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<text id=93HT0620>
<link 93XP0259>
<link 90TT2134>
<link 89TT1672>
<link 89TT0479>
<title>
1983: Reagan For The Defense
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1983 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
April 4, 1983
NATION
Reagan for the Defense
</hdr>
<body>
<p>His vision of the future turns the budget battle into a star war
</p>
<p> The crusade he has embarked upon required that he balance two
competing messages: the U.S. must resolutely rearm to counter
the Soviet threat, but it must project is peaceful intent along
with its military might. Congress must be convinced that his
$274 billion defense budget for fiscal 1984 ought not to be
gutted. The nuclear freeze movement at home and abroad has to
be countered that the U.S. can upgrade its strategic forces and
proceed with deployment of NATO missiles. And the Soviet Union
needs to be persuaded that the West will not shrink from nuclear
competition if its proposals for arms reductions are spurned.
In a television address last week, Ronald Reagan confronted
this complicated balancing act by graphically depicting what he
claims is Moscow's "margin of superiority" while broaching a
surprising and controversial idea for preventing nuclear war.
</p>
<p> Reagan refused to retreat an inch in defending what is now
proposed to be a $2 trillion, five-year military spending plan.
Speaking just 33 minutes after the House voted to cut by more
than half his proposed 10% increase in next year's Pentagon
budget, the President sharply assailed the arguments of his
critics as "nothing more than noise based on ignorance." Said
he: "They're the same kind of talk that led the democracies to
neglect their defenses in the 1930s and invited the tragedy of
World War II." In order to emphasize the offensive threat posed
by the Soviet Union, Reagan declassified spy-plane photographs
showing Soviet activity in the Caribbean area. His charts
showed the five new classes of Soviet ICBMs that have been
produced since the U.S. Minuteman was deployed. He compared
Moscow's missiles aimed at Europe with the lack of any NATO
missiles aimed at the Soviets. And he pointed to a daunting
Soviet lead in conventional weapons.
</p>
<p> Then, in concluding his down-to-earth defense of his budget,
Reagan launched the debate over U.S. military spending into an
entirely different orbit. "Let me share with you a vision of
the future which offers hope," he began. The President went on
to suggest that America forsake the three-decade-old doctrine
of deterring nuclear war through the threat of retaliation and
instead pursue a defensive strategy based on space-age weaponry
designed to "intercept and destroy" incoming enemy missiles.
"I call upon the scientific community in our country, those who
gave us nuclear weapons, to turn their great talents now to the
cause of mankind and world peace: to give us the mans of
rendering these nuclear weapons impotent and obsolete."
</p>
<p> Reagan's video-game vision of satellites and other weapons that
might some day zap enemy missiles with lasers or particle beams
and the drama surrounding his unexpected announcement were
partly a political ploy to change the context of the debate over
defense spending. But if his space-age plan proceeds, or even
if the suggestion of a shift ins strategy is taken seriously,
the implications are staggering. Indeed, as Reagan said, "we are
launching an effort which holds the promise of changing the
course of human history." Not since 1972, when the
antiballistic missile (ABM) treaty was signed as part of the
SALT I accords, has the U.S. or U.S.S.R. actively taken steps
to set up a defense against nuclear attack.
</p>
<p> Embarking on an effort to build shields rather than swords was
a characteristic Reagan gesture--a clear and simple assertion
from his gut challenging the accepted wisdom that defensive
systems are "destabilizing." His notion that missiles could be
knocked out in space had a wistful though dangerous appeal; it
suggested that the nation could be defended without earthly
sacrifice and bloodshed.
</p>
<p> As with many of the President's uncomplicated-sounding
proposals, the idea of space-age missile defenses masks a swarm
of complexities. It raises the specter of an arms race in
space, which ultimately could be more expensive and dangerous
than the one taking place on earth. In a prompt and strong
reaction, Soviet Leader Yuri Andropov personally warned:
"Should this conception be converted into reality, this would
actually open the floodgates of a runaway race of all types of
strategic arms, both offensive and defensive." Even more
ominous, the development of a missile defense system could
undermine the very foundation of strategic stability, namely,
the concept of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD), which has often
been modified, but never abandoned. Under this concept each
side is deterred from using its weapons by fear of cataclysmic
retaliation.
</p>
<p> The recognition that defensive systems could upset the nuclear
balance was the propelling force behind the 1972 ABM treaty, the
only arms-control pact that binds the two superpowers. It
declares: "Each party undertakes not to develop, test, or deploy
ABM systems or components which are sea-based, air-based,
space-based, or mobile-land-based." The administration says that
merely undertaking research into such a project does not violate
the treaty. Indeed, the Soviets have been spending perhaps as
much as five times the U.S. amount on laser technologies and
weapons, although they apparently have not developed such
devices for knocking out missiles. Over the past decade, the
U.S. has tested lasers against relatively slow-flying drones and
antitank missiles. The results were mixed, but good enough to
show the concept's potential.
</p>
<p> Two retired military intelligence officers, Air Force Major
General George Keegan and Army Lieut. General Daniel Graham,
have been leading advocates of space weaponry. Graham headed
a project, called the High Frontier, which was funded by the
Heritage Foundation, a Washington think tank. It reported that
technology currently exists to orbit more than 400 "killer
satellites" that could knock out Soviet missiles. There were
other supporters of the idea, most notably Edward Teller, the
hawkish physicist known as the "father of the hydrogen bomb."
</p>
<p> Reagan first discussed the question of missile-killing
technology with his science adviser, Physicist George Keyworth
II, in a conversation two years ago. Keyworth, an admirer of
Teller's who helped develop an earlier ABM system, appointed a
task force that included Teller, Consultant Edward Friedman and
former Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard. Early this
year they informed Reagan that the idea seemed technically
feasible, and it was brought up at a Feb. 11 White House meeting
with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Reagan said nothing for the
next three weeks, then popped the idea at a morning briefing.
He told National Security Adviser William Clark to have the
Pentagon and State Department formally consider the project.
The Arms Control and Disarmament Agency was left out of the
consultation due to the turmoil there resulting from the still
unsettled controversy over the nomination of Kenneth Adelman to
head the agency.
</p>
<p> Reagan felt the need to include a positive element in his speech
last week to show that his Administration had a broader vision
than simply confronting security problems with greenbacks. So
he decided to announce his space-age plan with some public
fanfare, rather than simply order that it be studied quietly.
(Reagan actually proposed such a plan before. It was outlined
in a White House position paper on defense in October 1981: "We
will expand ballistic missile defense research and development
for active defense of land-based missiles. We will develop
technologies for space-based missile defense.") Clark warned
Reagan on the day of the speech that he could expect criticism,
even from within his Administration, for precipitately
suggesting such a radical change in strategy. "It won't be
the first time," the President replied: "It doesn't bother me."
</p>
<p> In order to preserve an element of surprise in its announcement,
the White House restricted discussions of the ABM plan to top
officials on what is called a "close held" basis. Most
congressional leaders were kept in the dark until the afternoon
of the speech. So were most of those on the political and
policy staffs in the West Wing. The paragraphs in Reagan's
speech on new defensive technologies were drafted separately and
then blended into the speech by the President. The overriding
factor in the timing and handling of the issue--one that
discomfited a few senior aides--seemed to be the desire for
intensive political impact rather than a careful consideration
of the subject. The most important ramifications that the
Administration has yet to address fully may be geopolitical
rather than technological. What course will the Soviets take in
response? Moscow, which has a lead in many applications of
laser technology, seems unlikely to refrain from exploiting it.
If both nations follow parallel roads into space, a new balance
of forces could emerge. The President hopes that an emphasis
on defensive weapons could be linked to a negotiated reduction
in offensive missiles. But the Administration has not even
begun to work out the possible contingencies involved in a
Soviet-American military space race. If either side nears the
point of deploying an ABM system first, the strategic situation
could become dangerously destabilized, especially if offensive
weapons have not yet been reduced.
</p>
<p> What has been dubbed at the White House the "star wars add-on"
actually tended to obscure the real substance of Reagan's
speech, which was part of a series designed to rally support for
his defense budget. In what staffers jokingly call the "Darth
Vader" speech, Reagan told evangelical Christians meeting in
Orlando, Fla., in early March that the Soviet empire was "the
focus of evil in the modern world." This Thursday, the
President will outline the U.S. position on European-based
missiles in an address in Los Angeles and next week will make
another speech on the need for the MX missile. In addition to
presidential speeches, the Administration has been conducting
classified briefings for Congressmen in the White House theater
on the Soviet military threat.
</p>
<p> Even with this offensive, the Administration will have serious
trouble salvaging what it considers to be an acceptable defense
budget in Congress. House Democrats last week passed their own
version of a budget for fiscal 1984, which begins in October.
Depending on how inflation is calculated, the Democratic plan
raises defense spending by about 2% to 4% compared with the more
than 10% after-inflation boost that Reagan wants.
</p>
<p> The Democratic leadership used various parliamentary maneuvers
to ensure that the budget plan it had worked out would be
considered as a whole; the only amendment they would permit was
a substitute of Reagan's proposed tax and spending package. But
no Republican was willing to introduce the Reagan version of the
budget on the floor for fear of being politically tainted by its
large deficit (*$188.8 billion) and whopping increases in
defense. The G.O.P. members preferred instead to let the
Democratic proposal, which calls for tax hikes of $30 billion
and deficits of $174.5 billion, be the focus of debate. Reagan
personally lobbied against the budget alternative, mostly with
Democratic freshmen. He told Ronald Coleman of Texas that the
Democratic plan was "way out of line." Army Secretary John
Marsh also called Coleman, subtly reminding the Congressman that
Fort Bliss was in his district. Coleman stuck with his party.
"Even though I'm a freshman, I think there's enough of us not
to let anything happen to Fort Bliss," he said. The 26 seats
won by the Democrats last fall tipped the balance: on what was
close to a party-line vote, the Democrats budget passed, 229 to
196.
</p>
<p> The Democratic budget plan will not pass the Republican-
controlled Senate, of course. But the President will
have trouble prevailing there too. On defense spending,
Republican leaders in the upper chamber are closer to the
Democrats in the House than their leader in the White House.
They have publicly urged that the growth in the Pentagon budget
be cut to about 5%. The more pragmatic members of the
President's staff, led by James Baker, are hoping for a
compromise at about 7%. For them to persuade the President to
come down to that level may be as difficult as getting
Republican Senators to come up to it.
</p>
<p> Underlying Reagan's speech last week was his unwavering
contention that questions about the proper level of military
spending should be divorced from the nation's overall budgetary
and fiscal situation. The determining factor, Reagan insisted,
should be the level of threat posed by the Soviets. "Our
defense establishment must be evaluated to see what is necessary
to protect against any or all of the potential threats," he
said. "The cost of achieving these ends is totaled up and the
result is the budget for national defense."
</p>
<p> Reagan somberly detailed the overwhelming nature of these
threats as he sees them. Using red and blue charts marked with
the Soviet sickle and the American flag (which inexplicably
contained 56 stars), he compared the production of armaments
since 1974: 3,050 tactical warplanes for the U.S. vs. 6,100 for
the Soviets, 27 U.S. attach submarines vs. 61 Soviet ones,
11,200 U.S. tanks and armored fighting vehicles vs 54,000 for
the U.S.S.R. He also displayed a graph of the unilateral
increase in Soviet intermediate-range missiles aimed at Europe,
noting the pledges made by Kremlin leaders at each point in
their buildup. Critics claimed he did not make clear how the
comparisons compelled precisely the spending increase that
Reagan proposed, rather than one twice as big or one half the
size, since the President was essentially contending the
military budget should have nothing to do with the nation's
ability to afford the spending.
</p>
<p> The question of using spyplane photographs to bolster Reagan's
charges of Soviet involvement in Latin America was debated
within the intelligence community. Reagan felt that if the
public could see what he sees, it would be more willing to rally
around his policies. So, less than two weeks after he signed an
Executive Order clamping down on leaks of classified material,
he ordered three reconnaissance-plane photographs declassified.
He did, however, accede to intelligence agency arguments that
the release of additional satellite photographs would reveal too
much about U.S. techniques.
</p>
<p> Reagan's display of the photographs was not done in a
sensational manner, and the evidence revealed in two cases was
hardly more than what tourists could have gathered on the
ground. Commandant Tomas Borge, a leader in Nicaragua's
Sandinista directorate, scoffed at the idea that the Mi-8 Soviet
helicopters Reagan pointed out on an airfield at Managua were
threats to American security. They are familiar sights at
Managua's airport. One was used to transport Pope John Paul II
during his visit there in march. Borge told TIME: "You can see
them without climbing into a satellite."
</p>
<p> The photographs did, however, illustrate an important point
that Reagan made: the Soviets are "spreading their military
influence" to America's backyard, and doing so in a way that
indicates that their aims are far from merely defensive.
Pointing to a new 10,000-foot runway on the tiny Soviet-aligned
Caribbean island of Grenada (pop. 110,000), Reagan noted:
"Grenada doesn't even have an air force. Who is it intended
for? The Caribbean is a very important passageway for our
international commerce and military lines of communications.
The rapid buildup of Grenada's military potential is unrelated
to any conceivable threat to this island country." Two
photographs of Cuba reveal a communications facility staffed by
1,500 Soviet technicians, which the President said is the
largest of its kind in the world, and an airfield from which two
modern Soviet antisubmarine planes are operating. "During the
past two years, the level of Soviet arms exports to Cuba can
only be compared to the levels reached during the Cuban missile
crisis 20 years ago," Reagan said. (In 1979, President Carter
cited with alarm aerial evidence that a 2,000 to 3,000-man
Soviet brigade was training and operating in Cuba. He publicly
asked that the troops be withdrawn; they are still there.)
</p>
<p> Reagan's figures are technically accurate, and the Soviet
buildup has indeed been formidable, but there is still ample
room for dispute over what the numbers mean. Daniel Inouye, in
the official Democratic response, argued that it is wrong to
think that the Soviets enjoy a strategic superiority, as Reagan
asserted. Said the Hawaii Senator: "Reagan left the impression
that the U.S. is at the mercy of the Soviet Union. Most
respectfully, Mr. President, you know that is not true. You
have failed to present an honest picture." Inouye said that
Reagan failed to point out that the Soviet Union's advantage in
land-based missiles is "more than offset" by American warheads
on submarines and bombers; the total nuclear warhead arsenal of
the U.S. is 9,268, compared with 7,339 for the Soviets. (These
numbers, from a Democratic Party study, differ somewhat from the
most recent Pentagon reports, which say the U.S. has about 9,000
warheads and the U.S.S.R. has about 8,500.)
</p>
<p> Some skeptics charged that the speech was part of an increasing
Pentagon propensity toward "threat inflation." Explained
Congressman Les Aspin of Wisconsin: "We are seeing a more
exaggerated and disingenuous presentation of the Soviet threat
than we have seen in the past." As an example of his this
works, critics point to Defense Department hype two years ago
for the new Soviet T-80 tank. It was depicted in briefings and
a Pentagon publication as fast, heavily armored and bristling
with grenade and missile launchers. That was when the
Administration was anxious to secure funding for America's new
M1 tank. A recent photograph released by the Pentagon in its
latest assessment of Soviet strength shows that the T-80 is
actually only a slight modification of its predecessor, the
T-72, with similar shape, armor and capability.
</p>
<p> Reactions to Reagan's defense of his military spending plans
were dwarfed by the debate over his vision of satellite missile
killers. "To inject and hurl out this new idea while the whole
world is waiting for the U.S. to come up with a reasonable arms
control proposal I find bizarre," said Democratic Senator
Christopher Dodd of Connecticut. "Can you imagine the reaction
here and abroad if Yuri Andropov had made this speech?" Others
were appalled at the enormous potential costs of a space race.
Said Republican Senator Mark Hatfield of Oregon: "It is a call
to siphon off the meager and inadequate commitment which now
exists to rebuild America." A few senators, including
Republicans Pete Domenici of New Mexico and Malcolm Wallop of
Wyoming, have long been urging such a project. The reaction
from most others was guarded curiosity. "It's worth putting out
and debating," said Senator William Cohen, A Republican from
Maine.
</p>
<p> The White House reported an outpouring of supportive calls and
telegrams after the speech (80% out of 2,800 in favor). Said
Senior Adviser Michael Deaver: "He has had the most favorable
response to any speech since he was elected President." But
editorial reaction from around the country was more skeptical.
The Atlanta Constitution, which labeled Reagan's
characterization of the Soviet threat as "huckstering
misimpressions," said that by "raising the remote possibility
of a sci-fi defense against Soviet missiles, he risked
destabilizing the U.S.-Soviet military balance--already
dangerously tenuous." The Chicago Sun Times called the speech
"an appalling disservice." Said the Detroit Free
Press: "Reagan's vision of a 21st century in which the U.S. will
be hermetically sealed against all nuclear attack provides no
answer to the problem of hour our national security is to best
be addressed now and in the next couple of decades."
</p>
<p> There was some feeling, however, that Reagan's challenge to a
system of deterrence that is based on the threat of mutual
destruction could be a welcome element in the debate over
nuclear policy. "Reagan now suggests that we slowly start
investigating whether in the next century technology may offer
a solution to our security that does not rest on the prospect
of mass and mutual death," noted the Washington Post. "It is
the product of Ronald Reagan's peculiar knack for asking an
obvious question, one that is moral as well as political
dimensions and one that the experts had assumed had been
answered, or found unanswerable, or found not worth asking, long
ago."
</p>
<p> Moscow's response was far less generous. For the second time
since coming to power, Andropov chose to respond personally to
a U.S. initiative through an interview with Pravda. He began
by conceding that part of what Reagan said was correct: "True,
the Soviet Union did strengthen its defense capability. Faced
with feverish U.S. efforts to establish military bases near
Soviet territory, to develop ever new types of nuclear and other
weapons, the U.S.S.R. was compelled to do so." But then he
struck back, saying of his American counterpart: "he tells a
deliberate lie asserting that the Soviet Union does not observe
its own moratorium on the deployment of medium-range missiles
[in Europe]." When he addressed Reagan's idea of space-age
defensive ABMs, Andropov became heated. "It is a bid to disarm
the Soviet Union in the face of the U.S. nuclear threat," he
said. The relation between offensive and defensive weapons
cannot be severed, he argued. "It is time Washington stopped
devising one option after another in search of the best ways of
unleashing nuclear war in the hope of winning it. Engaging in
this is not just irresponsible, it is insane."
</p>
<p> Reagan invited a group of 52 scientists and national security
experts to the White House Wednesday night to view his speech
and be briefed by top officials. Some of those who attended,
such a Teller and David Packard, a co-founder of the
Hewlett-Packard Co., were longtime advocates of ABM research.
Said Packard: "Technology has moved ahead to the point where
we could design a ballistic missile defense system which could
be fully effective. If both sides had a defensive system, it
would be stabilizing."
</p>
<p> But other scientists who were at the White House briefing,
including Victor Weisskopf of M.I.T., Hans Bethe of Cornell and
Simon Ramo of TRW Inc., are troubled by the plan. "I don't
think it can be done," says Bethe, a Nobel laureate in physics.
What is worse, it will produce a star war if successful."
Ramo, one of the developers of the ballistic missile, likes the
idea in theory but says, "We don't know how to do it." He also
worries about the awesome offensive power that would be inherent
in what are conceived of as defensive weapons. Asks Ramo: "Who
says that this technique will be used only to knock out missiles
in the sky? If It's such a good technique, why not use it to
knock out things on the ground?"
</p>
<p> Scientists also believe that any satellite antimissile system
could lead to more emphasis on a low-flying missiles, like the
cruise, that would not be vulnerable to space defenses. The
satellites could also be vulnerable. "Many potential counters,
such a decoys or space mines, have the power to neutralize
space-based systems," says Stanford University Physicist and
Arms Control Expert Sidney Drell. He colleague Arthur Schawlow,
who won the Nobel Prize for his work on developing the laser,
agrees: "A laser battle station out in space would be a sitting
duck."
</p>
<p> The fact that new weapons could probably evade or destroy
satellite defense systems makes the technology Reagan envisions
incalculably expensive. "The offense can add dimensions to
thwart or neutralize the defense for far less money than the
cost of defensive systems," says Ramo. "Hence it's economically
unsound." Jeremy Stone, director of the Federation of American
Scientists, agrees. "The cost is unlimited," he says, "because
what we try to do in defending the country, the Russians will
attempt to negate by penetrating the system."
</p>
<p> Even if such a system could survive, points out another
Stanford physicist, Wolfgang Panofsky, it is "infeasible" to
design a defense that will intercept all missiles. "It is
possible to develop a system that can shoot down one missile,
but that is a long cry from developing a system that does not
leak," he says. Such shortcomings in a nuclear defense system
clearly would be disastrous. Even if a system were 90%
effective, the leakage of just a fraction of Moscow's 8,500 or
so warheads could be devastating. Says Kosta Tsipis, co-
director of a program in science and technology at M.I.T.: "The
critical failure of all these defensive systems is that they
must be perfect. Less than that and they are ruinous. What the
President is offering is a cruel hoax."
</p>
<p> Carl Sagan, the Cornell University astronomer and author, and
Richard Garwin, a military expert at IBM's Watson Research
Center, have prepared a petition of leading scientists opposing
space weaponry. Sagan, who listened to Reagan's speech from a
Syracuse hospital where he was recovering from an appendectomy,
was so agitated that he pressed to have the manifesto completed
for release this week. It concludes: "If space weapons are
ever to be banned, this may be close to the last moment in which
it can be done."
</p>
<p> West European political leaders and defense experts were taken
aback by Reagan's out-of-the-blue suggestion that the entire
deterrent doctrine be reassessed. One main worry: such a
strategic shift might "de-couple" America's defense of itself
from that of its NATO allies. "I fear this will be an issue that
could become extremely divisive between the Europeans and the
U.S. because it is tending toward Fortress America," said
British Colonel Jonathan Alford of the International Institute
for Strategic Studies in London. "The proposal intends to put
a bubble over the U.S., and that would be followed by a bubble
over the Soviet Union. If we can't threaten to strike the
Soviet Union, we Europeans are going to be out in the cold."
While the london Standard headlined its worry over Reagan's
ray-guns, the Times engaged in soberer hyperbole, calling the
initiative "one of the most fundamental switches in American
policy since the second World War."
</p>
<p> In Bonn, the disarmament spokesman in the opposition Social
Democratic Party, Egon Bahr, said Reagan "has broken a taboo,
and the new perspective could be fruitful." But Manfred Worner,
Defense Minister in the conservative government, called the plan
"a program for the next century, not one to tackle the defense
problems of tomorrow."
</p>
<p> For Western Europe, visions of 21st century satellite weapons
could scarcely divert attention from an immediate defense
concern, the 572 American Pershing II and cruise missiles that
NATO plans to begin deploying this year if no agreement is
reached with the Soviets on Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
(INF). For this reason, allied officials are less interested
in the speech Reagan gave last week than in the one he is
schedules to deliver Thursday in Los Angeles spelling out the
U.S. INF negotiating stance.
</p>
<p> So far the U.S. has stood pat on Reagan's zero option, which
proposes that NATO forgo its planned deployment if the Soviets
dismantle the 613 intermediate-range missiles they now have in
place. NATO defense ministers meeting in Portugal were
successfully persuaded by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger
last week to reaffirm support for deployment of NATO's missiles
if there is no agreement at the INF negotiations in Geneva. But
despite this declaration, West European leaders remain hopeful
that the U.S. will adopt a more flexible approach. In this
week's speech, Reagan is expected to indicate that the U.S. will
consider accepting an interim U.S.-Soviet balance of, perhaps,
300 warheads for each side as a step toward the eventual
elimination of Euromissiles. Offering such a compromise would
help blunt the intense opposition among many citizens in Western
Europe to new missiles. In addition, a good-faith bargaining
gesture could neutralize one of Reagan's severest political
problems both at home and abroad, the perception that he is not
really sincere in seeking arms control.
</p>
<p> Reagan's final speech in his current defense crusade is expected
to offer a recommendation concerning the much disputed MX
missile. A presidential panel has been studying ways to deploy
the new ICBMs, which remain homeless after three years of basing
proposals ranging from race tracks to dense packs. The panel
is expected to suggest that a limited number of the mammoth
missiles be built and placed in existing silos used by Minuteman
ICBMs. The panel is also considering calling for a new, smaller
missile, dubbed Midgetman, that could be made mobile and thus
less vulnerable to an enemy strike.
</p>
<p> With so many crucial defense decisions looming in the coming
months, it was distressing that Reagan chose this particular
moment to introduce his star ward vision of missile defense
forces. The issue of altering fundamental nuclear strategies
is far too important to be tosses about either for temporary
political impact, or in the name of getting the levels of
defense spending that he feels--rightly or wrongly--the nation
so urgently needs. Shifting to a system of satellite defenses
would require years of careful planning and sincere negotiations
with the Soviets, for the idea can never work as a unilateral
pursuit or as merely a hostile escalation of the arms race.
</p>
<p>-- By Walter Isaacson. Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and
Douglas Brew/Washington
</p>
<p>The Old Lion Still Roars
</p>
<p> "The President's statement bears some analogy with President
Roosevelt's interest in Einstein's letter about the atomic bomb.
In historic importance, the two are comparable."
</p>
<p> That may sound like an extravagant appraisal of President
Reagan's proposal to develop a defense against nuclear missiles.
But it comes from the only man who had a hand in both those
decisions, 44 years apart. As a young refugee from Hungary,
Edward Teller was part of the group of physicists who persuaded
Albert Einstein to draft his famous 1939 letter advising F.D.R.
that a nuclear bomb could be designed. Teller went on to help
develop it and, in the 1950s, win universal recognition as the
"father of the hydrogen bomb." Now, gray and limping at 75 but
booming out sharply worded o pinions in a voice as powerful and
confident as ever, Teller is one of the advisers who convinced
Reagan that a missile-killing system based on laser- and
particle-beam technology is feasible.
</p>
<p> Teller's influence these days is indirect. A senior research
fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, he
serves the Government only as a member of the Air Force
scientific advisory board. But the highly hawkish views that
have made him a suspect figure to many fellow scientists win him
respect from the Reagan white House, where he is an honored
guest. He was among the 13 scientists who dined at the mansion
last week. More to the point, Reagan's science adviser, George
Keyworth, 31 years younger than Teller, has long admired the old
lion and included him in a group of outside scientists who
reviewed antimissile technologies for the President last summer
and found them promising. Says Teller about "my President":
"He has endorsed high technology as a means by which a more
stable world can be created. Such confidence in imaginative
approaches...is remarkable news."
</p>
<p> Reagan did not need to consult Teller personally or even
through Keyworth; he could have learned the aged physicist's
views by picking up a newspaper or magazine. Teller has been
arguing for an antiballistic-missile system since the mid-1960s.
He fell silent after the signing of the treaty banning such
systems in 1972, a grievous mistake, in his opinion, but has
taken up the cudgels again in a spate of articles during the
past two years. His opinions, as summarized for TIME
correspondent Dick Thompson last week, dismiss contrary opinion
as vigorously as ever.
</p>
<p>-- On how long it would take to develop a working antimissile
system: "Fission was discovered late in 1938, and the first
atomic bomb exploded in the summer of 1945. To my mind, our job
today is comparable; perhaps more difficult, perhaps more east.
I tend to be an optimist."
</p>
<p>-- On the necessity for it: "We need to be in a situation where
we are not subject to nuclear blackmail, where no matter how
other conflicts come out we can at least be safe at home,
without allies. I don't believe that the United States can
maintain its happy position in the world--I don't even think we
can survive--without high technology."
</p>
<p>-- On the balance of nuclear power: "If we have a defensive
advantage, the Soviets can be very sure that this is no real
danger to them. They know we are not going to use it; we are not
going to start a nuclear war. But if the Soviets should have
a defensive advantage, that would be dangerous."
</p>
<p>-- On the interim period: "We need a good defense, and a good
defense of necessity is preceded by a marginal defense and later
by a better defense. We will be able to defend ourselves if we
stand behind the President." </p>
</body>
</article>
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