DoD News Briefing
Secretary of Defense
William J. Perry
Thursday, April
11, 1996 - 1:30 p.m.
(Also participating
in this new briefing is Mr. Kenneth H. Bacon, ASD PA)
Mr. Bacon: We have
three briefers today for the presentation on the new proliferation report
which I hope you've had a chance to read. Secretary Perry will start,
and then General Hughes, the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency,
followed by Ashton Carter, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International
Security Policy. Secretary Perry will not be able to take any questions,
but General Hughes and Secretary Carter will.
Secretary Perry:
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union created a massive and a deadly
arsenal of nuclear weapons, including what we call the SS-18 and the
SS-19 ICBMs. These created a truly dangerous threat to the United States.
In the '60s we talked about the missile gap; in the '70s we talked about
the window of vulnerability; in the '80s we were talking about a nuclear
hair-trigger. I bring this up to remind you of the legacy of nuclear
weapons which have concerned us for decades.
This threat was
described during the '80s in a publication called Soviet Military Power.
I have spent most of my career one way or another trying to deal with
these threats. During the '70s when I was the Under Secretary of Defense,
I initiated programs to enhance deterrence against this threat. There
were programs to be deployed in the United States -- the MX, the ALCM,
the B-2. We were deploying programs at sea -- the Trident submarine,
the Trident I, the Trident II missile; programs in Europe, weapon systems
in Europe -- the GLCM,ground launched cruise missile; the Pershing II
with a penetrating nuclear warhead.
Recalling this
may make some of you nostalgic, but those are the kind of threats we
were facing in those days. Those were the kind of defenses,deterrence
threats that we were designing to deal with them.
During the '80s,
President Reagan tried to supplement our deterrence programs by initiating
a missile defense program called a Strategic Defense Initiative.
All of these together,
these deterrence programs, the defense programs, took up a significant
amount of the time and resources of this Department and its leadership.
Today, with the
Cold War over, the threat of nuclear holocaust is dramatically reduced,
and our programs and our investments have been dramatically changed
and correspondingly reduced. But another threat, in the mean time, has
increased in intensity, and that threat, is the one of the proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction -- nuclear weapons, chemical weapons,
biological weapons -- proliferating to countries all over the world.
That threat, and
the perception of that threat, has led us to develop a counterproliferation
program which we're going to be describing to you today. This is described
in a report which could be considered as the counterpart to that red
document, the Soviet Military Power document. Let me show you the two
reports we're talking about.
For those of you
who are nostalgic, this is the 1985 version of Soviet Military Power;
and this is the report we've just released called Proliferation-- Threat
and Response.
The achievement
of this report is to pull together and make available to the public
comprehensive information on proliferation threats, just as the old
Soviet Military Power did about the old Soviet missile threat, and our
responses to those threats.
As the previous
document, this is a basic tool for government officials, for journalists,
and for the interested public. This report gives clarity and definition
to a subject that has defied it in the past and has been very hard for
the public to understand.
We break the report
into two different sections. The first talking about the threat itself;
and the second talking about our response to the threat.
When we describe
the threat, we talk about the countries that are acquiring nuclear,
biological and chemical weapons and delivery systems; countries that
are supplying that technology. We talk about what we call transnational
threats such as organized crime. And it provides information about weapons,delivery
systems, and what we believe to be the acquisition strategies of the
proliferants. All of that is in the first section of this proliferation
report.
The second part
of it deals with the full range of the Department of Defense's response
to those threats. This counterproliferation effort of ours is among
our highest priority programs at the Department of Defense.
I want to show
you in this first chart why we rate this as our highest priority.
As this chart makes
clear, we are trying to preserve our U.S. military superiority. We start
off observing that the U.S. conventional forces are the best in the
world, and we believe that they are quite capable of deterring and defeating
any other armed force with which we might be confronted. But a wildcard
in this are the weapons of mass destruction -- the nuclear, chemical,
and biological. So we want to make sure that no one believes or tries
to demonstrate that weapons of mass destruction can be used as an equalizer
against U.S. conventional forces. That is our first reason.
The second is recognizing
simply a new geopolitical development -- the disintegration of the former
Soviet Union has the potential of creating a buyer's market for weapons
of mass destruction. We've gone from, simply with the disintegration
of the former Soviet Union, we now have four instead of one nuclear
state there; we have chaotic conditions which make it harder to predict
weapons and material; and we have economic pressures to sell expertise,
material, and technology.
Finally, we have
new technological developments. One way of expressing this is that no
matter how backward a country economically, today it can still have
the capability to build reactors and to generate plutonium, as was demonstrated
by North Korea. Also we observe that some technology and some products
that were once controlled, are now available, essentially by mail order
from Radio Shack. So for both of those reasons, the pace in technological
change and growth has made much more difficult our problems in trying
to control proliferation.
So what do we do
about this problem? Our response to it is first to try to prevent it;
secondly, to deter the threat that we cannot prevent; and finally, if
necessary, to defend against those threats.
The tools that
we have for prevention are the reduction of the weapons of the former
Soviet Union through arms control. We'll talk about that today. But
I would point out to you that the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program
is one of the key tools we have for effecting that.
Secondly, we have
ad hoc agreements that we can make, and the North Korea Framework Agreement
was a good example of that.
Third, we have
sanctions -- sanctions that we have imposed, for example, against Iran
and Iraq.
Finally, export
controls. But we have to understand that, in this world, we have to
find new ways of preventing this technology from reaching the would-be
proliferants. We have to focus these export controls in order to get
the greatest effectiveness.
In deterring this
threat, we depend both on a strong conventional military force and a
smaller but still powerful nuclear force. In our nuclear posture review,
we reaffirmed the importance of maintaining nuclear weapons as a deterrent.
But I would like to point out that both our conventional and nuclear
force, as deterrents, not only must be strong, but they must be perceived
that the United States has the will power to use that strength.
Finally, defense.
Defense can be thought of as both passive defense and active defense.
Two years ago we started our counterproliferation initiative,and that
put a major emphasis on organizing the efforts for passive defense,
to get new defense equipment and training to our troops. Dr. Carter
will talk more about that today.
In addition to
that, we started an active defense. We refocused our active defense
program through the ballistic missile defense effort. The first priority
on that effort has been the theater missile defense to deal with the
threat which is here and now, which are the tactical ballistic missiles,
such as the SCUDs.
The second priority
of that was to develop a new generation of systems represented by THAAD
and the Navy Wide Area System, which can deal with the longer range
tactical missiles when they emerge as threats. Then finally the national
missile defense program is laid out to meet the threat to the United
States as it emerges. The present program is laid out in what we call
the Three Plus Three program -- three years to develop the system, and
then at the end of that time if it seems appropriate to deploy it, another
three years to produce it and deploy it.
I'm not going to
discuss these proliferation challenges in much detail. We have listed
numerous challenges here, but I want to point out, those are no tour
only challenges. These are simply the ones we expect to make significant
progress on this year.
For example, both
the Fissile Material Protection and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
will be discussed at the Nuclear Summit that's coming up in Moscow,
and we expect progress to be made on those. We expect progress to be
made on export controls. And we expect a ratification of the Chemical
Weapons Convention Treaty.
Dr. Carter will
talk more about these, but these are all challenges in which we expect
significant progress this year.
I want to conclude
my comments with a statement about the achievements that have been made
in the last few years. First on the list here is the denuclearization
of Ukraine, Kazakstan and Belarus. We have gone from four nuclear nations
down to three because Kazakstan is now non-nuclear. By the end of the
year we expect Ukraine and Belarus to be non-nuclear as well. That simply
reduces the problem of trying to control proliferation.
Parenthetically,
I might say that during the same period of time we have taken 3,400
nuclear warheads out of service.
The second item
on this is Project Sapphire which is the purchase of the highly enriched
uranium which had been held by Kazakstan. We've talked about that before
in this group so I won't repeat it. We think that's a significant development.
The Cooperative
Threat Reduction Program has made very significant progress in protecting
the warheads -- protecting, controlling, counting the warheads in Russia.
We think that is a significant achievement, and we are hoping and expecting
to extend that achievement this year to provide that same sort of protection
and control to the fissile material which goes into these warheads.
The North Korea
Framework Agreement -- that is an example of not only controlling nuclear
weapons but rolling them back. This is a program that was well underway,
has been rolled back, and for almost two years now, has been stopped
dead in its tracks by that framework agreement.
The Non-Proliferation
Treaty extension that occurred a few months ago. The Defense Counterproliferation
Initiative which Dr. Carter will talk more about today. Also he'll talk
about this NATO Defense Group on Proliferation.
Finally, the potential,
the achievements in export control and the potential for getting even
more achievements this coming year. These have been real successes.
No reason to be complacent about these successes, but I've culled them
out because these are the successes on which we want to build in this
coming year.
I'm going to be
followed in my discussion by General Hughes, who will talk about the
threat; and then by Dr. Carter who will describe in more detail the
programs that we have to deal with these threats.
Q: Dr. Perry....
Q: Dr. Perry, can
you tell us more on Libya...
Q: ...American...
Q: ...directly
or indirectly through an intermediary, that they face a possible attack
if they produce chemical weapons in that underground facility?
A: Hold that for
a minute. What was your question? (Laughter)
Q: Given the possibility
of U.S. lives in jeopardy in Liberia, if you could just say how you
think the operation there is going.
A: On the first
question, you know the announcement, the statement that I've made on
that. That has described whatever... If you would like to consider that
a warning to Libya, you can so consider it. I have not made any other
efforts to try to communicate this to them, either directly or indirectly.
In terms of the
situation in Liberia, we have provided, I think, a quite adequate lift
capability to move out any of the American citizens who want to leave
that area. Quite a few have already been brought out. Most of those
American citizens have gathered at the embassy and we're lifting them
out from within the embassy compound. Quite a few citizens are still
at other locations in the city, and those who want to be lifted out
are now redeploying to the embassy, and we will be prepared to lift
them out from there.
Q: Mr. Secretary,
are you concerned about the Americans who are pinned down by the hostile
fire from the factions that are fighting in the capital city?
A: The American
citizens who do want to move out are being moved at this time to the
embassy. I believe the programs for doing that are probably adequate.
They've had very careful attention in the planning of them.
- END -
|