has repeatedly stated
that any move to withdraw from the ABM treaty could lead Russia to treat all existing U.S.-Russian security
agreements as null and void. This could lock both countries into unnecessarily large nuclear-weapons inventories for the
foreseeable future unless unilateral reciprocal reductions take the place of agreements. As the 2000 NIE points out, Russia
could also again deploy shorter-range missiles along its borders and return to multiple warheads for its strategic weapons,
thus rejecting a major provision of START II, and could deploy additional countermeasures on its missiles to penetrate
the NMD system. In maintaining a larger strategic arsenal than it can adequately support, given its ailing economy, Russia
would be more prone to accidental or unauthorized launch of its nuclear ballistic missiles
3. US-Russia relations key to solve Middle East and multiple nuclear war
scenarios.
Yale Global, February 28, 2005, “US-Russia Relations Saved for Now”, http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display
.article?id=5348, [CXia]
For the United States, a declining agenda with Russia will sooner or later result in overextension of US resources and
global disaster. Short- and middle-term reasons for engaging Russia lie in policy toward North Korea, Iraq, Iran, and China,
and the long-term - in the broader Middle East. Russia, with its imperial history, vast experience, and readiness to invest in
security, is the only US ally capable of collaborating to bring about Mideast stability- a rather imperial, but necessary
mission. Neither Europe nor the southern CIS have the resources to accomplish the task. Despite an EU presence in
Afghanistan and some contribution to Iraq, Europe's political culture an`d growing Muslim populations do not allow for
serious investments in missions like occupation and state-building. Ultimately, Washington and Moscow must work
together, despite all the difficulties and prejudices. They should strengthen those elements of agenda - creating the NATO-
Russia Council and Russian participation in the G8 - that may still facilitate cooperation and joint action. The US-Russia
foreign policy priority should be stabilization and governance promotion in the broader Middle East. Radical Islamic
terrorism and nuclear proliferation are facets of one single problem: degradation of this region.
NMD DA 4
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Respondents in Great Britain, France, Italy and Germany do not express knee-jerk opposition to all the policies of the
Bush administration. They applaud Bush's support for free trade and his willingness to keep American troops in Bosnia and
Kosovo, reversing a campaign promise to begin taking those troops out. However, echoing the views of their governments,
they express concern about his overall approach as well as his positions on National Missile Defense (NMD), the Kyoto
Protocol and the death penalty. The poll results on National Missile Defense may pose the greatest challenge for the
Bush administration. European publics may or may not favor the principle of missile defense, but overwhelming majorities
disapprove of a deployment that requires withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. More than seven-in-ten
German and French respondents and about two-thirds of the Italian and British respondents share this view. This means that
European governments are unlikely to yield to administration pressure to go ahead with a missile defense system if it leads to
terminating the ABM Treaty. And it suggests that, if any of these governments do go along, the long dormant European anti-
nuclear movement might come to life with a vengeance. Missile defense deployment is the quintessential post-Cold war
issue because, as powerful and as rich as the United States is, it simply cannot proceed on its own. An effective layered
national missile defense of the kind favored by the administration will require the cooperation of many other countries in
providing bases for radar and intelligence-gathering systems, as well as for the deployment of anti-missile launchers or the
support for ship-based systems. Moreover, the cooperation of other countries, including Russia and China, is necessary if
states such as North Korea, Iraq, and Iran are to be prevented from developing relatively simple decoys which would
neutralize any small missile defense system. This may help explain why Bush administration officials who favor giving early
notice to Russia that the United States is withdrawing from the ABM Treaty have not yet prevailed. Those who give priority
to negotiating an agreement with Russian President Vladimir Putin should have their hands strengthened by these poll results,
which suggest serious difficulties for U.S.-European relations, and for an effective anti-missile deployment, if the
administration is seen as cavalierly rejecting the treaty. These problems can only be overcome by reaching agreement with
Russia both on substantially lower levels of nuclear warheads and on amendments to the ABM treaty which permit the
deployment of a modest NMD against potential small missile threats. Global warming also poses a serious challenge for
the Bush administration. The majorities concerned about the American policy in this area are even larger than on
missile defense, and nothing can be accomplished without the cooperation of other states. To reduce tensions over the Kyoto
Protocol, the Bush administration will have to fulfill its commitment to present a proposal on global warming at the
next international meeting. Proponents of this position within the administration should also be strengthened by this poll,
which leaves no doubt that a continuing rift over this issue will have a profound impact on the overall relationship
between the United States and Europe.
NMD DA 6
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Nonproliferation has been one of the more persistent and contentious issues in Sino-U.S. relations for the last 15 years.
The continuing presence of nonproliferation issues on the bilateral agenda has masked a considerable degree of convergence
in U.S. and Chinese views and significant progress in addressing proliferation threats. The range and scope of U.S.
concerns about Chinese proliferation behavior has narrowed appreciably over the years as China has joined the
major arms control and nonproliferation treaties and improved its export control laws. Both countries are members of
the key international nonproliferation treaties (including the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the Chemical Weapons
Convention (CWC), and the Biological Weapons Convention BWC)) and play an active role in international arms control
negotiations. From 1995-98, the United States and China cooperated on a range of important arms control and
nonproliferation issues, including indefinite extension of the NPT, the CWC, final negotiations on the Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty (CTBT), and the UN Security Council resolutions in response to the 1998 nuclear tests in South Asia. This
cooperation gradually ended as Chinese concerns about U.S. ballistic missile defense plans
increased. China and the United States still share numerous common interests in fighting proliferation. In terms of specific
nonproliferation issues, the United States and China both oppose the introduction of nuclear weapons onto the Korean
peninsula and seek to restrain India's efforts to build an operational nuclear arsenal. Both also want to avoid arms races in
Northeast Asia that might lead Japan, South Korea, and even Taiwan to develop nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.
Finally, both the United States and China seek ways to improve the effectiveness of the treaties banning chemical and
biological weapons
In sum, widespread proliferation is likely to lead to an occasional shoot-out with nuclear weapons, and that such shoot-
outs will have a substantial probability of escalating to the maximum destruction possible with the weapons at hand.
Unless nuclear proliferation is stopped, we are headed toward a world that will mirror the American Wild West of the
late 1800s. With most, if not all, nations wearing nuclear ‘six-shooters’ on their hips, the world may even be a more
polite place than it is today, but every once in a while we will all gather on a hill to bury the bodies of dead cities or even
whole nations.
NMD DA 7
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Signaling a tougher position in negotiations with the United States on a European antiballistic-missile shield system,
Poland's foreign minister says his country's new government is not prepared to accept American plans to deploy missile-
defense bases in Poland until all costs and risks are considered. ''This is an American, not a Polish project,'' Foreign Minister
Radek Sikorski said in an interview published in the weekend edition of the newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza. The previous Polish
government had consented in principle to accept missile-interceptor bases as part of a larger system that would include a radar
station in the Czech Republic, but no formal agreement has been signed. Now Mr. Sikorski is saying that the terms under which
the shield would be deployed were unclear and that the new government wants the risks to be explained, the financial costs to be
set out and clarification on how Poland's interests would be defended if the bases were put on its territory. ''We feel no threat
from Iran,'' he said, challenging Bush administration assertions that some of the biggest threats facing the security of Europe
and the United States are from ''rogue states'' in the Middle East.
NMD DA 10
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
The gap between Europe and the United States on missile defense remains wide. Unlike most of the great transatlantic
security debates of the past, such as the controversies over the multilateral nuclear force in the 1960s, the neutron bomb in the
1970s, intermediate-range nuclear forces in the 1980s, and NATO enlargement in the 1990s—all instances in which the
Europeans (like the Americans) were split among themselves—the Europeans in today's missile defense debate are generally
unified. The fissures are much deeper on the American side. With a few exceptions, those Europeans who are engaged with
the issue have yet to be persuaded that the United States has made a compelling case for missile defense. As we have seen,
their skepticism is based upon fundamental considerations, such as the seriousness of the threat, the opportunity costs in
relation to other European foreign and security policy priorities, the future of the ABM Treaty and international arms control, and
the impact on relations with Russia and China. To this must be added doubts about the technological feasibility of missile
defenses and the financial cost of their participation in an allied missile defense project.
NMD DA 11
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
The poll results on National Missile Defense may pose the greatest challenge for the Bush administration. European publics
may or may not favor the principle of missile defense, but overwhelming majorities disapprove of a deployment that
requires withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. More than seven-in-ten German and French respondents and
about two-thirds of the Italian and British respondents share this view. This means that European governments are unlikely to
yield to administration pressure to go ahead with a missile defense system if it leads to terminating the ABM Treaty. And it
suggests that, if any of these governments do go along, the long dormant European anti-nuclear movement might come to life
with a vengeance. Missile defense deployment is the quintessential post-Cold war issue because, as powerful and as rich as the
United States is, it simply cannot proceed on its own. An effective layered national missile defense of the kind favored by
the administration will require the cooperation of many other countries in providing bases for radar and intelligence-
gathering systems, as well as for the deployment of anti-missile launchers or the support for ship-based systems. Moreover, the
cooperation of other countries, including Russia and China, is necessary if states such as North Korea, Iraq, and Iran are
to be prevented from developing relatively simple decoys which would neutralize any small missile defense system.
Policies that make Europe happy would cause them to get on board with NMD.
William Wallace, Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics, 5-01, “Europe, the
Necessary Partner”, Foreign Affairs, LexisNexis, [CXia]
Terrorism is another good example of where perceptions are diverging. European governments do not underestimate the threat of
terrorism; they have suffered more incidents of terrorism on their soil over the past 30 years -- from Irish Republicans, left-wing
revolutionaries in Germany and Italy, Kurdish and Algerian militants, Basques, Corsicans, fundamentalist Muslims, and Sikhs --
than the United States has. But rather than overestimating the threat, Europeans recognize that a political response must
accompany counterterrorism and preventive measures. No European government has initiated programs comparable to U.S.
ones; the marginal risks of biological or chemical weapons being deployed in European cities are just not seen as great enough to
justify such a response. National missile defense (NMD) also appears to Europeans as a disproportionate response to a
distant potential threat, driven by domestic psychology, entrenched economic interests, and policymakers whose
underlying agenda is confrontation with China rather than North Korea. American leadership of the Western alliance
depends on its ability to persuade its partners to accept its foreign policy rationale. After all, now that the Cold War is past,
the United States needs NATO as much as its European allies do. The global projection of U.S. power by long-range bombers
flying from U.S. home bases depends on intermediate bases in Europe for refueling. Aircraft-carrier groups benefit from forward
bases; U.S. forces in Europe now serve as the basis for potential deployment across Eurasia and the Middle East. But the
impression that U.S. commanders and officials have given, whether in Somalia, Bosnia, or Kosovo, is that they see no need to
listen to the knowledge of their allies or of locals in assessing situations. Combined with an unwillingness to accept casualties
while ordering others to take greater risks (as in the Balkans), a preoccupation with media opportunities, and a preference for
high-level bombing over commitment on the ground, these traits have undermined Europeans' respect for their alliance partner.
The "revolution in military affairs" has also widened the transatlantic rift. Washington's pursuit of the RMA has seemed to most
European observers a domestic matter, driven by American industrial and defense lobbies rather than by any clear external threat.
European governments have been pursuing a different tack, preparing to fight limited wars, contain disorder, and if necessary
invest in the "nation-building" activities that George W. Bush decried in last year's presidential campaign. Shared experiences on
the ground in Bosnia provided the foundation for the Franco-British defense initiative, while collaborative European engagement
in Kosovo has provided a further impetus for an autonomous capability in military planning and deployment. Although no other
European state has so far joined the United Kingdom in its limited peacekeeping commitment in Sierra Leone, European military
planners are uncomfortably aware that restoring order within failed states, in Africa as well as southeastern Europe, is a likely
contingency for which they must all prepare. Along with the 60,000 European troops being assembled for a deployable
peacekeeping force, Europe is working on a reserve force of military and civilian police to take over the task of re-establishing
domestic order within fragile societies as the front-line troops withdraw. The Bush administration's approach to military reform
will therefore be a test case of strategic assumptions and force requirements. Greater U.S. emphasis on space and NMD, armored
divisions, and large-scale carrier groups would widen the transatlantic strategic gap; more flexible forces with lighter
equipment would bring American and European thinking closer together.
NMD DA 13
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
The UK government does not deny that RAF Fylingdales would play an important role in NMD should it go ahead.
However, despite repeated questioning by the press and in the Commons, it will not pronounce on what its decision would be
should the US ask permission for the changes to be made. The Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, has said: "Until we know both the
nature of the question and also the circumstances in which we are being asked that question, it would be premature for us to
debate what might be, particularly since there is no commitment by the United States to ask the question." It has been said that
the UK government is 'working behind the scenes' and is not willing to make public statements that might put the ABMT in
danger. A number of US politicians have spoken of abandoning the treaty if it becomes too difficult to renegotiate to allow
them to deploy NMD. Perhaps this explains the apparent differences of opinion in government. On the same evening in March
earlier this year, Foreign and Commonwealth Office minister Peter Hain said on the BBC that, he did "not like the idea of a Star
Wars programme". Meanwhile on Channel 4, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon stated that Britain would be sympathetic to any
request from the US to use Fylingdales. Officials in Washington are also confident that any such requests would not be
turned down.
NMD DA 14
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Moscow does not tolerate any possibility of talks between the United States and Lithuania on missile defense issues,
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said. "The Russian president openly expressed serious concerns at a meeting with U.S.
President [George] Bush about media reports that the U.S. and Lithuania have been in talks on a possibility to deploy a
base of missile interceptors. It was stated that this is absolutely unacceptable," Russian presidential aide Sergei Prikhodko
told journalists after a meeting between Medvedev and Bush. Medvedev "stated that there is no real progress in the Russian-
U.S. dialog on the missile defense issue,"
Russia claimed that the ABM Treaty is the “cornerstone of strategic stability” and that, without its limits on missile
defense, the entire framework of offensive arms control agreements could collapse. Furthermore, Russia argued that a U.S.
NMD system would undermine Russia’s nuclear deterrent and upset stability by allowing the United States to initiate an attack
and protect itself from retaliatory strike. The Clinton Administration claimed that the U.S. NMD system would be directed against
rogue nations and would be too limited to intercept a Russian attack. But Russian officials questioned this argument. They
doubted that rogue nations would have the capability to attack U.S. territory for some time, and they believed that the
United States could expand its NMD system easily. Furthermore, they argued that, when combined with the entirety of U.S.
conventional and nuclear weapons, an NMD system would place the United States in a position of strategic superiority.
NMD DA 16
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Claims that the system could not deter Russia are false.
Desmond Butler, staff writer, 10-5-07, “US Study Supports Russia’s AMD Suspicions”, Associated Press,
LexisNexis, [CXia]
A number of top U.S-based physicists have concluded that the United States used inaccurate claims to reassure NATO allies
about U.S. missile defense plans in Eastern Europe. They say the planned Polish-based interceptors and a radar system in
the Czech Republic could target and catch Russian missiles, thus threatening Russia's nuclear deterrent. That view
supports Russia's criticism of the system. Russia adamantly opposes the plan and the dispute has escalated U.S.-Russian
tensions to the highest point since the Cold War. The Pentagon agency overseeing the missile program, the Missile Defense
Agency, rejects the scientists' claims, saying their analyses are flawed. The United States says the missile system is intended to
counter a threat from Iran and could not takeout Russian missiles. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has dismissed
Russia's concerns as "ludicrous." But the six scientists - whose backgrounds include elite American universities, research labs
and high levels of government- said in interviews that Russia's concerns are justified.
NMD DA 17
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
NMD will change the world’s stability – Russia will lash out.
Luke Harding, staff writer, 4-11-07, “Russia Threatening new Cold War over Missile Defense”, The Guardian
UK, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/apr/11/usa.topstories3, [CXia]
Russia is preparing its own military response to the US's controversial plans to build a new missile defence system in
eastern Europe, according to Kremlin officials, in a move likely to increase fears of a cold war-style arms race. The Kremlin is
considering active counter-measures in response to Washington's decision to base interceptor missiles and radar installations
in Poland and the Czech Republic, a move Russia says will change "the world's strategic stability". The Kremlin has not
publicly spelt out its plans. But defence experts said its response is likely to include upgrading its nuclear missile arsenal so that it
is harder to shoot down, putting more missiles on mobile launchers, and moving its fleet of nuclear submarines to the north pole,
where they are virtually undetectable. Russia could also bring the new US silos within the range of its Iskander missiles launched
potentially from the nearby Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, they add. In an interview with the Guardian, the Kremlin's chief
spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said Moscow felt betrayed by the Pentagon's move. "We were extremely concerned and
disappointed. We were never informed in advance about these plans. It brings tremendous change to the strategic balance in
Europe, and to the world's strategic stability."
NMD DA 18
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
According to the NMD plan, the US will deploy 100 interceptors in Alaska in its first configuration. Assuming a 1 in 4 rate of
interception, the US could at most hit 25 incoming missiles, a more than sufficient capability to take care of the alleged threat
from those “rogue” states’ said to be developing long-range ballistic missiles with which to target America. At later stages, the US
would deploy further kinetic kill vehicles in North Dakoda in order to provide nationwide missiles defence.
The US has stated clearly that China has not figured in its NMD calculations. However, China views the situation
differently and remains strongly suspicious of the US intentions in terms of NMD development. From China’s perspective, it
is untenable that the US would spend 60-100 billion dollars on a system which has only “rogue” states in mind.
Such capability of intercontinental strike by ballistic missile owned by “rogue” states does not yet exist. Excluding the P5,
only Israel, Saudi Arabia, India, Pakistan, DPRK and Iran are currently believed to have medium-range missiles with ranges
above 1,000km. Only four of these states, India, Pakistan, DPRK and Iran, may also have active programmes to develop
intermediate-range missiles with ranges of over 3,000km.[8] It is highly unlikely that any of them will acquire an ICBM
capability within a decade or so. The CIA’s classified 1998 Annual Report to Congress on Foreign Missile Development
recognised that the ICBM threat to the United States from so-called rogue states is unlikely to materialise before 2010, with the
possible exception of DPRK.[9]
From China’s perspective, the US national missile defence would cause even worse strategic relations between Beijing and
Washington. Though China has not publicly made its nuclear capability transparent, its CSS-4 ICBM force, capable of reaching
the US with a range of 13,000 kilometres, is largely believed by the Western strategic analysts to number around 20.[11] China’s
concern over the US national missile defence in violation of ABM has been expressed through various channels many
times.[12] Primarily China is concerned about two issues. One is that the NMD will destabilise the world order, and harm the
international relations. The other is that NMD will undermine China’s strategic deterrence, undermining China’s
confidence in its strategic retaliatory capability. A limited anti-ballistic missile capability, as allowed by the existing ABM
Treaty, would be enough to defend the strategic assets of the US against potential missile threats from outside the P5. Indeed the
one-site base of anti-ballistic missile deployment under ABM framework cannot immunise the whole US from being hit. It is
exactly this reason that has given Russia (as well as other nuclear weapons states) a confidence that they retain a credible nuclear
deterrence vis-à-vis the US. Theoretically, part of the US would thus be exposed to some missile threat from “rogue” states.
However, either that threat has been too remote, or the overwhelming strength of the US in both nuclear and conventional
weapons will be powerful enough to deter potential adversaries from initiating hostilities. Also the envisaged NMD cannot stop
an all-out Russian nuclear attack, considering the thousands of strategic weapons at Russia’s disposal. Therefore, Beijing can
only take the view that US NMD has been designed to effectively neutralise China’s strategic deterrence.
NMD DA 19
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
Rather than seeing its own missile system as offensive, China, like Russia, believes that deployment of U.S. missile defenses
would be an offensive move. In reaction, China would likely expand its nuclear-weapons arsenal, building more missiles,
equipping some with multiple warheads, adding decoys and other countermeasures, and placing them on full alert. China's
principal concern is not simply the deployment of U.S. national missile defense but the strengthening of Taiwan through the
possible sale or deployment of theater defenses and the sale of U.S. cruisers equipped with Aegis radar. Such moves, in Chinese
eyes, could lead to Taiwanese independence. China's chief arms negotiator, Sha Zukang, has suggested that if Washington went
ahead with an NMD deployment designed to intercept "tens of warheads" -- a figure suspiciously close to China's eighteen to
twenty single-warhead ballistic missiles -- this would "lead to serious confrontation" and a renunciation of previous
undertakings barring nuclear or chemical weapons proliferation and nuclear testing. The 2000 NIE suggests that China
might well increase its ICBM arsenal from twenty to two hundred within a few years. Thus, instead of providing security, a
deployed NMD system could provoke responses from Russia and China that would actually exacerbate the threat.
Meanwhile, Sino-Russian joint opposition to either a U.S. effort to deploy a national missile defense system or to reinterpret the
ABM treaty has led to improved bilateral relations between them. NMD has also given President Putin the opportunity to travel to
Europe, China, and North Korea and to suggest a regional defense for Europe, although his ideas are still quite vague.
NMD DA 20
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
If a thicker and wider missile defense causes U.S. policymakers to feel more secure against a direct missile attack and less
vulnerable by threatened attacks to its allies, they may be more tempted to engage in reckless overseas military adventures
against potential regional adversaries possessing WMD and long-range missiles. Such interventions would actually reduce
U.S. security. Even a thicker, wider missile defense offers only a probability of killing incoming warheads, not an airtight
defense against them. So it is possible that overconfident U.S. policymakers might get into unnecessary scrapes with
WMD-armed regional powers that could lead to at least one warhead getting through the shield. In other words, a
catastrophic attack on U.S. soil (a failure of the first magnitude in U.S. security policy) could originate from a country that
would not have threatened U.S. security if it had been left alone. An apt analogy can be found in attempts to swat a wasp at
a picnic. If the wasp is left alone, it will probably not sting any of the picnickers; but the picnickers will probably be stung if
they threaten the wasp by attempting to swat it.
NMD DA 21
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
NMD Instability
NMD would destroy the world order.
Yuriy KAPRALOV, Director of the Department for Security Affairs and Disarmament, 1-18-01, “Effects of
National Missile Defense on Arms Control and Strategic Stability”, http://www.armscontrol.ru/start/pu
blications/kapralov020601.htm, [CXia]
The deployment of a National Missile Defense by the United States would ruin this legacy and a hope for better and safer
world. Eliminating both conceptual and physical foundation of strategic stability the deployment of NMD would have a lasting
and spreading negative effect not only on arms control efforts, but at much larger scale on military, political, economic
situation and generally on international security, both regional and global. It is highly indicative that while the deployment of
an NMD has not even started, the plans for such defense for the US territory already now adversely affect arms control
process. Suffice it to mention the situation around the prohibition of the production of fissile material for weapon purposes at the
Conference on Disarmament in Geneva (FMCT, or a "cut-off" Treaty). Even the START III negotiations, with its universal
popularity, has fallen victim of NMD plans: the outgoing US administration during its last months established a linkage between
the official negotiations on START III and an agreement on the part of Russia to NMD deployment by the US. No wonder the
START-III negotiations have not even started. The most direct and potentially dangerous effect the NMD deployment,
irrespective of its scope, would exert on strategic situation and nuclear forces. The deployment of NMD would result in
undermining the strategic stability and a sharp increase in uncertainty and unpredictability. For the military it would mean
heightened alert and readiness (who dreamed of dealerting and greater transparency at a recent NPT Review Conference?); for a
population it would mean a much greater risk of serious accidents and use of nuclear weapons. Among other things, it would
turn upside down the present correlation of offensive and defensive strategic arms, nullify the tested and proved effective "rules of
the game", greatly complicate and toughen conditions of functioning for Strategic Forces Command and Control Centers.
NMD DA 23
DDI 08 KO
Crystal Xia
NMD leads to arms races that would ultimately result in a US/Russia nuclear
war.
Catharine Field, correspondent for the New Zealand Herald, 1-24-01, “Europe Braces for US Defense Moves”,
The New Zealand Herald, LexisNexis, [CXia]
Bush made the NMD, launched by President Bill Clinton in 1999, a key plank of his election campaign, declaring it essential
for thwarting rogue states such as Iraq, Iran and North Korea which have missile capability and the perceived intent to acquire
nuclear weapons. But as well as stirring hostility from China and Russia, the project is under fire in Europe, reviving
memories of the wave of anti-US protests of the mid-1980s. The NMD "could overturn the foundations of defence policies
around the world," says Georges Le Guelte, director of research at France's Institute for International Strategic Research. "This
upheaval could have the gravest consequences for Western Europe, first and foremost." The NMD, with a pencilled cost of
$NZ175 billion, is a scaled-down version of Ronald Reagan's "Star Wars" initiative. It entails building space and ground-based
sensors to provide early warning; ground-based radar to spot incoming missiles, and 100 missile interceptors, based in Alaska, to
smash into the warheads while they are still in the air. But the NMD would in effect destroy the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile
(ABM) treaty, signed by the US and the Soviet Union, which limited their anti-missile defences. It would be designed - at least
in its first phase - to protect only the US, not its allies. But for it to work, two radar bases in Britain and Greenland would have
to be updated. Politicians in Britain, Denmark, France and Germany have already warned it could be impossible to sell the NMD
to their public. Unlike the 1980s, when the US was able to deploy new medium-range missiles in five Nato countries despite big
protests by the left wing, there is no proof of a similar threat to Europe today. A parallel programme, the Theatre Missile Defence,
is being designed to protect US forces abroad from medium-range missiles, which would conceivably help to shield the countries
where the troops are deployed, but this is not the case for the NMD in its current design. Most damaging of all though, are the
fears that the ABM treaty will be torn up and another arms race will begin. Western Europe could again become a
strategic battlefield, as the radar sites would presumably be first-wave targets in any nuclear war between Moscow and
Washington. The European Union's top representative for security and foreign affairs, Javier Solana, a former Nato secretary-
general, said it was "questionable" whether the NMD could be effective against rogue nations and terrorists and warned of
"difficult discussions within Nato."
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Although a missile defense would undoubtedly make the United States more willing to intervene overseas, the allies should be
skeptical that U.S. interventions would always serve their interests. If the United States—protected by a missile defense—
moved against a regional adversary possessing WMD and long-range delivery systems, the adversary, having a lower
probability of successfully attacking the United States, might instead threaten a missile strike against a U.S. ally. In effect,
the adversary— betting that the United States would care more about the safety of its economically developed allies than about
intervening in the developing world—would hold U.S. allies hostage to persuade the United States to desist from meddling in its
business. U.S. allies should be wary that they might be exposed to the consequences of U.S. recklessness overseas. The allies
should conclude that without missile defense they could be left “holding the bag” for risky U.S. foreign interventions. But
the United States should refuse to cover wealthy allies—nations that spend too little on their own defense and already benefit
from significant U.S. security guarantees—with a missile shield. (For example, Germany spends only about 1.5 percent of its
gross domestic product on defense, and Japan spends less than 1 percent.) Instead, President Clinton recently proposed a superior
approach: sharing missile defense technology with the allies.1 1 Using that technology, allied nations could unilaterally or
collectively build their own missile defenses. In contrast, protection by a U.S.-directed missile shield would deepen and
perpetuate the unhealthy dependence of allies on the United States. The dangers of U.S. interventions overseas do not accrue
only to allies. Comprehensive missile defenses may inadvertently increase the risk to those they are ostensibly intended to
protect—the American people. In addition to creating a wider defense by protecting allies, adding sea- and space-based missile
defenses to a limited land-based system also increases the probability that warheads will be intercepted before they strike U.S.
soil. That increased protection (a “thicker” defense) could do more harm than good if it spurred more dangerous activism
in U.S. foreign policy.
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None of the national missile defense systems proposed over the past twenty years has ever proven in tests to be technically
feasible, and those currently under development are far from promising. The United States is many years away from
conducting the kinds of realistic tests that could provide military and political leaders with the confidence they should have in
these weapons to deploy them. An example is the rigged test of October 2, 1999, in which the target followed a preprogrammed
flight path to a designated position; the interceptor missile also flew to a preprogrammed position; the decoy had a significantly
different thermal temperature from the target; and a Global Positioning Satellite receiver was placed on the target to send its
position to ground control. Inadequate testing also constitutes a problem. The Clinton system faced this problem, as illustrated
by the finding of the GAO in 1997 that "Because of the compressed development schedule, only a limited amount of flight test
data will be available for the system deployment decision in fiscal year 2000." Inadequate testing is also cited in the Coyle report
of January 2001, and flight tests are way behind schedule. In fact, only fifteen intercept attempts outside the atmosphere have
been conducted by the Department of Defense since 1982. In only four, or 26 percent, did the anti-missiles actually hit their
targets, and none demonstrated an ability to distinguish warheads from realistic decoys. Other missile-defense systems being
discussed by the Bush administration have failed to pass their tests or remain seriously undertested
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.
Bush's budget for next year includes $10.7 billion for missile defense—over twice as much money as for any other single
weapons system. This summer, he's planning to start deploying the first components of an MD system—six anti-missile missiles
in Alaska, four in California, and as many as 20 more, in locations not yet chosen, the following year. Yet, except by sheer luck,
these interceptors will not be able to shoot down enemy missiles. Or, to put it more precisely, Bush is starting to deploy
very expensive weapons without the slightest bit of evidence that they have any chance of working.
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Growing international cooperation in building missile defense capabilities represents a new, forward-looking consensus on
defending against current and future threats, says Paula DeSutter, assistant secretary of state for verification, compliance and
implementation. “We can’t continue to use 20th-century tools to meet 21st-century challenges,” DeSutter said in April 4 remarks
at a Washington seminar sponsored by the National Defense University Foundation. DeSutter said that missile defense systems
are “a reasonable insurance policy to purchase in today’s international security environment,” because they strengthen
deterrence while also serving a contingency need should a hostile regime launch ballistic missiles -– possibly carrying
nuclear, chemical or biological weapons –- against the United States or its allies. At the same time, she said, missile defense is
more than an insurance policy -– it is an essential component of America’s goal to support international nonproliferation
efforts and build a “layered” defense against weapons of mass destruction
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"Russia's nuclear forces will continue to shrink, even with this new missile and its warheads," said Michael Krepon, co-
founder of the Henry L. Stimson Center, a specialist security think-tank in Washington. The Russian ministry of defense refused
to reveal the characteristics of the new missile but said it was designed to replace the Soviet-era RS-18 and RS-20 rockets. "This
test clarifies the message that Moscow has minimal assured destruction capabilities even with US military dominance and
missile defenses," Krepon said. Political scientists Keir Lieber of Notre Dame University in Indiana and Daryl Press from the
University of Pennsylvania detailed what they said was Russia's declining post-Cold War military clout last year in the journal
Foreign Affairs. "Even as the United States' nuclear forces have grown stronger since the end of the Cold War, Russia's
strategic nuclear arsenal has sharply deteriorated," they wrote. "What nuclear forces Russia retains are hardly ready for
use." "Unless they reverse course rapidly, Russia's vulnerability will only increase over time," they added. "With the US
arsenal growing rapidly while Russia's decays and China's stays small, the era of MAD (mutual assured destruction by
nuclear weapons) is ending -- and the era of US nuclear primacy has begun."