home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2120>
- <title>
- Aug. 30, 1993: The Ploy That Fell to Earth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 30, 1993 Dave Letterman
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DEFENSE, Page 26
- The Ploy That Fell to Earth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Star Wars suffers another blow with charges that an antimissile
- test was faked
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE VAN VOORST/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> One night in June 1984, a test ICBM soared up from Vandenberg
- Air Force Base in California. Thousands of miles away in the
- middle of the Pacific, another rocket was launched on Kwajalein
- Island. It contained an infrared sensor powerful enough to detect
- heat from a human body 1,000 miles away. Closing at 15,000 m.p.h.,
- the rocket locked onto the ICBM, intercepting it in midflight
- and destroying it by sheer physical impact. So devastating was
- the hit that the remaining shards of the ICBM's warhead measured
- less than an inch across.
- </p>
- <p> Pentagon officials were ecstatic about the results of the $300
- million test. It was, declared one official, like "hitting a
- bullet with a bullet." Moreover, it was proof of the potential
- of Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. It seemed to
- signal an important first step in building a high-tech astro-shield
- against nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles from the Soviet Union.
- A Wall Street Journal editorial proclaimed, STAR WARS WORKS.
- </p>
- <p> But did it? Last week a report in the New York Times alleged
- that the test was a fraud and that the results had been rigged.
- While that may have served as part of a cold war strategy to
- deceive the Soviets into spending their way into oblivion to
- counter SDI, similar misinformation was provided to Congress
- to persuade it to fund the program with huge sums--$31 billion
- to date. Clearly stung, Defense Secretary Les Aspin, a former
- Congressman, ordered an internal investigation at the Pentagon.
- Said he: "Any allegation that the Congress has been misled raises
- serious questions." Said Senator David Pryor, whose long-standing
- probe of SDI seems to have triggered the revelations: "It could
- totally discredit the testing process and the credibility of
- the Pentagon."
- </p>
- <p> Sources apparently within the SDI program told the Times that
- the 1984 launchings did not prove the efficacy of the heat-seeking
- infrared sensor. Rather, the target ICBM carried a beacon that
- guided the interceptor rocket toward a set-up collision. Officials
- involved with the test have vigorously defended the test results.
- Said General Eugene Fox, the retired Army missile-defense chief:
- "We didn't gimmick anything." William Inglis, the experiment's
- civilian test director, dismissed the accusations of an SDI
- hoax as "technical nonsense." There was indeed a beacon, but,
- said Inglis, it served only for "range safety" purposes, allowing
- ground crews to destroy the ICBM if it went off course.
- </p>
- <p> Inglis admitted to TIME, however, that some aspects of the test
- might have enhanced the results and made it easier for the interceptor
- to find its target. The warhead, for example, was preheated
- before launch to 100 degreesF to provide a clearer infrared
- signature. The target warhead also carried explosives to increase
- the detonation and thus assist ground observations. Says a congressional
- staff member: "Either could have served to skew the tests."
- </p>
- <p> While SDI's supporters, including top Reagan Administration
- officials, strenuously deny that the 1984 results were falsified,
- they all concede that deceptive practices are normal in statecraft.
- During the '80s a "perception management" program run by the
- CIA handled a disinformation operation aimed at deceiving the
- Soviets about U.S. technological research. Among the programs
- it had a hand in was SDI. A draft of a classified Defense guidance
- document from that period clearly toes the spend-Moscow-into-the-ground
- line and reads, "We should seek to open up new areas of military
- competition and obsolesce previous Soviet investment or employ
- sophisticated strategic deception options to achieve this end."
- A former official told TIME, "A lot of time and money has been
- spent on this." It may have worked. Last year the Russian ambassador
- to the U.S., Vladimir Lukin, told Robert McFarlane, Reagan's
- National Security Adviser, that fear of competing with the U.S.
- in strategic defense "accelerated the Gorbachev revolution by
- five years."
- </p>
- <p> Gimmicking military-weapons tests is nothing new at the Pentagon.
- In the mid-1980s congressional investigators dethat aircraft
- were exploded by remote ground control within seconds of each
- firing from the Sergeant York antiaircraft gun and that it never
- actually hit the drone planes. In operational tests of the Bradley
- Fighting Vehicle, ammunition in the turret was replaced with
- cans of water to douse fires and lower the level of explosions
- when the vehicle was hit.
- </p>
- <p> The current controversy has cast further doubts on the SDI program,
- which even in this time of declining defense budgets is still
- slated for $3 billion in 1995. "This is a body blow to the integrity
- of everyone who worked on SDI," said Frank Gaffney, director
- of the Washington-based Center for Security Policy and a diehard
- Star Warrior. Caspar Weinberger, Reagan's Secretary of Defense,
- insists that "the test was scientifically based, did succeed
- and was accurately reported to the Congress and the American
- public." But he said there may be no overcoming the new allegations:
- "Once these fairy tales are out, they are picked up as gospel
- truth by editorial writers and never corrected."
- </p>
- <p> Yet SDI has always been something of a fairy tale. In 1983 scientist
- Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb, promised Reagan
- that nuclear-generated X rays would destroy warheads. It was
- a claim accepted by few in the scientific community and has
- long since proved false. Other SDI-related technologies--directed
- energy, chemical lasers, neutron beams--have turned out to
- be useless. Last May, Aspin conceded that the decade-long SDI
- program produced no credible defense against ICBMs. He renamed
- SDI--focused now on threats from mid-range rockets like the
- Scud--the Ballistic Missile Defense program. It was, said
- Aspin, "the end of the Star Wars era." True enough, but not
- the end of Ballistic Missile Defense, which will cost taxpayers
- a projected $40 billion more over the next six years.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-