Document Title : Overcoming the ABM Treaty: Paths to
National Missile Defense
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AD Number: ADA354663
Subject Categories: ANTIMISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS GUIDED MISSILES
Corporate Author: NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
Title:
Overcoming the ABM Treaty: Paths to National Missile Defense
Personal
Authors: Keenan, Joseph M.
Report Date: JUN 1998
Pages: 183 PAGES
Monitor Acronym: XB
Monitor Series: NPS
Supplementary Note: Master's
thesis.
Descriptors: *ANTIMISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS, *TREATIES, *DEFENSE
PLANNING, *NATIONAL DEFENSE, WEAPONS, USSR, WARFARE, MILITARY STRATEGY, UNITED
STATES, ENVIRONMENTS, DEFENSE SYSTEMS, MILITARY DOCTRINE, NAVY, THESES, COLD
WAR, MASS DESTRUCTION WEAPONS, INTERNATIONAL, POSTURE(GENERAL), GUIDED
MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS, MILITARY FORCE LEVELS, ASSURED DESTRUCTION.
Identifiers: NMD(NATIONAL MISSILE DEFENSE), NO MISSILE DEFENSE
Abstract: Some of the most heated debates taking place on Capitol Hill
surround a proposed American national missile defense system. The debate
is not new. For twenty years, the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty and
its underlying acceptance of mutual assured destruction (MAD) enjoyed widespread
support among U.S. leaders. Events of the early 1990s shook support for
America's "no missile defense" posture to its very core. The fall of the
Soviet Union, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and
ballistic missile technology, and the Gulf War presented new challenges
to existing strategic doctrine. As a result, a renewed push for a U.S. National
Missile Defense (NMD) system began in earnest, and a new round of debates
began over the utility of the bilateral ABM Treaty in a multilateral post-Cold
War international environment This thesis identifies four distinct paths which
the United States could follow in addressing the NMD-ABM Treaty debate. Each
path is characterized by distinct factors which historically have influenced
past ABM system debates. The most likely path to NMD that the United States is
following, based on these driving factors, is identified. The potential
implications which this prevalent NMD path may have on U.S. Navy force structure
and planning is also addressed. Understanding how the current NMD debate is
structured and driven enables one to discern which path to NMD deployment the
United States is on. This realization can help shape future force planning
considerations.
Limitation Code: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
Source
Code: 251450
Citation Creation Date: 28 OCT 1998