Missile Defenses for Stability in Europe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Missile Defenses for Stability in Europe

Description:

Great Britain (Fylingdales radar) Denmark (Thule radar) Germany (MEADS) Italy (MEADS) ... Cobra Dane. Japan-based FBX-T Radar. Patriot AN/MPQ-65 (PAC-3) Radar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:94
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: spri4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Missile Defenses for Stability in Europe


1
Missile Defenses for Stability in Europe
  • Baker Spring
  • F.M. Kirby Research Fellow in National Security
    Policy
  • The Heritage Foundation
  • Vienna, Austria
  • February 19, 2008

2
President Bushs National Security Strategy
March 2006
  • Yet the first duty of the United States
    Government remains what it always has been to
    protect the American people and American
    interests. It is an enduring American principle
    that this duty obligates the government to
    anticipate and counter threats, using all
    elements of national power, before the threats
    can do grave damage.
  • Damage Limitation Strategy

3
President Bushs National Policyon Ballistic
Missile DefenseMay 20, 2003
  • The contemporary and emerging missile threat
    from hostile states is fundamentally different
    from that of the Cold War and requires a
    different approach to deterrence and new tools
    for defense.
  • Building on previous missile defense work, over
    the past year and a half, the Defense Department
    has pursued a robust research, development,
    testing, and evaluation program designed to
    develop layered defenses capable of intercepting
    missiles of varying ranges in all phases of
    flight.
  • Because the threats of the 21st Century also
    endanger our friends and allies around the world,
    it is essential that we work together to defend
    against these threats.

4
Global, Layered Missile Defense System
  • Global Scope
  • Layered Defense
  • Different Missile Ranges
  • Different Basing Modes

5
Global Defenses
  • U.S.-based Defenses for the Protection of U.S.
    Territory (e.g. Ground-Based Midcourse Defense in
    Alaska and California
  • Defense of U.S. Forces Deployed Abroad (e.g.
    Patriot PAC-3)
  • Defense of U.S. Allies and Friends (e.g.
    Aegis-based defenses on ships)

6
Allied Cooperation (Examples)
  • Great Britain (Fylingdales radar)
  • Denmark (Thule radar)
  • Germany (MEADS)
  • Italy (MEADS)
  • NATO (Defenses against shorter-range missiles)
  • Israel (Arrow)
  • Japan (Aegis systems)

7
NATO and Missile DefenseU.S. Department of State
Fact SheetApril 16, 2007
  • NATO has focused its missile defense development
    efforts on countering shorter-range threats.
  • The United States and NATO efforts are
    complementary and could work together to form a
    more a more effective defense for Europe.

8
Components of the Global Missile Defense System
  • Patriot PAC-3
  • Standard Missile-3
  • Standard Missile-2 Block IV
  • Ground-Based Midcourse Defense
  • Defense Support Program Satellites
  • Upgraded Early Warning Radar
  • Sea-Based X-Band Radar
  • Aegis AN/SPY-1 Radar
  • Cobra Dane
  • Japan-based FBX-T Radar
  • Patriot AN/MPQ-65 (PAC-3) Radar
  • Global Command and Control Structure
  • Future systems

9
European Sites
  • Midcourse X-Band Radar in the Czech Republic
  • Transportable Forward-Deployed X-Band Radar in
    Caspian Basin (For Analytical Purposes)
  • 10 Ground-Based Midcourse Interceptors in Poland
  • Protecting Europe and the U.S. Against
    Longer-Range Missiles

10
The Damage Limitation Strategy
  • Protection Over Retaliation
  • Reassuring U.S. Allies
  • Reduce to an Absolute Minimum the Likelihood of
    an Attack on the U.S and Its Friends and Allies
    with Weapons of Mass Destruction
  • Lessen the Incentives for Other States and
    Non-State Actors to Acquire Nuclear, Biological,
    and Chemical Weapons and the Means to Deliver
    Them
  • Limit the Impact of Attempted Attacks

11
The Damage Limitation Strategy and StabilityThe
Link to Missile Defense
  • Target Driven Force Posture
  • Offense-Defense Mix
  • Timely Engagement
  • Adaptive Force

12
Stability and the Nuclear Games Exercises
  • Proliferated Environment (7-Player Game Design)
  • Regional Settings (Global Option)
  • Differing Levels of Vulnerability
  • Diplomatic Options (Formal and Background)
  • Force Posture Options (Offensive and Defensive)
  • Disarmament Option (Not An Arms Control Exercise)
  • Detailed Study on Nuclear Games Exercises is
    Available at www.heritage.org/upload/NuclearGames.
    pdf

13
Nuclear Games ExerciseTokyo, JapanAugust 9, 2006
  • Player Descriptions Are Derived from an
    AbstractSetting Based on East Asia
  • Player A North Korea
  • Player B South Korea
  • Player C China
  • Player D Japan
  • Player E Taiwan
  • Player F Russia
  • Player G The United States

14
Opening Moves
  • North and South Korea both hedge their bets by
    shrouding readied weapons.
  • Japan moves to disarm, but only after seeking
    defenses and protection under the U.S. nuclear
    umbrella.
  • The U.S., seeking to reassure its friends and
    protect its own position, readies its offensive
    force and fields defenses for itself.
  • To realize its nonproliferation goals, the U.S.
    offers defenses and nuclear guarantees to other
    players that disarm.

15
North Korea SeeksLarger Power Sponsorship
  • North Korea proposes an alliance with China and
    Russia.
  • While North Korea is rebuffed on the alliance
    offers, its relationship with China remains
    friendly.

16
Initial Adjustments
  • China and Russia move to ready their offensive
    weapons.
  • U.S. and Japan enter into an alliance.
  • South Korea lifts its shroud and holsters, as it
    sees China and North Korea holster and obtains
    defenses from Player G.
  • North Korea lifts its shroud and holsters on the
    basis of its confidence in its relationship with
    China.

17
Divergent Tracks
  • Japan, Russia and the U.S. see North Korea as too
    unpredictable and move to isolate it by
    downgrading relations.
  • South Korea and Taiwan, seeing Japan not
    adversely affected by its decision to disarm,
    disarm under the U.S. nonproliferation offer,
    while Taiwan even seeks non-hostile relations
    with China.

18
Russia Moves Toward the West
  • Russia sees its security enhanced by joining the
    U.S. in seeking the disarmament of all the lesser
    powers and joins a great power condominium with
    the U.S. for that purpose.
  • Simultaneously, Russia moves to improve relations
    with South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

19
China Isolated
  • China offers closer relations to Russia to break
    the great power condominium, but the effort
    fails.
  • The U.S. and Russia enter a full-blown alliance
    and Russia obtains defenses.
  • The U.S. and Russia later move together to
    threaten China over its refusal to disarm.

20
North Korea Refuses to Disarm China Looks to
Back Down
  • North Korea refuses combined U.S./Russian demands
    that it disarm and faces an imminent threat of
    destruction at the hands of both.
  • China moves to holster, but not disarm, and seeks
    non-hostile relations with Taiwan and improved
    relations with Japan in an effort to avoid being
    attacked.
  • A combined U.S./Russian attack remains possible.

21
Lessons Learned
  • The presence of the U.S. nuclear deterrent
    remains essential to stability (deterring North
    Korea and China) and a force against
    proliferation (through reassurance to allies).
  • The ability and the willingness of the U.S. to
    provide defenses contribute to stability and
    nonproliferation goals (Japan, South Korea and
    Taiwan disarm).

22
Lessons Learned-Continued
  • The U.S. finds nuclear-armed allies a risky
    proposition and will work to seek their
    disarmament through close security relationships
    that include nuclear guarantees.
  • Both U.S. and Russia are tempted by a great power
    condominium to lessen the nuclear risks to
    themselves from the lesser powers.

23
Lessons Learned-Continued
  • New nuclear powers are likely overestimating the
    value of nuclear weapons, (made evident by the
    North Korean equivalent players refusal to
    disarm despite an imminent threat of
    destruction).
  • New nuclear powers do not have well developed
    doctrines regarding the use of nuclear weapons,
    which may simultaneously carry great risks for
    miscalculation and conflict and unexpected
    opportunities for disarmament (inherent
    volatility).

24
Lessons Learned-Continued
  • It is possible for Japanto forgo nuclear
    weapons.
  • The Japan equivalent player demonstrated that
    Japan can maintain its security without nuclear
    weapons in a proliferated setting (example to
    others).
  • It required a strong security relationship with
    the U.S (maintenance of the U.S.-Japan alliance).
  • It required an effective nuclear deterrent by the
    U.S.
  • It required defenses.

25
A New Design of the Nuclear Games Exercise
  • European/Middle East Regional Setting (Iran,
    Israel, Czech Republic, Poland, United Kingdom,
    United States)
  • Partially Proliferated Environment (Two Players
    Lack Nuclear Arsenals)
  • Initial Offensive Forces Differ (Nuclear Players)
  • Initial Diplomatic Relations Differ

26
Conclusion
  • Nuclear Games Validates the Damage Limitation
    Strategy
  • The Need to Protect and Defend Over Retaliation
  • Multilateralizing Mutually Assured Destruction
    Will Lead to Instability
  • Policymakers Can Use the Nuclear Games Tool to
    Familiarize Themselves with the Requirements for
    Stability in a Multi-polar Environment
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com